US2369030A - Amplifier circuit - Google Patents

Amplifier circuit Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2369030A
US2369030A US450015A US45001542A US2369030A US 2369030 A US2369030 A US 2369030A US 450015 A US450015 A US 450015A US 45001542 A US45001542 A US 45001542A US 2369030 A US2369030 A US 2369030A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
circuit
thermistor
amplifier
source
waves
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US450015A
Inventor
Paul G Edwards
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US450015A priority Critical patent/US2369030A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2369030A publication Critical patent/US2369030A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03FAMPLIFIERS
    • H03F1/00Details of amplifiers with only discharge tubes, only semiconductor devices or only unspecified devices as amplifying elements
    • H03F1/34Negative-feedback-circuit arrangements with or without positive feedback
    • H03F1/36Negative-feedback-circuit arrangements with or without positive feedback in discharge-tube amplifiers

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the amplification of electrical waves for signaling or like purposes, and particularly to the use of a. negative resistance device, such as a thermistor, in wave amplification.
  • An object of the invention is an amplifier of simplified and economical construction capable of increased utility and effectiveness.
  • negative resistance elements including thermistors, such as those disclosed by Pearson, are well adapted for use in the plate circuit of a vacuum tube amplifier and can be used in this way to modify in some desirable manner the operation of the vacuum tube circuit.
  • the vacuum tube has to be supplied with space current from a battery or similar source, and the impedance of a thermistor, for example, can readily be made of such value that, when placed in series relation between the load, the plate battery and the cathode-anode terminals of the vacuum tube, the current passing through the thermistor brings it into its negative resistance region.
  • the amplification factor of the circuit may thus be increased in a. very simple and economical way, or the operation of the circuit can be modified or controlled in other respects.
  • the thermistor is placed in parallel relation with the cathode-anode terminals of the tube as regards the direct current circuit, and in series with the alternating current output circuit.
  • Fig. 1 is a simple schematic circuit diagram showing one manner of associating a thermistor with an amplifier in accordance with this invention
  • Figs. 4 and 5 show frequency characteristics obtainable with the circuit of Fig. 3.
  • the vacuum tube 1 has its input or grid circuit coupled to a source of waves 2 to be amplified, through input coupling coil 3.
  • the output for the amplified waves leads to any suitable utilization circuit shown as indicator 4 through output coupling coil 5.
  • the grid is pro- .vided with the usual bias battery 6, and the plate is supplied with space current from plate battery 1.
  • the thermistor 8 which may be of any suitable construction, such as the type shown in the Pearson patent.
  • the source 2 may be a telephone transmitter or line in which case the tube I operates as a voice current amplifier.
  • the indicator 4 would then be a telephone receiver or loudspeaker.
  • This example is cited to make it clear that the invention contemplates the amplification of a band of frequencies of which the voice band is illustrative.
  • the band may be narrower or wider than the speech band within the capabilities of the apparatus, especially the thermistor.
  • the thermistor 8 is to have a sufilciently high speed of response to give a negative resistance effect at the highest frequency of the band to give the greatest effect, although, if desired, the thermistor could operate over a chosen part only of the total band.
  • the thermistor Assuming the thermistor to have an amplifying characteristic covering the band represented by the waves from source 2, this amplification is added to that of the tube I above to give increased amplification of the band.
  • the tube I being a unilateral transducer, prevents the thermistor from amplifying toward the source 2.
  • the tube i need not, of course, be a triode but could be a pentode or other type tube.
  • the gain frequency characteristic of the circuit asa whole is determined in part by the tube I and in part by the thermistor 8. By controlling the design of the thermistor, a control is had over the gain frequency characteristic of the circuit. .It is commonin the art to use shaping networks which are attenuators.
  • the thermistor can be used to provide a gain up to a certain frequency after which itbecomes a loss, at higher frequencies, depending upon its design. It offers a possibility, therefore, of use as a shaping network operating with an intrinsic gain over part or all of the utilized frequency range. For this purpose it can have shaping networks associated with it if desired.
  • thermistor resistance lowers the effective plate voltage since it is directly in series with battery I and the plate.
  • a parallel supply is shown in Fig. 2.
  • the plate bein supplied through mpedance in, and th signal or alternating path continuing through blocking condenser II to the thermistor 8 and output.
