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Conquer Radio Frequency

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5.1 Introduction – The transistor at Radio Frequency 205 5.1.5 Gain The gain that we are normally interested in for RF transistors is the power gain of the device, rather than just the voltage or current gain. It is power gain that is important because of the numerous impedance levels which are encountered in RF circuitry. When an impedance level changes in a circuit, voltage and current gains alone no longer mean anything. Even a passive device can produce a voltage or current gain but it cannot produce both simultaneously. That is what transistors are for, to produce power gain. The power gain of a transistor typically resembles a curve similar to that shown in Figure 5.1-7. This curve makes sense when we consider the equivalent transistor circuit of Figure 5.1-4. Notice that what we have, in effect, is an RC low-pass filter with a gain which must fall off (neglecting lead inductance) at the rate of 6 dB per octave. The maximum frequency at which the transistor provides a power gain is called . The gain curve passes through at 0 dB (i.e. Gain=1), and at the rate of 6 dB per octave. Figure 5.1-7 Gain Vs frequency for a transistor Frequency Power Gain (dB) 6dB/octave max f Conquer Radio Frequency 205 www.cadence.com/go/awr

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