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cascode amplifier

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cascode amplifier

[′ka‚skōd ′am·plə‚fī·ər]
(electronics)
An amplifier consisting of a grounded-emitter input stage that drives a grounded-base output stage; advantages include high gain and low noise; widely used in television tuners.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Cascode amplifier

An amplifier stage consisting of a common-emitter transistor cascaded with a common-base transistor (see illustration). The common-emitter-common-base (CE-CB) transistor pair constitutes a multiple active device which essentially corresponds to a common-emitter stage with improved high-frequency performance. In monolithic integrated-circuit design the use of such active compound devices is much more economical than in discrete designs. A similar compound device is the common-collector-common-emitter connection (CC-CE), also known as the Darlington pair. See Integrated circuits

Cascade amplifierenlarge picture
Cascade amplifier

The cascode connection is especially useful in wideband amplifier design as well as the design of high-frequency tuned amplifier stages. The improvement in high-frequency performance is due to the impedance mismatch between the output of the common-emitter stage and the input of the common-base stage.

Another important characteristic of the cascode connection is the higher isolation between its input and output than for a single common-emitter stage, because the reverse transmission across the compound device stage is much smaller than for the common-emitter stage. In effect, the second (common-base) transistor acts as an impedance transformer. This isolation effect makes the cascode configuration particularly attractive for the design of high-frequency tuned amplifier stages where the parasitic cross-coupling between the input and the output circuits can make the amplifier alignment very difficult. See Amplifier, Transistor

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Engineering. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
M2 PRESSWIRE-September 4, 2019-: Deep Technology Analysis of the UnitedSiC Cascode JFET 650V Family
The common source (CS) and cascode topologies are used at millimeter frequencies._A transistor in common source has low power gain, problems with stability, and low output impedance.
Kim and Kim (2009)haveproposedalowpower temperature monitoring circuit with some transistors in sub-threshold and some in super threshold region and also the authors have used a cascode configuration in their work.
The proposed topology includes an interesting power saving strategy in which a single NMOS cascode current mirror serves three functions simultaneously; it conveys X terminal current to Z output, provides high impedance at Z terminal and helps further reducing the X terminal impedance by establishing a negative feedback loop.
Nevertheless, many LNA designs feature a cascode configuration as shown in Figure 7.
Clock or circuit reuse, module time-sharing, PSRR cascode current source mirror bias circuit, and subthreshold technology bias transistors can further reduce power consumption.
Explanation of finest design of CMOS-based folded cascode op-amp is extensively discussed by us in [7] and will not be covered here.
The replica folded cascode amplifier gives a low output offset voltage (lesser than 8 mV) up to 300 MHz, and the source-buffered folded cascode amplifier shows a low output offset voltage beyond 300 MHz's.
Snook et al., "Large area silicon carbide vertical JFETs for 1200 V cascode switch operation," International Journal of Power Management Electronics, vol.
The noise temperature can be reduced further by using a cascode configuration or by employing multiple amplifiers working in parallel to reduce noise statistically.
Differential Cascode Voltage Switch Logic (DCVSL) [6] is a static style which is beneficial from circuit delay, layout density, logic flexibility, and power consumption.
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