  • couplin'g. Bias current for the thermistor is supplied through resistor I! which may 'be adjustable.
  • Shaping networks l3 and M are shown associated with thermistor 8. Either or both may be omitted over By throwing the switch i to the right the thermistor is connected in circuit with series condenser By-pass resistance I8 is provided for the direct current. In either position of the switch l5, the thermistor is provided with energizing current from plate battery I through series resistance I!) to bias the thermistor to its negative resistance region.
  • Figs. 6 and 7 show the thermistor 8 connected in the negative feedback connection of an amplifier.- In Fig. 6 the thermistor is placed in the cathode lead and is common to the grid and plate circuits. .In Fig. 7, a hybrid coil type of feedback is used. In both cases the energizing current for the thermistor is obtained fromthe plate supply. The feedback action is controlled by the characteristic of the thermistor. thermistor has associated with it elements to give it a marked frequency characteristic as in Fig. 3,
  • a vacuum tube amplifier circuit comprising an input circuit including a source of input waves of given frequencies and an output circuit including a load for using the amplified waves, a thermistor having a frequency of response including at least some of the input wave frequencies, and means coupling said thermistor to said If the vacuum tube amplifier circuit in series relation to said load to modify the amplifying action of the circuit for said waves such that the modified amplifying action for waves of a frequency corresponding to the thermistor frequency response is in opposite relation to the modified amplifying action for waves of other frequencies.
  • An amplifier circuit having an input circuit and an output circuit, a source of input waves connected to the input circuit for amplification by said amplifier circuit, a load and a thermistor connected in series with each other in said output circuit, said thermistor having a response frequency the same as certain of the input wave frequencies for selectively modifying the frequency amplitude characteristic of said amplifier circuit such that the amplitudes of input waves of frequencies equivalent to the thermistor response frequency and the amplitudes of input waves of other frequencies are modified in opposite sense.
  • a circuit according to claim 2 including a source of anode current for said amplifier circuit which embodies an anode-cathode discharge path, and means connecting said thermistor in series between said source of anode current and the anode-cathode discharge path.
  • An amplifier having a space discharge path, an input circuit and an output circuit, a source of input waves connected to said input circuit for amplification by said amplifier, a source of anode current for said amplifier, a response device for said waves connected to said output circuit, a thermistor connected in said output circuit in series relation to said device for further amplifying said input waves and connections for energizing saidthermistor from said source of anode current.
  • An amplifying circuit for currents of a cerwill range of frequencies comprising a vacuum tube amplifier having a cathode-anode space path and current source therefor, said amplifier amplifying the currents of said frequency range, and a semiconductor negative resistance device exnibiting series negative resistance properties throughout said frequency range connected in the output circuit of said vacuum tube amplifier and energized from said source for further amplifying said currents of said frequency range, and a utilization circuit for the amplified waves serially related to said device.
  • An amplifying circuit comprising a space discharge device amplifier having a source of space current and means for continuously increasing the amplifying action of said circuit comprising a solid element series negative resistance in circuit with said space discharge device and energized :by current from said source, and a utilization circuit for the amplified currents serially related to said negative resistance element.
  • a space discharge tube amplifier having a source of space current, a thermistor having a thermal lag whereby said thennistor has an inductive component of impedance, means to connect said thermistor in circuit with said tube and to energize said thermistor from said source', and a capacitive reactance in circuit with said thermistor and resonating therewith to modify the gain frequency characteristic of said amplifying circuit.
  • a circuit according to claim 8 in which said space discharge tube amplifier has an alternatin current output circuit for the amplified waves, said thermistor being connected in series in said output circuit.
  • a vacuum tube amplifier having an input circuit and an output circuit for amplifying waves of a band of frequencies, a source of space current therefor, a feedback path from said output circuit to said input circuit for said waves, and a thermistor in said feedback path introducing a negative resistance into said path at frequencies within said band, and mean to energize said thermistor from said source.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Amplifiers (AREA)

