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Frequency multiplier

In electronics, a frequency multiplier is an electronic circuit that generates an output signal and that output frequency is a harmonic (multiple) of its input frequency. Frequency multipliers consist of a nonlinear circuit that distorts the input signal and consequently generates harmonics of the input signal. A subsequent bandpass filter selects the desired harmonic frequency and removes the unwanted fundamental and other harmonics from the output.

Frequency multipliers are often used in frequency synthesizers and communications circuits. It can be more economical to develop a lower frequency signal with lower power and less expensive devices, and then use a frequency multiplier chain to generate an output frequency in the microwave or millimeter wave range. Some modulation schemes, such as frequency modulation, survive the nonlinear distortion without ill effect (but schemes such as amplitude modulation do not).

Frequency multiplication is also used in nonlinear optics. The nonlinear distortion in crystals can be used to generate harmonics of laser light.

Theory edit

A pure sine wave has a single frequency f

 

If the sine wave is applied to a linear circuit, such as a non–distortion amplifier, the output is still a sine wave (but may acquire a phase shift). However, if the sine wave is applied to a nonlinear circuit, the resulting distortion creates harmonics; frequency components at integer multiples nf of the fundamental frequency f. The distorted signal can be described by a Fourier series in f.

 

The nonzero ck represent the generated harmonics. The Fourier coefficients are given by integrating over the fundamental period T:

 

So a frequency multiplier can be built from a nonlinear electronic component which generates a series of harmonics, followed by a bandpass filter which passes one of the harmonics to the output and blocks the others.

From a conversion efficiency standpoint, the nonlinear circuit should maximize the coefficient for the desired harmonic and minimize the others. Consequently, the transcribing function is often specially chosen. Easy choices are to use an even function to generate even harmonics or an odd function for odd harmonics. See Even and odd functions#Harmonics. A full wave rectifier, for example, is good for making a doubler. To produce a times-3 multiplier, the original signal may be input to an amplifier that is over driven to produce nearly a square wave. This signal is high in 3rd order harmonics and can be filtered to produce the desired x3 outcome.

YIG multipliers often want to select an arbitrary harmonic, so they use a stateful distortion circuit that converts the input sine wave into an approximate impulse train. The ideal (but impractical) impulse train generates an infinite number of (weak) harmonics. In practice, an impulse train generated by a monostable circuit will have many usable harmonics. YIG multipliers using step recovery diodes may, for example, take an input frequency of 1 to 2 GHz and produce outputs up to 18 GHz.[1] Sometimes the frequency multiplier circuit will adjust the width of the impulses to improve conversion efficiency for a specific harmonic.

Circuits edit

Diode edit

Clipping circuits. Full wave bridge doubler.

Class C amplifier and multiplier edit

Efficiently generating power becomes more important at high power levels. Linear Class A amplifiers are at best 25 percent efficient. Push-pull Class B amplifiers are at best 50 percent efficient. The basic problem is the amplifying element is dissipating power. Switching Class C amplifiers are nonlinear, but they can be better than 50 percent efficient because an ideal switch does not dissipate any power.

A clever design can use the nonlinear Class C amplifier for both gain and as a frequency multiplier.

Step recovery diode edit

Generating a large number of useful harmonics requires a fast nonlinear device.

Step recovery diodes.

Microwave generators may use a step recovery diode impulse generator followed by a tunable YIG filter. The YIG filter has a yttrium iron garnet sphere that is tuned with a magnetic field. The step recovery diode impulse generator is driven at a subharmonic of the desired output frequency. An electromagnet then tunes the YIG filter to select the desired harmonic.[2]

Varactor diode edit

Resistive loaded varactors. Regenerative varactors. Penfield.

Frequency multipliers have much in common with frequency mixers, and some of the same nonlinear devices are used for both: transistors operated in Class C and diodes. In transmitting circuits many of the amplifying devices (vacuum tubes or transistors) operate nonlinearly and create harmonics, so an amplifier stage can be made a multiplier by tuning the tuned circuit at the output to a multiple of the input frequency. Usually the power (gain) produced by the nonlinear device drops off rapidly at the higher harmonics, so most frequency multipliers just double or triple the frequency, and multiplication by higher factors is accomplished by cascading doubler and tripler stages.

