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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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We have seen that:
1. Sensitivity determines the minimum carrier level which allows to handle required modulation index. A pn diode has the best *potential* sensitivity. (Only liquid nitrogen can improve it further. Sigh...) A tube is four times worse. 2. For an unbiased detector modulation handling always reduces with audio frequency, for the biased one -- it stays close to 100% till a certain frequency, then starts to fall. 3. An unbiased detector HF high-level performance does not depend on the signal level, whilst for the biased detector works worse and worse (slew rate wise) with the carrier increasing. This it requires an efficient (delayed and amplified AGC). === How to properly bias the diode in an unbiased detector ==== Everyone knows that differential resistance of a pn diode is approximately Rd = 25 Ohms / I, where I - current trough the diode in mA. What is the differential resistance of a diode with no bias, at low voltage (10mV)? Is it infinitely high? The answer is "No". A diode acts as a resistor at low voltages. In fact, the above formula is not correct. More correct version of it should be: Rd = 25 Ohm / (Io + I), where Io - so called saturation current or reverse current of the diode in mA; I - current flowing through the diode in mA. This equation is derived from I = Io * (exp (e*V / kT) - 1). Note that in part 1 I deliberately omitted " -1" for simplicity. For a silicon diode Io, the reverse current, is of the order of picoamps, therefore, with no bias (I = 0) its resistance Rd is gigaohms, virtually infinite. For a germanium diode reverse current Io is in the range of 0.5...5uA. for example, if Io = 1uA, then Rd = 25KOhm. Now consider you use a germanium diode with Io=1uA in a conventional booooring detector fed from a Hi-Z IFT with no cathode follower. For a low signal the rectifier is virtually shunted by Rd which is as low as 25K in this case. Needless to say that the low Rd=25K will be greatly shunting the LC tank which normally has 100...300K of resonance impedance. The detector will lose its sensitivity. Reducing Io improves performance. You can try the following experiment. In a booring radio replace a vacuum diode with a germanium point contact one. Most likely sensitivity of the radio will drop. Now cool the diode by spraying it with CO2 or some quickly evaporating liquid. The radio will come to life. Warm the diode by a soldering iron -- the radio will become completely dead. Note that Io changes 2 times per 10 degrees, Rd changes reciprocally in the same proportion. Now it is easy to explaim why Partick ended up with 3 germanium diodes in series. He connected them in series to increse Rd. Probably each of his diodes had about 0.5uA of reverse current (Rd = 50K). Three diodes would have 150K which is sort of OK. Connecting more diodes in series though increases Rd, reduces the sensitivity as the RF voltage is divided between the diodes. If one diode needs 25mV of RF to rectify, three diodes need 75mV, etc. So there somwhere lies the optimum number of the diodes in the chain. Too few -- you shunt the LC tank and lose gain, too many -- you raise the sensitivity threshold. If Patrick happen to experiment on a cold winter day, perhaps we would have heard about "two diodes". If Partick had chosen to fix his radio during a scourching 45C heatwave, then today we would have heard his stories about four Germanium diodes... Mystery solved... But what is the best Rd of a diode to use as a detector? To answer the question consider the following. Everyone knows that an equivalent load the detector presents to the IFT at high signal is R/2. It is logical to presume that at low signal (25mV) the load on IFT shall also be R/2 -- so that IFT does not "see" a differenc in load over the whole range and thus works with the least distortion and losses. In a common boooooring detector R is about 500K. Thus Rd shall be 250K, which translates into 100nA of the diode reverse current. One germanium diode has higher reverse current and therefore unsuitable. What about a silicon diode with a negligible Io? The answer is obvious -- bias it so that at no signal the current through the diode is 100nA. Or on the load it will translate into 50mV of DC voltage drop. That is the rule: bias a silicon diode to have 50mV across the load. (Use a hi-Z multimeter for this purpose). The bias voltage must be temperature compensated, so it must be taken from an auxiliary forward biased diode. If you want to use a germanium diode, you need to reverse (!!!) bias it, so that Io + I = 100nA. For example, if your Ge diode has 1uA of reverse current, then you need reverse bias it so that --900nA is flowing, or --45mV is on the load. Needless to say, it is impractical to do so given that Io depends on temperature. So, do not use Ge diodes in Hi-Z detectors. (With Io=1uA a Ge diode will be perfect in a detector with R=50K, not 500K.) What to do if you are not looking forward to complications with forward biasing Si diodes? Then... use Schottky diodes!!!! They have Io from 10nA to 500nA depending on the type. Buy a dozen of 1N5711 Schootky diodes and select the ones with suitable Io. To measure Io use a multimeter in a mV range in series with the diode under test and any battery, e.g., 9V battery. Multimeters have either 1M or 10M input resistance. (To find this out measure say a 9V battery with 1M in series with the