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#11
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On Wed, 12 May 2004 10:13:10 +0200, Toni wrote:
This is something I have always thought: When driving loops, very short monopoles (VLF) or other low-impedance antennas, why raise transmitter Z to 50 ohms, send it through the line and lower it again to whatever required? Couldn't the amplifier be built directly at the antenna base so _no_ transmission line is required and couple directly the low Z at the final transistor(s) to the low Z at the antenna? Hi Toni, Exactly! 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#12
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Hi Cecil
En Cecil Moore va escriure en Wed, 12 May 2004 09:44:10 -0500: 40-50 years ago, we had to lower the transmitter Z usually with a built-in adjustable pi-net tuner. Do you mean before the existence of electronic simulators, when people actually build electronic apparatus? :^) When I studied electronics I was in the last course where students would actually build things. From the next course on student's practices would be made only by computer simulations :^( As to your comment, I know valves exist but I have never learned / been taught how to use them. :^( 73s Toni - EA3FYA |
#13
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![]() "Toni" wrote En Richard Clark va escriure en Wed, 12 May 2004 00:32:35 GMT: These designs also have the benefit of low pass filters aiding a smooth transition of Z from the device Z on the order of 0.5 to 1 Ohm to the System Z of 50 Ohms. There is 0.5 Ohm when the transistor is on but not when is it off. So the resulting impedance should probably be more than that. ?? This is something I have always thought: When driving loops, very short monopoles (VLF) or other low-impedance antennas, why raise transmitter Z to 50 ohms, send it through the line and lower it again to whatever required? Couldn't the amplifier be built directly at the antenna base so _no_ transmission line is required and couple directly the low Z at the final transistor(s) to the low Z at the antenna? This is what I have. The amplifier is directly connected to the loop. Here is a scope screen copy of the output of the amplifier: http://www.fractalconcept.com/scope-screen.jpg The C2 trace is the drain voltage and the C3 one is the 50 Ohm resistor voltage. The schematics is very simple: http://www.fractalconcept.com/schema.pdf The first one is the one that works on the scope screen. The second one is a one that does not work at all: the torus of the 680nH melted ![]() I have a little more success by just connecting the drain to the loop through a capacitor but it's still not good (25% efficiency) Any idea ? Marc |
#14
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On Thu, 13 May 2004 10:58:27 +0200, "Marc Battyani"
wrote: This is what I have. The amplifier is directly connected to the loop. Here is a scope screen copy of the output of the amplifier: http://www.fractalconcept.com/scope-screen.jpg The C2 trace is the drain voltage and the C3 one is the 50 Ohm resistor voltage. The schematics is very simple: http://www.fractalconcept.com/schema.pdf The first one is the one that works on the scope screen. The second one is a one that does not work at all: the torus of the 680nH melted ![]() I have a little more success by just connecting the drain to the loop through a capacitor but it's still not good (25% efficiency) Any idea ? Hi Marc, There are a number of questions. First, how do you compute efficiency? Where on the schematic are these scope connections? What is your design source for this schematic, or if original, what drove you to select the reactive components you did? The series load on the drain does not resonate at 8MHz and is not particularly matched to either the FET or the 50 Ohm load. What is the inductance of the loop? Alternatively, what size is it? This last is more important because it subsumes the radiation resistance that must be known to perform any efficiency computation. The two circuits are very, very different from each other to be achieving the same purpose. The 50 Ohm resistor, as an equivalent load appears to be grossly in error. By all appearances of the magenta trace, you are running Class B or a very long Class C. This is not a hallmark of high efficiency. However, not knowing where this trace resides in the circuit, this is simply a guess. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#15
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![]() "Richard Clark" wrote On Thu, 13 May 2004 10:58:27 +0200, "Marc Battyani" wrote: This is what I have. The amplifier is directly connected to the loop. Here is a scope screen copy of the output of the amplifier: http://www.fractalconcept.com/scope-screen.jpg The C2 trace is the drain voltage and the C3 one is the 50 Ohm resistor voltage. The schematics is very simple: http://www.fractalconcept.com/schema.pdf The first one is the one that works on the scope screen. The second one is a one that does not work at all: the torus of the 680nH melted ![]() I have a little more success by just connecting the drain to the loop through a capacitor but it's still not good (25% efficiency) Any idea ? Hi Marc, There are a number of questions. First, how do you compute efficiency? The power in the load divided by the power used by the amplifier. Where on the schematic are these scope connections? ?? The C2 trace is the transistor drain voltage and the C3 one is the 50 Ohm resistor voltage (not the ground ;-). What is your design source for this schematic, or if original, what drove you to select the reactive components you did? The series load on the drain does not resonate at 8MHz and is not particularly matched to either the FET or the 50 Ohm load. I looked at a lot of class E app notes and picked one. I started with approx values and changed them incrementally to try to have a better result. What is the inductance of the loop? Alternatively, what size is it? This last is more important because it subsumes the radiation resistance that must be known to perform any efficiency computation. The loop is 65x25mm The two circuits are very, very different from each other to be achieving the same purpose. The 50 Ohm resistor, as an equivalent load appears to be grossly in error. Yes. This is the problem. The first one was to test if I was able to make a working class-E amplifier. The second one is really bad. I have a third one where the loop is connected in place of the resistor which is somewhat better but still not good. By all appearances of the magenta trace, you are running Class B or a very long Class C. This is not a hallmark of high efficiency. However, not knowing where this trace resides in the circuit, this is simply a guess. The C2 trace (the drain voltage) looks like the one expected for a class E IMO. Marc |