Previous uses edit

Frequency multipliers use circuits tuned to a harmonic of the input frequency. Non-linear elements such as diodes may be added to enhance the production of harmonic frequencies. Since the power in the harmonics declines rapidly, usually a frequency multiplier is tuned to only a small multiple (twice, three times, or five times) of the input frequency. Usually amplifiers are inserted in a chain of frequency multipliers to ensure adequate signal level at the final frequency.

Since the tuned circuits have a limited bandwidth, if the base frequency is changed significantly (more than one percent or so), the multiplier stages may have to be adjusted; this can take significant time if there are many stages.

Microelectromechanical (MEMS) frequency doubler edit

An electric-field driven micromechanical cantilever resonator is one of the most fundamental and widely studied structures in MEMS, which can provide a high Q and narrow bandpass filtering function. The inherent square-law nonlinearity of the voltage-to-force transfer function of a cantilever resonator's capacitive transducer can be employed for the realization of frequency doubling effect.[3] Due to the low-loss attribute (or equivalently, a high Q) offered by MEMS devices, improved circuit performance can be expected from a micromechanical frequency doubler than semiconductor devices utilized for the same task.[4]

Graphene based frequency multipliers edit

Graphene based FETs have also been employed for frequency doubling with more than 90% converting efficiency.[5][6]

In fact, all ambipolar transistors can be used for designing frequency multiplier circuits.[7] Graphene can work over a large frequency range due to its unique characteristics.[8]

Phase-locked loops with frequency dividers edit

A phase-locked loop (PLL) uses a reference frequency to generate a multiple of that frequency. A voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) is initially tuned roughly to the range of the desired frequency multiple. The signal from the VCO is divided down using frequency dividers by the multiplication factor. The divided signal and the reference frequency are fed into a phase comparator. The output of the phase comparator is a voltage that is proportional to the phase difference. After passing through a low pass filter and being converted to the proper voltage range, this voltage is fed to the VCO to adjust the frequency. This adjustment increases the frequency as the phase of the VCO's signal lags that of the reference signal and decreases the frequency as the lag decreases (or lead increases). The VCO will stabilize at the desired frequency multiple. This type of PLL is a type of frequency synthesizer.

Fractional-N synthesizer edit

In some PLLs the reference frequency may also be divided by an integer multiple before being input to the phase comparator. This allows the synthesis of frequencies that are N/M times the reference frequency.

This can be accomplished in a different manner by periodically changing the integer value of an integer-N frequency divider, effectively resulting in a multiplier with both whole number and fractional component. Such a multiplier is called a fractional-N synthesizer after its fractional component.[failed verification] Fractional-N synthesizers provide an effective means of achieving fine frequency resolution with lower values of N, allowing loop architectures with tens of thousands of times less phase noise than alternative designs with lower reference frequencies and higher integer N values. They also allow a faster settling time because of their higher reference frequencies, allowing wider closed and open loop bandwidths.[citation needed]

Delta sigma synthesizer edit

A delta sigma synthesizer adds a randomization to programmable-N frequency divider of the fractional-N synthesizer. This is done to shrink sidebands created by periodic changes of an integer-N frequency divider.

