UNIVERSITY OF UTAH ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT AMPLIFIER FREQUENCY RESPONSE

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UNISITY OF UTAH LTIAL AND OMPUT NGINING DPATMNT 30 LABOATOY XPIMNT NO. AMPLIFI FQUNY SPONS Objecties This experiment will demonstrate the frequency and time domain response of a single-stage common emitter BJT amplifier. The measured data will be compared to SPI simulations from SPI assignment #. To sae a lot of time and possible frustration, read the section you are working on entirely before performing any measurements. There are often important hints or subtleties in following paragraphs. xperiment Build the amplifier shown in Fig.. You may use standard alue components that are within 0% of the specified alues, but be sure to measure and record the actual alues. During this experiment, you will be making measurements at frequencies in the 0 MHz range. At these higher frequencies, the parasitic capacitance of your breadboard, wires, and terminals of your discrete components can cause additional poles to appear in your circuit s measured transfer function. To minimize this effect, use the shortest possible wires and clip the terminal wires of your components to be as short as possible. Also, be sure the polarized electrolytic capacitors are connected with the proper polarity. NOT: A common mistake in wiring this circuit is to get the emitter and collector reersed, so make sure you look at the data sheet.

= 45 KΩ = 85 KΩ = 4.7 KΩ = 3.0 KΩ L = 4.7 KΩ B = µf = µf = 0 µf Q = N3904 i IN B cc Q L OUT - o Fig.. Single stage bipolar oltage amplifier.. (5 points) alculate the expected D oltages at all nodes of the circuit assuming a 0 power supply (ignore the base current also). With no A signal applied to the circuit, set the D supply to 0. Measure and record the D oltage at all nodes. ompare these measurements with calculations. Before proceeding, be sure that calculations and measurements are in reasonable agreement (to make sure the transistor is inserted properly).. (0 points) Apply a small (less than 0.0-olt peak-to-peak) sinusoidal oltage to the input at a frequency of about 0 khz. Use the bench-mounted signal generator with a oltage diider using a kω and a 5Ω resistor to attenuate the signal generator output by a factor of approximately 0. Use a 0X scope probe to aoid unnecessary loading of the amplifier output. Obsere the amplifier output and, if necessary, reduce the magnitude of the input until the output shows no distortion. Measure and record this input signal amplitude. Don t forget to take this oltage diider into account when calculating the gain. (5 points) To get an idea of the oerall transfer function, do a quick frequency sweep to locate approximately both the upper and lower corner frequencies of the amplifier gain (where the midband gain changes by 3 db). Note the approximate corner frequencies.

(0 points) Now, starting at a frequency two decades below the low corner frequency (f L /00), measure the gain and the phase. Adjust the phase response so that you hae zero phase in the amplifier passband. (This is necessary because a phase shift of 80 degrees and a negatie sign in the gain are equialent.) epeat the same measurements for the rest of the frequency range, up to around 0MHz. Take enough data so the measurements can be plotted and compared with SPI results. Keep in mind that Bode plots hae logarithmic axes. In other words don t waste your time taking a lot of measurements, the points can be relatiely spread out in frequency. Make sure you get many points near the corner frequencies though, this is where you want to be the most accurate. Another phase measurement issue is when the measurements are plotted and there are 80-degree discontinuities in the measurements. Don t worry, this is fairly normal. All this means is that the phase was measured relatie to a different period. To fix this in MATLAB, use the unwrap function on your phase data. Make sure to look at the help file to get the syntax right. Keep in mind that unwrap works on data in radians, not degrees, so you will hae to do a couple of conersions. 3. (0 points) Now replace the 0X scope probe with a short section of co-ax cable. (Note that standard coax cable has a capacitance of around 30 pf/foot.) epeat the gain and phase measurements oer the same frequency range as aboe. Do you notice a difference in the corner frequencies? What was the difference and what do you think caused it? 4. (0 points) Measure the input impedance of the amplifier at about 0 khz using the circuit shown in Fig.. This circuit has a -kω resistor inserted between the signal source and the input. Set the input oltage to a alue that produces no distortion in the output (you will probably need the attenuator again). arefully measure and record 3

and and the alue of, but make sure to use two probes for this. One probe will measure relatie to ground, and the second will measure relatie to ground. If you connect one probe directly across the resistor you short out the scope and may blow a fuse and possibly destroy your circuit as well. This is because the negatie input of the scope probe is connected to earth ground. You can also use a multimeter in A mode to measure the MS oltage, but only do this if the other measurement is too noisy. From the measurements, calculate the alue of in. Measurements of and must be as accurate as possible because both alues will be only a few milliolts. in = KΩ B i Signal Generator L Fig.. Input impedance measurement. 5. (0 points) Measure the response of this amplifier to a square-wae input. Because the amplifier gain is dependent on frequency, an input square wae will not result in a perfect square wae at the output. For a discussion of the shape of the output pulse, see Appendix D, pp. -5 (Appendix F, pp 4-7 in the 4 th edition). First use a lowamplitude, high frequency square wae on the input. The amplitude of the input should be about 0.0 olt. Measure the rise time (see Fig. D-3 [Fig. F.3 in 4 th ed.] in the book) and fall time (which should be ery close to the rise time). Now decrease the frequency of the square wae by seeral orders of magnitude and measure the percentage sag (see Fig. D-4 [Fig. F.4 in 4 th ed.] in the book). The cursors feature of the scope make these measurements easier. Analysis 4

. (0 points) alculate the mid-band gain of the amplifier A M, the input impedance in, and the lowest corner frequency (use equations deeloped in the textbook). Using the simulated results from SPI assignment #, make a table that compares the mid-band gain, input resistance, and lowest corner frequency. How do they compare? Why are they different?. (0 points) ompare, in table form, your simulated D node oltages, measured D node oltages, and the alues calculated by hand. How do they compare? Why are they different? 3. (0 points) Using your spice simulation data from SPI assignment #, measured data with the 0x probe, and measured data with the coax probe, prepare a Bode plot of magnitude and phase for all three on the same set of axes using MATLAB. Make sure the phase starts at zero for all three sets of data, and use unwrap on the phase if there are any 80-degree jumps in the measured data. Also, don t plot the measurements as a continuous line, use a * and ^ to plot the measured points (i.e. plot(x,y, * )). How do the plots compare? What causes the simulated to ary from the measured? Which type of probe is better for measurements? Is the SPI model accurate? 4. (0 points) ompute the upper and lower corner frequencies, i.e. the 3-dB frequencies, of your amplifier from your low-amplitude square-wae measurements. ompare these alues with those obtained from your transfer function measurements. efer to Appendix D in the text for the relationship between corner frequencies and time constants. 5