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Describes the use of the Real Frequency Technique for designing and realizing RF/microwave amplifiers and circuits This book focuses on the authors' Real Frequency Technique (RFT) and its application to a wide variety of multi-stage microwave amplifiers and active filters, and passive equalizers for radar pulse shaping and antenna return loss applications. The first two chapters review the fundamentals of microwave amplifier design and provide a description of the RFT. Each subsequent chapter introduces a new type of amplifier or circuit design, reviews its design problems, and explains how…mehr
Describes the use of the Real Frequency Technique for designing and realizing RF/microwave amplifiers and circuits This book focuses on the authors' Real Frequency Technique (RFT) and its application to a wide variety of multi-stage microwave amplifiers and active filters, and passive equalizers for radar pulse shaping and antenna return loss applications. The first two chapters review the fundamentals of microwave amplifier design and provide a description of the RFT. Each subsequent chapter introduces a new type of amplifier or circuit design, reviews its design problems, and explains how the RFT can be adapted to solve these problems. The authors take a practical approach by summarizing the design steps and giving numerous examples of amplifier realizations and measured responses. * Provides a complete description of the RFT as it is first used to design multistage lumped amplifiers using a progressive optimization of the equalizers, leading to a small number of parameters to optimize simultaneously * Presents modifications to the RFT to design trans-impedance microwave amplifiers that are used for photodiodes acting as high impedance current sources * Discusses the methods using the RFT to optimize equalizers made of lossy distributed networks * Covers methods and examples for designing standard linear multi-stage power amplifiers and those using arborescent structures * Describes how to use the RFT to design multi ]stage active filters * Shows the flexibility of the RFT to solve a variety of microwave circuit design problems like the problem of passive equalizer design for Radar receivers * Examines a possible method for the synthesis of microwave antennas using the RFT Microwave Amplifier and Active Circuit Design Using the Real Frequency Technique is intended for researchers and RF and microwave engineers but is also suitable for advanced graduate students in circuit design. Dr. Beneat and Dr. Jarry are members of the editorial board of Wiley's International Journal of RF and Microwave Computer Aided Engineering. They have published seven books together, including Advanced Design Techniques and Realizations of Microwave and RF Filters (Wiley-IEEE 2008), Design and Realizations of Miniaturized Fractals RF and Microwave Filters (Wiley 2009), Miniaturized Microwave Fractal Filters--M2F2 (Wiley 2012), and RF and Microwave Electromagnetism (Wiley-ISTE 2014).
Pierre Jarry, PhD, is a professor at the University of Bordeaux, France, and also serves the French National Science Research Center (CNRS) laboratory IMS (Intégration du Materiau au Système). Previously he was professor at the University of Brest, Brest, France, where he created and directed the Laboratory of Electronics and Telecommunication Systems, which is affiliated with the CNRS. His research focuses on the areas of microwave filters (localized, distributed, multimode, and genetic), and microwave amplifiers (lumped, distributed and lossy distributed, power, and multi-stage). Jacques N. Beneat, PhD, is Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Norwich University, Vermont, USA. He received his PhD in electrical and computer engineering from Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Massachusetts, USA, with a focus in advanced microwave structures for satellite communications.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword vii
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
1 Microwave Amplifier Fundamentals 1
1.1 Introduction 2
1.2 Scattering Parameters and Signal Flow Graphs 2
1.3 Reflection Coefficients 5
1.4 Gain Expressions 7
1.5 Stability 9
1.6 Noise 10
1.7 ABCD Matrix 14
1.7.1 ABCD Matrix of a Series Impedance 14
1.7.2 ABCD Matrix of a Parallel Admittance 15
1.7.3 Input Impedance of Impedance Loaded Two-Port 15
1.7.4 Input Admittance of Admittance Loaded Two-Port 16
1.7.5 ABCD Matrix of the Cascade of Two Systems 16
1.7.6 ABCD Matrix of the Parallel Connection of Two Systems 17
1.7.7 ABCD Matrix of the Series Connection of Two Systems 17
1.7.8 ABCD Matrix of Admittance Loaded Two-Port Connected in Parallel 17
1.7.9 ABCD Matrix of Impedance Loaded Two-Port Connected in Series 19
1.7.10 Conversion Between Scattering and ABCD Matrices 19
1.8 Distributed Network Elements 20
1.8.1 Uniform Transmission Line 20
1.8.2 Unit Element 21
1.8.3 Input Impedance and Input Admittance 22
1.8.4 Short-Circuited Stub Placed in Series 23
1.8.5 Short-Circuited Stub Placed in Parallel 24
1.8.6 Open-Circuited Stub Placed in Series 24
1.8.7 Open-Circuited Stub Placed in Parallel 25
1.8.8 Richard's Transformation 25
1.8.9 Kuroda Identities 28
References 35
2 Introduction to the Real Frequency Technique: Multistage Lumped Amplifier Design 37
2.1 Introduction 37
2.2 Multistage Lumped Amplifier Representation 38
2.3 Overview of the RFT 40
2.4 Multistage Transducer Gain 41
2.5 Multistage VSWR 43
2.6 Optimization Process 44
2.6.1 Single-Valued Error and Target Functions 44
2.6.2 Levenberg-Marquardt-More Optimization 46
2.7 Design Procedures 48
2.8 Four-Stage Amplifier Design Example 49
2.9 Transistor Feedback Block for Broadband Amplifiers 57