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Clapp oscillator

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The Clapp oscillator or Gouriet oscillator is an LC electronic oscillator that uses a particular combination of an inductor and three capacitors to set the oscillator's frequency. LC oscillators use a transistor (or vacuum tube or other gain element) and a positive feedback network. The oscillator has good frequency stability.

History

The Clapp oscillator design was published by James Kilton Clapp in 1948.[1] According to Vačkář,[2] oscillators of this kind were independently developed by several inventors, and one developed by Gouriet had been in operation at the BBC since 1938.

Circuit

Clapp oscillator (direct-current biasing network not shown)

The Clapp oscillator uses a single inductor and three capacitors to set its frequency. The Clapp oscillator is often drawn as a Colpitts oscillator that has an additional capacitor (C0) placed in series with the inductor.[3]

The oscillation frequency in Hertz (cycles per second) for the circuit in the figure, which uses a field-effect transistor (FET), is

The capacitors C1 and C2 are usually larger than C0, so the 1/C0 term dominates the other capacitances, and the frequency is near the series resonance of L and C0.

Capacitors C0, C1 and C2 form a voltage divider that determines the amount of feedback voltage applied to the transistor input.

Although, the Clapp circuit is used as a variable frequency oscillator (VFO) by making C0 a variable capacitor, Vačkář states that the Clapp oscillator "can only be used for operation on fixed frequencies or at the most over narrow bands (max. about 1:1.2)."[4] The problem is that under typical conditions, the Clapp oscillator's loop gain varies as 1/f3. For VFOs, Vačkář recommends other circuits. See Vačkář oscillator.

References

  1. ^ Clapp, J. K. (March 1948). "An inductance-capacitance oscillator of unusual frequency stability". Proc. IRE. 367: 356–358.
  2. ^ Vačkář, Jiri. LC Oscillators and their Frequency Stability (PDF) (Report). TESLA. TESLA Report 1949, ch. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-24. Retrieved 2008-12-20. {{cite report}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Department of the Army (1963) [1959]. Basic Theory and Application of Transistors. Dover. pp. 171–173. TM 11-690. Modification of the Colpitts oscillator by including a capacitor in series with winding 1–2 of the transformer results in the Clapp oscillator.
  4. ^ Vačkář, pp. 5–6

Further reading

  • Ulrich L. Rohde, Ajay K. Poddar, Georg Böck "The Design of Modern Microwave Oscillators for Wireless Applications ", John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, May, 2005, ISBN 0-471-72342-8.
  • George Vendelin, Anthony M. Pavio, Ulrich L. Rohde " Microwave Circuit Design Using Linear and Nonlinear Techniques ", John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, May, 2005, ISBN 0-471-41479-4.
  • A. Grebennikov, RF and Microwave Transistor Oscillator Design. Wiley 2007. ISBN 978-0-470-02535-2.