PLL References edit

  • Egan, William F. 2000. Frequency Synthesis by Phase-lock, 2nd Ed., John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-32104-4
  • Fractional N frequency synthesizer with modulation compensation U.S. Patent 4,686,488, Attenborough, C. (1987, August 11)
  • Programmable fractional-N frequency synthesizer U.S. Patent 5,224,132, Bar-Giora Goldberg, (1993, June 29)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ For example, the old Hewlett Packard 83590A.
  2. ^ Technology Description: YIG Tuned Oscillators (PDF), Fremont, CA: Micro Lambda Wireless, retrieved 18 May 2012
  3. ^ Basu, Joydeep; Bhattacharyya, Tarun K. (2013). "Microelectromechanical system cantilever-based frequency doublers". Journal of Intelligent Material Systems and Structures. 24 (2): 240–246. arXiv:1210.3491. doi:10.1177/1045389X12461695. S2CID 1266952.
  4. ^ Jing Wang; Ren, Z.; Nguyen, C.T.-C. (2004). "1.156-GHz self-aligned vibrating micromechanical disk resonator". IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control. 51 (12): 1607–1628. doi:10.1109/TUFFC.2004.1386679. PMID 15690722. S2CID 9498440.
  5. ^ Wang, Han; Nezich, D.; Kong, Jing; Palacios, T. (2009). "Graphene Frequency Multipliers" (PDF). IEEE Electron Device Letters. 30 (5): 547–549. Bibcode:2009IEDL...30..547H. doi:10.1109/LED.2009.2016443. hdl:1721.1/54736. S2CID 9317247.
  6. ^ Wang, Zhenxing; Zhang, Zhiyong; Xu, Huilong; Ding, Li; Wang, Sheng; Peng, Lian-Mao (2010). "A high-performance top-gate graphene field-effect transistor based frequency doubler". Applied Physics Letters. 96 (17): 173104. Bibcode:2010ApPhL..96q3104W. doi:10.1063/1.3413959.
  7. ^ Wang, Zhenxing; Liang, Shibo; Zhang, Zhiyong; Liu, Honggang; Zhong, Hua; Ye, Lin-Hui; Wang, Sheng; Zhou, Weiwei; Liu, Jie; Chen, Yabin; Zhang, Jin; Peng, Lian-Mao (2014). "Scalable Fabrication of Ambipolar Transistors and Radio-Frequency Circuits Using Aligned Carbon Nanotube Arrays". Advanced Materials. 26 (4): 645–652. Bibcode:2014AdM....26..645W. doi:10.1002/adma.201302793. PMID 24458579. S2CID 20376132.
  8. ^ Kabir, Hussain Mohammed Dipu; Salahuddin, S.M. (2017). "A frequency multiplier using three ambipolar graphene transistors". Microelectronics Journal. 70: 12–15. doi:10.1016/j.mejo.2017.10.002. S2CID 31657795.

