Darlington amplifier has more gain when compared to cascade amplifier .
Because the feedback of an amplifier tends to reduce the gain of an amplifier and also, the bandwidth of feedback increases the gain of an amplifier, so in an high gain amplifier as to be stabilized. BY ENGINEER MUHAMMED OLALEYE OLUWATOSIN TELECOMMUNICATION STUDENT, RUFUS GIWA POLYTECHNIC, OWO
Common-emitter gives more voltage gain because a common-collector amplifier has a voltage gain of 1. But a common-collector can have a power gain because the input impedance is much more than the output impedance.
Class C amplifier.. A class D amplifier is more efficient than class B, and is more efficient than class C as well.
A Darlington transistor it may contain one or more transistor in its case. the purpose is to amplify current by beta multiplication.
A wideband amplifier is an electronic circuit providing constant amplification with a ratio of its low corner frequency to its high corner frequency of more than an octave. The widwband amplifier is complementary in concept to "audio amplifier" (20Hz-20KHz) and "video amplifier" (15KHz to 4.8MHZ). The "opposite" concept is the narrow-band or tuned amplifier. There's a new wideband amplifier technology called PowerBand from TriQuint Semiconductor. end-
buck and boost converter is cascaded by connecting two or more converters series ....
A Darlington transistor is a composite transistor. The definition is a combination of two or more transistors that have the purpose of increasing the current gain.
feedback that reduces gain to help stabilize amplifier operation. gain is easy and cheap to get, stability isn't. its a tradeoff. so amplifier is deliberately designed with much more gain than needed and negative feedback sacrifices some of that gain to stabilize it.
Gain, usually measured in decibels, is the ratio of output to input power. A more sensitive amplifier will have higher gain settings requiring less input signal.
the gain of diffrential amlifier should be more than 2db(6db).so it willincrease.
it increases
The gain of a common-emitter amplifier is collector resistor divided by emitter resistor, or hFe, whichever is less. Since hFe depends on temperature, designing the amplifier to be dependent on resistance ratio makes it more stable. As such, the emitter resistance serves to stabilize the amplifier.
Because the feedback of an amplifier tends to reduce the gain of an amplifier and also, the bandwidth of feedback increases the gain of an amplifier, so in an high gain amplifier as to be stabilized. BY ENGINEER MUHAMMED OLALEYE OLUWATOSIN TELECOMMUNICATION STUDENT, RUFUS GIWA POLYTECHNIC, OWO
Common-emitter gives more voltage gain because a common-collector amplifier has a voltage gain of 1. But a common-collector can have a power gain because the input impedance is much more than the output impedance.
A power amplifier may also boost voltage; in audio equipment, power amplifiers often have a dial on the front that is used to control the input voltage gain. A simple power amplifier is composed of a single transistor; this type of configuration cannot provide voltage amplification as well. A voltage amplifier stage is needed. So the above example of an audio power amplifier is actually a voltage amplifier stage, followed by one or more power amplifier stages.
The voltage gain,input impedance,output impedance,bandwidth etc. are the characteristics of amplifier's. these are more or less constant for a given amplifier. These parameters are required to be controlled. This can be done by using feedback that's why we use feedback.
Gain of ce-cb cascode is nearly equal to the gain of ce amplifier, because in a ce-cb cascode, the gain of the ce stage is equal to 1, and the gain of the cb stage is nearly equal to an isolated ce amplifier. Hence, gain of both are nearly equal. On the other hand, Bandwidth of ce-cb cascode is much higher than the bandwidth of ce amplifier because the cb stage in the cascode configration is not subjected to any Miller effect, thereby improving the high frequency response. The absence of Miller effect is due to the fact that the base of the cb stage is grounded thus, shielding the collector signal from being fed back into the emitter input. To be more clear, the gain of CE stage in cascode is nearly 1, which reduces the miller effect on the cb stage greatly.