Cascode operation results in an impression of a dynamic range capability considerably
beyond what the rated power would suggest.
Author: Nelson Pass [Threshold Corp. Sacramento, Calif., USA]
Lowering distortion in power circuits without compromising their transient
response remains a primary problem for designers of audio power amplifiers.
Until fairly recently, the favorite technique for removing distortion components
in linear amplifiers was to cascade many gain stages to form a circuit having
enormous amounts of gain and then using negative feedback to control the
system and correct for the many errors introduced by this large number of
components.
While the sum of these components' distortions may cause large complex nonlinearities,
the correspondingly large amounts of feedback applied are generally more
than equal to the task of cleaning up the performance with only one trade-off-the
high frequency performance of the system.
Fig. 1-Characteristics of an ideal transistor.
Fig. 2-Actual transistor characteristics.
Fig. 3-Operating region of a class-A amplifier.
Fig. 4-Cascode operation of transistor Q, by the common-base connection
of Q2.
Fig. 5-Region of cascode operation.
Fig. 6-Effective characteristic of cascode operation.
Fig. 7 - Emitter-follower operation.
Fig. 7b - Cascode-emitter follower.
Fig. 8a--Oscillator residual distortion components.
Fig. 8b--The output of the emitter follower operation.
Fig. 8c--The output of the cascode emitter-follower.
Fig. 9--Basic configuration of the cascode power amplifier.
Because each amplifying device also contributes its own high frequency roll-off,
and because the sum of many of these roll-offs creates a complex, multi-pole
phase lag, a system using large amounts of negative feedback tends to be
unstable at high frequencies, resulting in phenomena popularly referred to
as Transient Intermodulation Distortion (TIM). As this phenomena has been
well described elsewhere, it will be sufficient here to point out that two
solutions to TIM problems exist. The first solution is to not require any
high frequency performance of the circuit, that is, not to feed it high frequency
signals it cannot handle. While this solution works very well for many operational
amplifier applications requiring only low frequency performance, it is judged
to be unacceptable in high-fidelity applications where frequency response
is required beyond 100 kiloHertz. Although human hearing is generally very
poor above 20,000 Hertz, ultrasonic frequency roll-offs produce phase and
amplitude effects in the audible region; for example, a single pole (6dB/octave)
roll-off at 30 kHz produces about 9° phase lag and 0.5 dB loss at 10 kHz.
The effects may be subtle, but their audibility is undesirable in a piece
of equipment whose performance is judged by its neutrality.
Because of this bandwidth requirement, designers of state-of-the-art amplifiers
are turning to the other solution; simple circuits having few amplifying
devices and relatively low open loop gain. The simplicity and low gain allows
the circuitry to respond to signals very quickly, thus eliminating transient
problems, but it does so at the expense of higher harmonic and intermodulation
distortions.
Because these distortions are more "musical" (having low orders
of harmonics and intermodulation sidebands), they are less offensive than
TIM effects, whose high order sidebands bear less resemblance to the naturally
occurring harmonics in the music. Musical or not, the lower order harmonics
and sidebands still deserve to be removed, and the attention of the best
designers has turned to removing the distortions in the individual amplifying
devices themselves, instead of applying corrective feedback to the system.
Altered Gain
To understand the approach to this problem, it is first necessary to note
that all distortions arise when the gain of an amplifying device is altered.
A perfectly linear device has a transfer curve which is a perfectly straight
line.
Any deviations (distortion) from this straight line is the result of a gain
factor which varies depending upon the operating conditions. In real life,
the gain of a transistor, tube, or FET changes as the voltage across the
device changes and as the current through the device changes. As these conditions
fluctuate, the device generates distortion, but if we hold these conditions
to a constant, the device becomes distortionless. Figure 1 is a characteristic
curve of an ideal distortionless transistor, showing absolute linearity under
all conditions, whereas Fig. 2 is the characteristic curve of an actual transistor.
Notice that the spacing between the parallel lines is unequal, reflecting
gain changes with different currents through the transistor, and that they
are curved off the horizontal axis, showing gain changes dependent on the
voltage across the device. As the transistor wanders through these regions
in reproducing the audio signal, its gain alters, causing both harmonic and
intermodulation distortion effects. If we can limit the region of operation
on this curve, particularly to the area away from the boundaries, the distortion
will be significantly reduced.