Description

P. G. EDWARDS Feb. 6, 1945.
' AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT Filed July '7, 1942 1 HERMIS TOR 4 FIG. I
IND/CA TOR I l my.
- FIG. 3
i H 7 g /5 T i a m T a [a FREQ. F IG. 5
INVENTOR P. G. EDWARDS ATTORNEY Patented Feb. 6, 1945 AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT Paul G. Edwards, Verona, N. J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratorie York, N. Y., a corporatio Application July 7, 1942, Serial No. 450,015
10 Claims.
The present invention relates to the amplification of electrical waves for signaling or like purposes, and particularly to the use of a. negative resistance device, such as a thermistor, in wave amplification.
An object of the invention is an amplifier of simplified and economical construction capable of increased utility and effectiveness.
It is known that certain substances, such as semi-conductors including certain crystals or compounds of certain uranium oxides, of boron and of other elements can be made to exhibit negative resistance efi'ects by use of a direct current bias to bring the device to the proper region of its volt-ampere characteristic where the slope is in the negative direction. More recently improvements in the construction of thermistor elements have greatly increased the range of frequencies over which they are responsive so that it is practical to use them for amplifying waves covering the speech band or an even wider band. Examples of such construction are given in United States patent to G. L. Pearson 2,276,864, March 17, 1942,
I have found that negative resistance elements including thermistors, such as those disclosed by Pearson, are well adapted for use in the plate circuit of a vacuum tube amplifier and can be used in this way to modify in some desirable manner the operation of the vacuum tube circuit. The vacuum tube has to be supplied with space current from a battery or similar source, and the impedance of a thermistor, for example, can readily be made of such value that, when placed in series relation between the load, the plate battery and the cathode-anode terminals of the vacuum tube, the current passing through the thermistor brings it into its negative resistance region. The amplification factor of the circuit may thus be increased in a. very simple and economical way, or the operation of the circuit can be modified or controlled in other respects. In other circuit arrangements the thermistor is placed in parallel relation with the cathode-anode terminals of the tube as regards the direct current circuit, and in series with the alternating current output circuit. I
The nature and objects of the invention will'appear more fully from the following detailed description of certain illustrative embodiments as given in the attached drawing.
Fig. 1 is a simple schematic circuit diagram showing one manner of associating a thermistor with an amplifier in accordance with this invention;
s, Incorporated, New
n of New York Figs. 2, 3, 6, and 7 show other circuit arrangements according to the invention; and
Figs. 4 and 5 show frequency characteristics obtainable with the circuit of Fig. 3.
In Fig. 1, the vacuum tube 1 has its input or grid circuit coupled to a source of waves 2 to be amplified, through input coupling coil 3. The output for the amplified waves leads to any suitable utilization circuit shown as indicator 4 through output coupling coil 5. The grid is pro- .vided with the usual bias battery 6, and the plate is supplied with space current from plate battery 1. Included in series between the battery I and the plate is the thermistor 8, which may be of any suitable construction, such as the type shown in the Pearson patent.
In this circuit the source 2 may be a telephone transmitter or line in which case the tube I operates as a voice current amplifier. The indicator 4 would then be a telephone receiver or loudspeaker. This example is cited to make it clear that the invention contemplates the amplification of a band of frequencies of which the voice band is illustrative. The band may be narrower or wider than the speech band within the capabilities of the apparatus, especially the thermistor. Taking the speech band as illustrative, the thermistor 8 is to have a sufilciently high speed of response to give a negative resistance effect at the highest frequency of the band to give the greatest effect, although, if desired, the thermistor could operate over a chosen part only of the total band. Assuming the thermistor to have an amplifying characteristic covering the band represented by the waves from source 2, this amplification is added to that of the tube I above to give increased amplification of the band. The tube I, being a unilateral transducer, prevents the thermistor from amplifying toward the source 2. The tube i need not, of course, be a triode but could be a pentode or other type tube. The gain frequency characteristic of the circuit asa whole is determined in part by the tube I and in part by the thermistor 8. By controlling the design of the thermistor, a control is had over the gain frequency characteristic of the circuit. .It is commonin the art to use shaping networks which are attenuators. The thermistor can be used to provide a gain up to a certain frequency after which itbecomes a loss, at higher frequencies, depending upon its design. It offers a possibility, therefore, of use as a shaping network operating with an intrinsic gain over part or all of the utilized frequency range. For this purpose it can have shaping networks associated with it if desired.
In the circuit of Fig. 1. the thermistor resistance lowers the effective plate voltage since it is directly in series with battery I and the plate. A parallel supply is shown in Fig. 2. the plate bein supplied through mpedance in, and th signal or alternating path continuing through blocking condenser II to the thermistor 8 and output. couplin'g. Bias current for the thermistor is supplied through resistor I! which may 'be adjustable.
Shaping networks l3 and M are shown associated with thermistor 8. Either or both may be omitted over By throwing the switch i to the right the thermistor is connected in circuit with series condenser By-pass resistance I8 is provided for the direct current. In either position of the switch l5, the thermistor is provided with energizing current from plate battery I through series resistance I!) to bias the thermistor to its negative resistance region.
