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[AMPS] Conjugate Matching and Efficiency

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Subject: [AMPS] Conjugate Matching and Efficiency
From: W8JI@contesting.com (Tom Rauch)
Date: Fri, 25 May 2001 22:37:42 -0400
I haven't been following this....but....

> BILLY:
> But, the series C will be dissipating the unwanted power--not reflecting
> it. 
>   If you want proof of that use a low voltage cap and feel for the heat.

The only possible heat source in a reactance is due to loss 
resistance. In a good quality capacitor, loss is almost zero.

Small mica caps can be as low as 500 in Q, but transmitting caps 
are normally far into the 1000's. Chip caps can be in the ten's of 
thousands and higher.

In that case, the component is virtually lossless.

The bulk of efficiency loss in a transmitting system is due to 
dissipative resistances in the energy conversion device that 
converts dc to RF. That loss is a function of the time-varying 
resistance of the device and the current through the device at every 
instant of time integrated over a period of time.

Not all reflected power increases device dissipation. Some load 
phase angles reduce device dissipation. Of course this also 
reduces power from the dc source, efficiency can drop even while 
power dissipation is reduced by a mismatch. In a case like this, a 
class AB PA can shift into class C operation. This is the source of 
destructive voltages when PA's are mistuned or under some 
conditions of load faults. It is easy to produce voltages far in 
excess of the normal operating voltages, because PA conduction  
angle can be much shorter than 180 degrees even in PA's biased 
for AB operation.  

On the other hand some phase angles will cause the device to 
conduct longer, and increase output device dissipation.

This is why theorems like the conjugate match theorem have to 
stop short of predicting things that happen in non-linear areas of a 
system, like at the source. The PA device is generally like a diode 
in series with a time-varying resistance. The tank (or low-pass filter) 
becomes an energy storage system, like a flyback transformer, 
and dissipates very little power.     


73, Tom W8JI
W8JI@contesting.com 

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