Recently, the most effective method employed for reducing distortion without
feedback has been the use of class-A operation, in which the amplifying devices
are idled at very high currents, keeping the transistor in a region on the
curve where the nonlinearities are less spectacular, as shown in Fig. 3.
While the characteristics of the transistor are less than perfect, the distortions
within the boundaries shown are relatively mild as compared with the more
abrupt gain changes outside of the dotted lines.
Cascode Operation
At great expense of efficiency, class-A operation reduces nonlinearities
due to current fluctuations through the transistor. However, it does not
affect nonlinearities in the transistor due to voltage changes.
There is a method for eliminating such nonlinearities called cascode operation,
where the voltage across the transistor, tubes, or FETS is frozen at a constant
value, completely eliminating voltage-induced distortions. In the case of
transistors, the gain device can be operated in common-emitter or common-collector
modes that utilizes a second transistor in the common base mode whose emitter
is connected to the collector of the gain transistor, as in Fig. 4. Having
essentially unity current gain, extremely wide bandwidth, and no distortion,
the common base device shields the gain transistor from voltage changes in
the circuit.
Figure 5 shows the operating boundaries of such a system, where the operating
voltage is frozen to a constant. Figure 6 shows the effective transfer characteristics
of such a system, and we see that it more nearly approximates the curves
of the ideal transistor in Fig. 1.
A graphic demonstration of the effectiveness of such an arrangement is clearly
illustrated by the spectral analysis of a class-A emitter-follower operated
without feedback. The circuits in Fig. 7 a & b were operated at 15 kHz
at ±5 volts. The spectral analysis of the outputs of each circuit are shown
in Fig. 8 a, b, & c, where the vertical scale is 10 dB per division (80
dB), the horizontal scale is 0-100 kHz at 10 kHz division, and as can be
easily seen, the cascode operation of the same transistor under otherwise
identical conditions results in the reduction of distortion from several
percent to the residual of the test setup.
Increased Bandwidth
Besides eliminating voltage caused nonlinearities, cascode operation can
yield an additional benefit in increased bandwidth. Because the collector-base
voltage is held constant, there is minimal charging of the collector-base
junction capacitance in the transistor.
Eliminating the effects of this internal lag capacitance allows higher frequency
response, thus cascode circuitry is commonly found in ultra-high frequency
amplifiers and wide bandwidth oscilloscopes where response is required beyond
100 mega-Hertz.
Cascode circuitry has also found its way into preamplifier circuitry as
manufactured by Dayton-Wright, Paragon, DB Systems, and Audio Directions
among others.
With all these factors in mind, and noting that the output transistors in
power amplifiers would enjoy the beneficial effects of cascode operation,
we recently undertook the design of a cascode audio power amplifier (patent
pending) where the gain stages and emitter-follower output stages are operated
at constant voltages. The conceptual schematic of such a device can be seen
from Fig. 9, which serves to illustrate the use of cascode operation on both
the common-emitter voltage gain stage and the common -collector output stage.
In this circuit, Q1 is the input transistor, held at a constant voltage by
Q2. Q3 and Q4 form the cascode common-emitter, voltage -gain stage which
generates the full voltage swing of the amplifier. Both parts of the circuit
are biased using constant current sources, '11, 12 seen near the negative
supply rail. Output current gain is supplied by the complementary common
collector darlingtons formed by Q5-8, and Q9 and Q10 are the common base
transistors which hold them at constant voltages. V1-5 are constant voltage
sources ranging from two to 10 volts. The voltage sources on the cascode
circuits can be generated by a number of arbitrary means, including zener
diodes, resistors, or even batteries.
Because voltage-induced nonlinearities take the form of "compressive" intermodulation,
it was not surprising to discover the sonic effects of utilizing cascode
operation throughout a power amplifying system corresponded to an impression
of a dynamic range capability considerably beyond what the rated power would
suggest. This effect is pronounced at high transient levels and imparts a
sense of effortlessness in the reproduction of demanding material.
While the distortion characteristics of a fully cascode amplifier are not
equivalent to those obtained through class-A operation, the lack of signal
compression produces a subjective "ease" to the reproduced sound
that closely approximates that of the smooth nonlinearities which characterize
class-A operation and are achieved without the cost penalties attendant
to a class-A output stage.
(Source: Audio magazine, March. 1978, )
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