Design Theory of Balanced Transistor Amplifiers

01 October 1965

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This paper discusses the expected characteristics of balanced transistor amplifiers with sijmmetrical directional couplers. Provided that pairs of transistors with similar characteristics can be selected from a given distribution, the input and output matches obtained with the balanced configuration are satisfactory over a ±10 per cent bandwidth with simple one-section lumped-constant LC directional couplers and over a ±40 per cent bandwidth (1.2 octaves) with one section distributed 4 couplers. For single-stage amplifiers, the decrease in gain is less than 0.1 db and the phase nonlinearities introduced by the couplers are about ±0.15° and ±0.6respectively, over the same bandwidths. The requirements on the terminations which are connected to the couplers to absorb the transistor reflections are not stringent: FjSW^R's less than 1.4 shoidd be acceptable. The noise measure of balanced amplifiers is calculated to be a weighted average of the noise measures of the two component amplifiers, plus a small term which vanishes when the couplers have 3-db coupling and the component amplifiers have identical gains. Gain compression takes place at a 3-db higher signal level compared with conventional single-ended designs, ami the expected improvement in the thirdorder intermodulation is 9 db on the average. In the final section, the cascade connection of identical balanced amplifiers is discussed. With typical microwave transistors, the input and. output return losses for a midtistage amplifier should be about 4-3 db worse than those for the individual single-stage amplifiers of which it is composed.