When should I use emitter follower to drive???

Status
Not open for further replies.

gggould

Member level 3
Joined
Apr 10, 2004
Messages
63
Helped
0
Reputation
0
Reaction score
0
Trophy points
1,286
Activity points
532
emitter follower oscillation

Dear all,

This question has been confusing me for a while.

I know that the emitter follower is to drive low impedence load.
But when I see some of my friends' VCO design (all use npn+L load, which should have low Rout), some of them use emitter follower to drive the next stage while others do not....

Does anyone know when should we use emitter follower, at least for VCO ???

Thank you very much...
 

emitter follower circuit

For emitter follower output signal is always lower than input signal by 0.7V. If it is acceptable for your design you can use that.
 

emitter follower buffer

You would use Emitter follower to drive
large capacitive loads, As you know the
the oscillation frequency of an LC oscillator
is 1/sqrt(LC), hence if you want to increase
oscillation frequency you have to decrease
L and C. For gigahertz range system, next stage load Cap can severely limit macimum achievable oscillation frequency. An advantage of using BJT transistor is that they are fast (ft is very high) so it is suitable for high frequency.
Another important issue
is that the tuning range of the VCO, if the constant
capacitive part of the LC tank (such as next stage
input load) can limit the tuning range of the VCO.
The drawback is that the input resistance of the BJT degrades the Q of the VCO which degrades in turn,
phase noise, power consumption, etc...
 

emitter follower

gggould said:
Does anyone know when should we use emitter follower, at least for VCO ???
a) voltage gain is 1 (see!)
b) high current amplification
c) high input impedance (see!)
d) no phase change/inversion

makes sense now???

Fom said:
For emitter follower output signal is always lower than input signal by 0.7V.
It is not always necessary true. 0.7 is only when is silicon.
 

emitter follower capacitive load

Add an AMP is to block the VCO and the loading circuit. If the loading circuit drains too much current from VCO or capacitively loads the VCO, a AMP (or BUFFER) is always needed to be inserted between VCO and loading circuit.

If the loading circuit is uncertain, the AMP or BUFFER should have a good isolation ability to keep its input impedance fixed while the loading circuit's impedance is changing.
 

emitter follower uses

gggould,

You don't need to use emitter follower in circuits that work.
However, if you design new circuit and you don't know how next stage may interfeare with previous it is always good practice to separete stages by emitter follower and avoid possible problems.
 

Status
Not open for further replies.
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more…