The Hartley oscillator is an electronic oscillator using two coils in serial, parallel to a single capacitor, forming the LC circuit that determines the frequency.
Operation
Schematic diagram
A Hartley oscillator is essentially any configuration that uses two series-connected coils and a single capacitor (see Colpitts oscillator for the equivalent oscillator using two capacitors and one coil). Although there is no requirement for there to be mutual coupling between the two coil segments, the circuit is usually implemented this way.
It is made up of the following:
- Two inductors in series, which need not be mutual
- One tuning capacitor
Advantages of the Hartley oscillator include:
- The frequency may be varied using a variable capacitor
- The output amplitude remains constant over the frequency range
- Either a tapped coil or two fixed inductors are needed
Disadvantages include:
- Harmonic-rich content if taken from the amplifier and not directly from the LC circuit.
Note that, if the inductance of the two partial coils L1 and L2 is given (e.g. in a simulator), the total effective inductance that determines the frequency of the oscillation is (coupling factor k):

(see [1])
History
The Hartley oscillator was invented by Ralph V.L. Hartley while he was working for the Research Laboratory of the Western Electric Company. Hartley invented and patented the design in 1915 while overseeing Bell System's transatlantic radiotelephone tests; it was awarded patent number 1,356,763 on October 26, 1920. Note that the above basic schematic is essentially the same as in the patent drawing, except that the tube is replaced by a J-FET, and that the battery for a negative grid base is not needed.
In 1946 Hartley was awarded the IRE medal of honor "For his early work on oscillating circuits employing triode tubes and likewise for his early recognition and clear exposition of the fundamental relationship between the total amount of information which may be transmitted over a transmission system of limited band-width and the time required."[2](The second half of the citation refers to Hartley's work in information theory which largely paralleled Harry Nyquist.)
Applications
Part of Scott 310E circuit diagram
The Hartley oscillator was extensively used on all broadcast bands including the FM 88-108MHz band. An example is given of the Scott 310E RF oscillator for its FM section.
See also
LC oscillators:
Other (non-LC):
References
- ^ Jim McLucas, Hartley oscillator requires no coupled inductors, EDN October 26, 2006 [1]
- ^ Ralph V. L. Hartley, Legacies, IEEE History Center, updated January 23 2003, [2]
- Radiotron Designer's Handbook, 4th edition
- Ulrich L. Rohde, Ajay K. Poddar, Georg Böck "The Design of Modern Microwave Oscillators for Wireless Applications ", John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, May, 2005, ISBN 0-471-72342-8.
- George Vendelin, Anthony M. Pavio, Ulrich L. Rohde " Microwave Circuit Design Using Linear and Nonlinear Techniques ", John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, May, 2005, ISBN 0-471-41479-4.
- F.A. Record, J.L. Stiles: "An Analytical Demonstration of Hartley Oscillator Action". Proceedings of the IRE, Volume: 31 , Issue: 6, June 1943, ISSN 0096-8390.
External links
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