hayowazzup
- 63
- 0
Does anyone know how to measure the input and output impedance of a bjt circuit on Ltspice? eg. a circuit like this
Exactly.vk6kro said:You have real gain if the power of the output is greater than the input. This is the case with most transistor amplifiers. You compare this to a transformer where the power out cannot be more than the input.
Correct, but the product of the voltage gains of the individual stages can never be greater than beta^n where n is the number of stages and the output impedance is equal to the input impedance.vk6kro said:For example, you could follow a voltage gaining common emitter amplifier with an emitter follower.
You have high input impedance followed by a low output impedance. You could cascade these modules as much as you like or until the noise from the first stage is amplified enough to be objectionable.
True, but I would prefer to use a different term for voltage gain due only to impedance transformation. For instance the familiar 20*Log(Vout/Vin) does not apply in those cases and I don't think this is made clear in many EE classes.vk6kro said:Cascading stages is not the only reason to build an amplifier. You may want to drive a meter or a lamp or close a relay. You could drive a FET or the input of an oscilloscope or a frequency counter.