frequency, multiplier, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Frequency multiplier news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards No cleanup reason has been specified Please help improve this article if you can July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message In electronics a frequency multiplier is an electronic circuit that generates an output signal and that output frequency is a harmonic multiple of its input frequency Frequency multipliers consist of a nonlinear circuit that distorts the input signal and consequently generates harmonics of the input signal A subsequent bandpass filter selects the desired harmonic frequency and removes the unwanted fundamental and other harmonics from the output Frequency multipliers are often used in frequency synthesizers and communications circuits It can be more economical to develop a lower frequency signal with lower power and less expensive devices and then use a frequency multiplier chain to generate an output frequency in the microwave or millimeter wave range Some modulation schemes such as frequency modulation survive the nonlinear distortion without ill effect but schemes such as amplitude modulation do not Frequency multiplication is also used in nonlinear optics The nonlinear distortion in crystals can be used to generate harmonics of laser light Contents 1 Theory 2 Circuits 2 1 Diode 2 2 Class C amplifier and multiplier 2 3 Step recovery diode 2 4 Varactor diode 2 5 Previous uses 2 6 Microelectromechanical MEMS frequency doubler 2 7 Graphene based frequency multipliers 3 Phase locked loops with frequency dividers 3 1 Fractional N synthesizer 3 1 1 Delta sigma synthesizer 3 2 PLL References 4 See also 5 ReferencesTheory editA pure sine wave has a single frequency f x t A sin 2 p f t displaystyle x t A sin 2 pi ft nbsp If the sine wave is applied to a linear circuit such as a non distortion amplifier the output is still a sine wave but may acquire a phase shift However if the sine wave is applied to a nonlinear circuit the resulting distortion creates harmonics frequency components at integer multiples nf of the fundamental frequency f The distorted signal can be described by a Fourier series in f x t k c k e j 2 p k f t displaystyle x t sum k infty infty c k e j2 pi kft nbsp The nonzero ck represent the generated harmonics The Fourier coefficients are given by integrating over the fundamental period T c k 1 2 p 0 T x t e j 2 p k t T d t displaystyle c k frac 1 2 pi int 0 T x t e j2 pi kt T dt nbsp So a frequency multiplier can be built from a nonlinear electronic component which generates a series of harmonics followed by a bandpass filter which passes one of the harmonics to the output and blocks the others From a conversion efficiency standpoint the nonlinear circuit should maximize the coefficient for the desired harmonic and minimize the others Consequently the transcribing function is often specially chosen Easy choices are to use an even function to generate even harmonics or an odd function for odd harmonics See Even and odd functions Harmonics A full wave rectifier for example is good for making a doubler To produce a times 3 multiplier the original signal may be input to an amplifier that is over driven to produce nearly a square wave This signal is high in 3rd order harmonics and can be filtered to produce the desired x3 outcome YIG multipliers often want to select an arbitrary harmonic so they use a stateful distortion circuit that converts the input sine wave into an approximate impulse train The ideal but impractical impulse train generates an infinite number of weak harmonics In practice an impulse train generated by a monostable circuit will have many usable harmonics YIG multipliers using step recovery diodes may for example take an input frequency of 1 to 2 GHz and produce outputs up to 18 GHz 1 Sometimes the frequency multiplier circuit will adjust the width of the impulses to improve conversion efficiency for a specific harmonic Circuits editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2019 Diode edit Clipping circuits Full wave bridge doubler Class C amplifier and multiplier edit Efficiently generating power becomes more important at high power levels Linear Class A amplifiers are at best 25 percent efficient Push pull Class B amplifiers are at best 50 percent efficient The basic problem is the amplifying element is dissipating power Switching Class C amplifiers are nonlinear but they can be better than 50 percent efficient because an ideal switch does not dissipate any power A clever design can use the nonlinear Class C amplifier for both gain and as a frequency multiplier Step recovery diode edit Generating a large number of useful harmonics requires a fast nonlinear device Step recovery diodes Microwave generators may use a step recovery diode impulse generator followed by a tunable YIG filter The YIG filter has a yttrium iron garnet sphere that is tuned with a magnetic field The step recovery diode impulse generator is driven at a subharmonic of the desired output frequency An electromagnet then tunes the YIG filter to select the desired harmonic 2 Varactor diode edit Resistive loaded varactors Regenerative varactors Penfield Frequency multipliers have much in common with frequency mixers and some of the same nonlinear devices are used for both transistors operated in Class C and diodes In transmitting circuits many of the amplifying devices vacuum tubes or transistors operate nonlinearly and create harmonics so an amplifier stage can be made a multiplier by tuning the tuned circuit at the output to a multiple of the input frequency Usually the power gain produced by the nonlinear device drops off rapidly at the higher harmonics so most frequency multipliers just double or triple the frequency and multiplication by higher factors is accomplished by cascading doubler and tripler stages Previous uses edit Frequency multipliers use circuits tuned to a harmonic of the input frequency Non