With switch IS in the position shown, a gain frequency characteristic like that of Fig. 4 is obtained. At the frequency f of resonance, a dip is produced in the characteristic because of the high series attenuation in the signal output branch at this frequency. The impedance of the thermistor and attenuation of the transformers at very low frequencies near zero account for the falling ofi of the gain characteristic at low frequencies.
With the switch l5 thrown to the right, a gain frequency characteristic of the Fig. 5 type is obtained. Here the series attenuation in the output signal branch is high except at the frequency f of resonance, where it falls to a very low value giving a gain peak.
Figs. 6 and 7 show the thermistor 8 connected in the negative feedback connection of an amplifier.- In Fig. 6 the thermistor is placed in the cathode lead and is common to the grid and plate circuits. .In Fig. 7, a hybrid coil type of feedback is used. In both cases the energizing current for the thermistor is obtained fromthe plate supply. The feedback action is controlled by the characteristic of the thermistor. thermistor has associated with it elements to give it a marked frequency characteristic as in Fig. 3,
a band elimination efiect can be obtained with the circuits of Figs. 6 and 7.
With the foregoing as illustrative examples,
still other circuit modifications will occur to those skilled in the art within the spirit and scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
1. A vacuum tube amplifier circuit comprising an input circuit including a source of input waves of given frequencies and an output circuit including a load for using the amplified waves, a thermistor having a frequency of response including at least some of the input wave frequencies, and means coupling said thermistor to said If the vacuum tube amplifier circuit in series relation to said load to modify the amplifying action of the circuit for said waves such that the modified amplifying action for waves of a frequency corresponding to the thermistor frequency response is in opposite relation to the modified amplifying action for waves of other frequencies.
2. An amplifier circuit having an input circuit and an output circuit, a source of input waves connected to the input circuit for amplification by said amplifier circuit, a load and a thermistor connected in series with each other in said output circuit, said thermistor having a response frequency the same as certain of the input wave frequencies for selectively modifying the frequency amplitude characteristic of said amplifier circuit such that the amplitudes of input waves of frequencies equivalent to the thermistor response frequency and the amplitudes of input waves of other frequencies are modified in opposite sense.
3. A circuit according to claim 2 including a source of anode current for said amplifier circuit which embodies an anode-cathode discharge path, and means connecting said thermistor in series between said source of anode current and the anode-cathode discharge path.
4. An amplifier having a space discharge path, an input circuit and an output circuit, a source of input waves connected to said input circuit for amplification by said amplifier, a source of anode current for said amplifier, a response device for said waves connected to said output circuit, a thermistor connected in said output circuit in series relation to said device for further amplifying said input waves and connections for energizing saidthermistor from said source of anode current.
5. A two-stage amplifying circuit of which the first stage comprises a space discharge vacuum tube amplifier having the usual space current supply source and the second stage comprises a negative resistance of the series type serially included in the output circuit of said vacuum tube amplifier between said supply source and the space discharge path of said vacuum tube and receiving its energy of amplification from said source, and a utilization circuit for the amplified output in series with said negative resistance.
6. An amplifying circuit for currents of a cerwill range of frequencies comprising a vacuum tube amplifier having a cathode-anode space path and current source therefor, said amplifier amplifying the currents of said frequency range, and a semiconductor negative resistance device exnibiting series negative resistance properties throughout said frequency range connected in the output circuit of said vacuum tube amplifier and energized from said source for further amplifying said currents of said frequency range, and a utilization circuit for the amplified waves serially related to said device.
7. An amplifying circuit comprising a space discharge device amplifier having a source of space current and means for continuously increasing the amplifying action of said circuit comprising a solid element series negative resistance in circuit with said space discharge device and energized :by current from said source, and a utilization circuit for the amplified currents serially related to said negative resistance element.
Y 8. In an amplifying circuit for a band of frequencies, a space discharge tube amplifier having a source of space current, a thermistor having a thermal lag whereby said thennistor has an inductive component of impedance, means to connect said thermistor in circuit with said tube and to energize said thermistor from said source', and a capacitive reactance in circuit with said thermistor and resonating therewith to modify the gain frequency characteristic of said amplifying circuit.
9. A circuit according to claim 8 in which said space discharge tube amplifier has an alternatin current output circuit for the amplified waves, said thermistor being connected in series in said output circuit.
10. A vacuum tube amplifier having an input circuit and an output circuit for amplifying waves of a band of frequencies, a source of space current therefor, a feedback path from said output circuit to said input circuit for said waves, and a thermistor in said feedback path introducing a negative resistance into said path at frequencies within said band, and mean to energize said thermistor from said source.
PAUL G. EDWARDS.
US450015A 1942-07-07 1942-07-07 Amplifier circuit Expired - Lifetime US2369030A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US450015A US2369030A (en) 1942-07-07 1942-07-07 Amplifier circuit

