Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier

Linearity and efficiency are both critical parameters for radio frequency transmitter applications. In theory, a Doherty amplifier is a linear amplifier that is significantly more efficient than comparable conventional linear amplifiers. It comprises two amplifiers, connected at their outputs by a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Karla Jenny Isabella
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Electrical and Computer Engineering 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2856
id ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-2856
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-28562015-03-30T15:29:05ZGate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty AmplifierSmith, Karla Jenny Isabellamicrowave power amplifierDoherty amplifierbias controlFET soft turn-onRF power amplifierharmonic load modulationLinearity and efficiency are both critical parameters for radio frequency transmitter applications. In theory, a Doherty amplifier is a linear amplifier that is significantly more efficient than comparable conventional linear amplifiers. It comprises two amplifiers, connected at their outputs by a quarter-wave transformer. The main amplifier is always on, while the peaking amplifier is off during low power levels. Load modulation of the main amplifier occurs when the peaking amplifier is on due to the quarter-wave transformer, ensuring the main amplifier never enters saturation. This results in an efficiency characteristic that increases with respect to input power at twice the normal rate at low power levels, and plateaus to a high value at high power levels. However, in much of the research that has been done to-date, less-than-ideal results have been achieved (although efficiency was better than a conventional amplifier). It was decided to investigate the cause of the discrepancy between theoretical and practical results, and devise a method to counteract the problem. It was discovered that the main cause of the discrepancy was non-ideal transistor gate-voltage to drain-current characteristics. The implementation of a gate bias control scheme based upon measured transistor transfer characteristics, and the desired main and peaking amplifier output currents, resulted in a robust method to ensure near-ideal results. A prototype amplifier was constructed to test the control scheme, and theoretical, simulated and measured results were well matched. The amplifier had a region of high efficiency in the high power levels (over 34% for the last 6 dB of input power), and the gain was nearly constant with respect to input power (between 4 and 5 dB over the dynamic range). Furthermore, it was decided to investigate the role harmonics play within the Doherty amplifier. A classical implementation shunts unwanted harmonics to ground within the main and peaking amplifiers. However, odd harmonics generated by the peaking amplifier can be used to operate the main amplifier like a class F amplifier. This means its supply voltage can be lowered, without the amplifier entering saturation, and the efficiency of the Doherty amplifier can be increased without a detrimental effect on the its linearity. A prototype amplifier was constructed to test this theory, and gave good results, with better efficiency than that of a conventional amplifier, and a constant gain with respect to input power (between 6.4 dB and 6.5 dB over the dynamic range).University of Canterbury. Electrical and Computer Engineering2009-09-17T00:03:51Z2009-09-17T00:03:51Z2009Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/2856enNZCUCopyright Karla Jenny Isabella Smithhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic microwave power amplifier
Doherty amplifier
bias control
FET soft turn-on
RF power amplifier
harmonic load modulation
spellingShingle microwave power amplifier
Doherty amplifier
bias control
FET soft turn-on
RF power amplifier
harmonic load modulation
Smith, Karla Jenny Isabella
Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier
description Linearity and efficiency are both critical parameters for radio frequency transmitter applications. In theory, a Doherty amplifier is a linear amplifier that is significantly more efficient than comparable conventional linear amplifiers. It comprises two amplifiers, connected at their outputs by a quarter-wave transformer. The main amplifier is always on, while the peaking amplifier is off during low power levels. Load modulation of the main amplifier occurs when the peaking amplifier is on due to the quarter-wave transformer, ensuring the main amplifier never enters saturation. This results in an efficiency characteristic that increases with respect to input power at twice the normal rate at low power levels, and plateaus to a high value at high power levels. However, in much of the research that has been done to-date, less-than-ideal results have been achieved (although efficiency was better than a conventional amplifier). It was decided to investigate the cause of the discrepancy between theoretical and practical results, and devise a method to counteract the problem. It was discovered that the main cause of the discrepancy was non-ideal transistor gate-voltage to drain-current characteristics. The implementation of a gate bias control scheme based upon measured transistor transfer characteristics, and the desired main and peaking amplifier output currents, resulted in a robust method to ensure near-ideal results. A prototype amplifier was constructed to test the control scheme, and theoretical, simulated and measured results were well matched. The amplifier had a region of high efficiency in the high power levels (over 34% for the last 6 dB of input power), and the gain was nearly constant with respect to input power (between 4 and 5 dB over the dynamic range). Furthermore, it was decided to investigate the role harmonics play within the Doherty amplifier. A classical implementation shunts unwanted harmonics to ground within the main and peaking amplifiers. However, odd harmonics generated by the peaking amplifier can be used to operate the main amplifier like a class F amplifier. This means its supply voltage can be lowered, without the amplifier entering saturation, and the efficiency of the Doherty amplifier can be increased without a detrimental effect on the its linearity. A prototype amplifier was constructed to test this theory, and gave good results, with better efficiency than that of a conventional amplifier, and a constant gain with respect to input power (between 6.4 dB and 6.5 dB over the dynamic range).
author Smith, Karla Jenny Isabella
author_facet Smith, Karla Jenny Isabella
author_sort Smith, Karla Jenny Isabella
title Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier
title_short Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier
title_full Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier
title_fullStr Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier
title_full_unstemmed Gate Bias Control and Harmonic Load Modulation for a Doherty Amplifier
title_sort gate bias control and harmonic load modulation for a doherty amplifier
publisher University of Canterbury. Electrical and Computer Engineering
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2856
work_keys_str_mv AT smithkarlajennyisabella gatebiascontrolandharmonicloadmodulationforadohertyamplifier
_version_ 1716798534299156480