linear elements such as diodes may be added to enhance the production of harmonic frequencies Since the power in the harmonics declines rapidly usually a frequency multiplier is tuned to only a small multiple twice three times or five times of the input frequency Usually amplifiers are inserted in a chain of frequency multipliers to ensure adequate signal level at the final frequency Since the tuned circuits have a limited bandwidth if the base frequency is changed significantly more than one percent or so the multiplier stages may have to be adjusted this can take significant time if there are many stages Microelectromechanical MEMS frequency doubler edit An electric field driven micromechanical cantilever resonator is one of the most fundamental and widely studied structures in MEMS which can provide a high Q and narrow bandpass filtering function The inherent square law nonlinearity of the voltage to force transfer function of a cantilever resonator s capacitive transducer can be employed for the realization of frequency doubling effect 3 Due to the low loss attribute or equivalently a high Q offered by MEMS devices improved circuit performance can be expected from a micromechanical frequency doubler than semiconductor devices utilized for the same task 4 Graphene based frequency multipliers edit Graphene based FETs have also been employed for frequency doubling with more than 90 converting efficiency 5 6 In fact all ambipolar transistors can be used for designing frequency multiplier circuits 7 Graphene can work over a large frequency range due to its unique characteristics 8 Phase locked loops with frequency dividers editA phase locked loop PLL uses a reference frequency to generate a multiple of that frequency A voltage controlled oscillator VCO is initially tuned roughly to the range of the desired frequency multiple The signal from the VCO is divided down using frequency dividers by the multiplication factor The divided signal and the reference frequency are fed into a phase comparator The output of the phase comparator is a voltage that is proportional to the phase difference After passing through a low pass filter and being converted to the proper voltage range this voltage is fed to the VCO to adjust the frequency This adjustment increases the frequency as the phase of the VCO s signal lags that of the reference signal and decreases the frequency as the lag decreases or lead increases The VCO will stabilize at the desired frequency multiple This type of PLL is a type of frequency synthesizer Fractional N synthesizer edit In some PLLs the reference frequency may also be divided by an integer multiple before being input to the phase comparator This allows the synthesis of frequencies that are N M times the reference frequency This can be accomplished in a different manner by periodically changing the integer value of an integer N frequency divider effectively resulting in a multiplier with both whole number and fractional component Such a multiplier is called a fractional N synthesizer after its fractional component failed verification Fractional N synthesizers provide an effective means of achieving fine frequency resolution with lower values of N allowing loop architectures with tens of thousands of times less phase noise than alternative designs with lower reference frequencies and higher integer N values They also allow a faster settling time because of their higher reference frequencies allowing wider closed and open loop bandwidths citation needed Delta sigma synthesizer edit A delta sigma synthesizer adds a randomization to programmable N frequency divider of the fractional N synthesizer This is done to shrink sidebands created by periodic changes of an integer N frequency divider PLL References edit Egan William F 2000 Frequency Synthesis by Phase lock 2nd Ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 32104 4 Fractional N frequency synthesizer with modulation compensation U S Patent 4 686 488 Attenborough C 1987 August 11 Programmable fractional N frequency synthesizer U S Patent 5 224 132 Bar Giora Goldberg 1993 June 29 See also editHeterostructure barrier varactor CPU multiplierReferences edit For example the old Hewlett Packard 83590A Technology Description YIG Tuned Oscillators PDF Fremont CA Micro Lambda Wireless retrieved 18 May 2012 Basu Joydeep Bhattacharyya Tarun K 2013 Microelectromechanical system cantilever based frequency doublers Journal of Intelligent Material Systems and Structures 24 2 240 246 arXiv 1210 3491 doi 10 1177 1045389X12461695 S2CID 1266952 Jing Wang Ren Z Nguyen C T C 2004 1 156 GHz self aligned vibrating micromechanical disk resonator IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control 51 12 1607 1628 doi 10 1109 TUFFC 2004 1386679 PMID 15690722 S2CID 9498440 Wang Han Nezich D Kong Jing Palacios T 2009 Graphene Frequency Multipliers PDF IEEE Electron Device Letters 30 5 547 549 Bibcode 2009IEDL 30 547H doi 10 1109 LED 2009 2016443 hdl 1721 1 54736 S2CID 9317247 Wang Zhenxing Zhang Zhiyong Xu Huilong Ding Li Wang Sheng Peng Lian Mao 2010 A high performance top gate graphene field effect transistor based frequency doubler Applied Physics Letters 96 17 173104 Bibcode 2010ApPhL 96q3104W doi 10 1063 1 3413959 Wang Zhenxing Liang Shibo Zhang Zhiyong Liu Honggang Zhong Hua Ye Lin Hui Wang Sheng Zhou Weiwei Liu Jie Chen Yabin Zhang Jin Peng Lian Mao 2014 Scalable Fabrication of Ambipolar Transistors and Radio Frequency Circuits Using Aligned Carbon Nanotube Arrays Advanced Materials 26 4 645 652 Bibcode 2014AdM 26 645W doi 10 1002 adma 201302793 PMID 24458579 S2CID 20376132 Kabir Hussain Mohammed Dipu Salahuddin S M 2017 A frequency multiplier using three ambipolar graphene transistors Microelectronics Journal 70 12 15 doi 10 1016 j mejo 2017 10 002 S2CID 31657795 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frequency multiplier amp oldid 1167478115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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