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US450015A US2369030A (en) 1942-07-07 1942-07-07 Amplifier circuit

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2369030A true US2369030A (en) 1945-02-06

Family

ID=23786407

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US450015A Expired - Lifetime US2369030A (en) 1942-07-07 1942-07-07 Amplifier circuit

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2369030A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2548901A (en) * 1947-07-23 1951-04-17 Time Inc Cathode compensated electronic tube circuit
US2563773A (en) * 1946-07-30 1951-08-07 Sonotone Corp Audio-frequency amplifier
US2598478A (en) * 1948-02-05 1952-05-27 Gen Electric Degenerative feedback radio amplifying system
US2675477A (en) * 1947-01-27 1954-04-13 Teszner Stanislas Modulator for pulse transmitters
US2794864A (en) * 1952-08-01 1957-06-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Nonreciprocal circuits employing negative resistance elements
US2862109A (en) * 1954-08-11 1958-11-25 Westinghouse Electric Corp Phototransistor light detector
US2889416A (en) * 1955-03-30 1959-06-02 Gen Electric Temperature compensated transistor amplifier
US2925559A (en) * 1955-10-28 1960-02-16 Honeywell Regulator Co Temperature compensated feedback transistor circuits
US2945123A (en) * 1954-04-30 1960-07-12 Phillips Petroleum Co Mass spectrometer
US3732564A (en) * 1951-04-10 1973-05-08 Us Navy Pulse doppler fuze

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2563773A (en) * 1946-07-30 1951-08-07 Sonotone Corp Audio-frequency amplifier
US2675477A (en) * 1947-01-27 1954-04-13 Teszner Stanislas Modulator for pulse transmitters
US2548901A (en) * 1947-07-23 1951-04-17 Time Inc Cathode compensated electronic tube circuit
US2598478A (en) * 1948-02-05 1952-05-27 Gen Electric Degenerative feedback radio amplifying system
US3732564A (en) * 1951-04-10 1973-05-08 Us Navy Pulse doppler fuze
US2794864A (en) * 1952-08-01 1957-06-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Nonreciprocal circuits employing negative resistance elements
US2945123A (en) * 1954-04-30 1960-07-12 Phillips Petroleum Co Mass spectrometer
US2862109A (en) * 1954-08-11 1958-11-25 Westinghouse Electric Corp Phototransistor light detector
US2889416A (en) * 1955-03-30 1959-06-02 Gen Electric Temperature compensated transistor amplifier
US2925559A (en) * 1955-10-28 1960-02-16 Honeywell Regulator Co Temperature compensated feedback transistor circuits

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2173427A (en) Electric oscillator
US2369030A (en) Amplifier circuit
US2752432A (en) Tone-control circuit-arrangement for use in low-frequency amplifier
US2208665A (en) Amplifier circuits with controlled gain
US1477017A (en) Current-controlling and static-reducing system
US2281644A (en) Inverse feedback amplifier
US2463533A (en) Electrical impedance matching apparatus
US1711658A (en) Current-controlling and static-reducing system
US2468205A (en) Volume controlled sound reinforcement system
US1734219A (en) Transmission regulation
US2266168A (en) Amplifier
US2449971A (en) Apparatus for reducing noise in microphone circuits
US2366565A (en) Audio-frequency amplifier
US2141944A (en) Automatic volume control for amplifiers
US2417844A (en) Radio receiver
US1693401A (en) Telephone circuits and apparatus
US1681102A (en) Oscillation-control circuits
US2207933A (en) Tuned ultra high frequency amplifier
US2162744A (en) Amplifier
US2255479A (en) Automatic level control decoupler
US2182100A (en) Automatic volume control device for wave transmission systems
US3142801A (en) Portable call-signal receiver with power saving means
US2269654A (en) Video amplifier
US3132207A (en) Microphone amplifier
US1497299A (en) System of wave transmission