#16
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On Thu, 13 May 2004 23:43:44 +0200, "Marc Battyani"
wrote: This last is more important because it subsumes the radiation resistance that must be known to perform any efficiency computation. The loop is 65x25mm Hi Marc, Yes, this appears to be extremely problematic. The radiation resistance of this loop is on the order of 30 nano Ohms. For you to achieve a 50% efficiency in radiating the input power, no component in the resonant loop must have an Ohmic resistance greater than this. In other words, you don't stand a chance. What coupling that you are getting is probably more capacitive or inductive than radiative. The radiation resistance of a loop rises or falls by the 4th power of its ratio to the wavelength of excitation. Double the radius and you will multiply the radiation resistance 16 fold.n What this says, is that the radiation resistance is overwhelmed by conductor loss (even if only micro Ohms) that is turning your power into heat. The two circuits are very, very different from each other to be achieving the same purpose. The 50 Ohm resistor, as an equivalent load appears to be grossly in error. Yes. This is the problem. An understatement with the loop dimension given. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#17
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![]() "Richard Clark" wrote On Thu, 13 May 2004 23:43:44 +0200, "Marc Battyani" wrote: This last is more important because it subsumes the radiation resistance that must be known to perform any efficiency computation. The loop is 65x25mm Hi Marc, Yes, this appears to be extremely problematic. The radiation resistance of this loop is on the order of 30 nano Ohms. For you to achieve a 50% efficiency in radiating the input power, no component in the resonant loop must have an Ohmic resistance greater than this. In other words, you don't stand a chance. What coupling that you are getting is probably more capacitive or inductive than radiative. Yes, this is exactly what I want to do : Inductive coupling. Maybe you didn't see my first posts, what I want to do is transmit 3W of power by induction over a 12mm distance. The radiation resistance of a loop rises or falls by the 4th power of its ratio to the wavelength of excitation. Double the radius and you will multiply the radiation resistance 16 fold.n What this says, is that the radiation resistance is overwhelmed by conductor loss (even if only micro Ohms) that is turning your power into heat. The two circuits are very, very different from each other to be achieving the same purpose. The 50 Ohm resistor, as an equivalent load appears to be grossly in error. Yes. This is the problem. An understatement with the loop dimension given. Heh, this is why I'm posting here. ![]() Marc |
#18
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On Fri, 14 May 2004 13:57:58 +0200, "Marc Battyani"
wrote: Yes, this appears to be extremely problematic. The radiation resistance of this loop is on the order of 30 nano Ohms. For you to achieve a 50% efficiency in radiating the input power, no component in the resonant loop must have an Ohmic resistance greater than this. In other words, you don't stand a chance. What coupling that you are getting is probably more capacitive or inductive than radiative. Yes, this is exactly what I want to do : Inductive coupling. Maybe you didn't see my first posts, what I want to do is transmit 3W of power by induction over a 12mm distance. Hi Marc, Then this returns us to the native Z of the source, the FET, and the sink Z of the load AFTER the link. Your link shows a 1:1 coupling (as best I can tell) and it follows that the load should be on the order of half an Ohm. It also follows that the characteristic Z of the FET load should also exhibit this value (it does not) as well as the coupling circuitry to the link. Move the primary loop back into the Drain lead to the positive rail path, and connect the 2200pF cap (which may be too much) from the Drain lead to ground path. The other circuitry is superfluous. The characteristic Z of this load is roughly equal to the FET; and as the FET on time is roughly 120°; and depending upon coupling, then you might find 60 - 80% efficiency. It will require some tuning as the Bandwidth will be 1 or 2 MHz around resonance. If you want some other actual load resistance other than half an Ohm, then you need to boost the transform ratio (it works by the square of the windings ratio). Give this a try and report your findings. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#19
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![]() "Richard Clark" wrote On Fri, 14 May 2004 13:57:58 +0200, "Marc Battyani" wrote: Yes, this is exactly what I want to do : Inductive coupling. Maybe you didn't see my first posts, what I want to do is transmit 3W of power by induction over a 12mm distance. Then this returns us to the native Z of the source, the FET, and the sink Z of the load AFTER the link. Your link shows a 1:1 coupling (as best I can tell) and it follows that the load should be on the order of half an Ohm. It also follows that the characteristic Z of the FET load should also exhibit this value (it does not) as well as the coupling circuitry to the link. Move the primary loop back into the Drain lead to the positive rail path, and connect the 2200pF cap (which may be too much) from the Drain lead to ground path. The other circuitry is superfluous. The characteristic Z of this load is roughly equal to the FET; and as the FET on time is roughly 120°; and depending upon coupling, then you might find 60 - 80% efficiency. It will require some tuning as the Bandwidth will be 1 or 2 MHz around resonance. If you want some other actual load resistance other than half an Ohm, then you need to boost the transform ratio (it works by the square of the windings ratio). Give this a try and report your findings. Much better! A get 70% efficiency now ![]() (with a 330pF cap) Thanks Marc |
#20
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On Sat, 15 May 2004 19:02:11 +0200, "Marc Battyani"
wrote: Much better! A get 70% efficiency now ![]() (with a 330pF cap) Thanks Marc Hi Marc, You are welcome. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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