DVM. It will either show 4.5V or 8.5V). Aim at lower than 100nA taking into account heating of the chassis in operation. What about properly biasing a tube detector. The above concept still applies, but because of higher temperature, for a tube diode Rd is 4 times greater. Rd = 100R / I. So for a boooring detector with R=500K emission current at no signal should be around 400nA, or 200mV across the load. If your detector diode is decent, like 6AL5, you will probably have more. For example, in my Lafayette HE-80 receiver I have about 390mV. The detector is overbiased and is excessively loading the IFT. Therefore I need to additionally reverse bias the circuit by connectin the load resistor not to GND, but to some negative voltage. Even better to reduce the heater voltage to have, without signal, about 200mVdc on the load . If your vacuum diode is feeble as 6AV6 or 6Q7, etc. your emission current might be not enough to deliver 200mV at 500K load. In this case you might like to add slight positive bias to the circuit. |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On Jul 18, 8:18*pm, "Alex Pogossov" wrote:
We have seen that: 1. Sensitivity determines the minimum carrier level which allows to handle required modulation index. A pn diode has the best *potential* sensitivity. (Only liquid nitrogen can improve it further. Sigh...) A tube is four times worse. 2. For an unbiased detector modulation handling always reduces with audio frequency, for the biased one -- it stays close to 100% till a certain frequency, then starts to fall. 3. An unbiased detector HF high-level performance does not depend on the signal level, whilst for the biased detector works worse and worse (slew rate wise) with the carrier increasing. This it requires an efficient (delayed and amplified AGC). === How to properly bias the diode in an unbiased detector ==== Everyone knows that differential resistance of a pn diode is approximately Rd = 25 Ohms / I, where I - current trough the diode in mA. What is the differential resistance of a diode with no bias, at low voltage (10mV)? Is it infinitely high? The answer is "No". A diode acts as a resistor at low voltages. In fact, the above formula is not correct. More correct version of it should be: Rd = 25 Ohm / (Io + I), where Io - so called saturation current or reverse current of the diode in mA; I - current flowing through the diode in mA. This equation is derived from I = Io * (exp (e*V / kT) - 1). Note that in part 1 I deliberately omitted " -1" for simplicity. For a silicon diode Io, the reverse current, is of the order of picoamps, therefore, with no bias (I = 0) its resistance Rd is gigaohms, virtually infinite. For a germanium diode reverse current Io is in the range of 0.5...5uA. for example, if Io = 1uA, then Rd = 25KOhm. Now consider you use a germanium diode with Io=1uA in a conventional booooring detector fed from a Hi-Z IFT with no cathode follower. For a low signal the rectifier is virtually shunted by Rd which is as low as 25K in this case. Needless to say that the low Rd=25K will be greatly shunting the LC tank which normally has 100...300K of resonance impedance. The detector will lose its sensitivity. Reducing Io improves performance. You can try the following experiment. In a booring radio replace a vacuum diode with a germanium point contact one. Most likely sensitivity of the radio will drop. Now cool the diode by spraying it with CO2 or some quickly evaporating liquid. The radio will come to life. Warm the diode by a soldering iron -- the radio will become completely dead. OK, at last you are saying something to make me think. Temperature sensitivity of Ge diodes. I didn't give that any thought. Note that Io changes 2 times per 10 degrees, Rd changes reciprocally in the same proportion. Now it is easy to explaim why Partick ended up with 3 germanium diodes in series. He connected them in series to increse Rd. Probably each of his diodes had about 0.5uA of reverse current (Rd = 50K). Three diodes would have 150K which is sort of OK. Connecting more diodes in series though increases Rd, reduces the sensitivity as the RF voltage is divided between the diodes. If one diode needs 25mV of RF to rectify, three diodes need 75mV, etc. So there somwhere lies the optimum number of the diodes in the chain. Too few -- you shunt the LC tank and lose gain, too many -- you raise the sensitivity threshold. If Patrick happen to experiment on a cold winter day, perhaps we would have heard about "two diodes". If Partick had chosen to fix his radio during a scourching 45C heatwave, then today we would have heard his stories about four Germanium diodes... I did the circuit on a cool but not icy day, and found diodes seemed to give much less THD than 1 diode. But then in practice, the set will warm up on a hot day under the chassis, and so that Ge diode idea might have to be chopped right out and better proven solution be installed. Mystery solved... But what is the best Rd of a diode to use as a detector? To answer the question consider the following. Everyone knows that an equivalent load the detector presents to the IFT at high signal is R/2. It is logical to presume that at low signal (25mV) the load on IFT shall also be R/2 -- so that IFT does not "see" a differenc in load over the whole range and thus works with the least distortion and losses. In a common boooooring detector R is about 500K. Thus Rd shall be 250K, which translates into 100nA of the diode reverse current. One germanium diode has higher reverse current and therefore unsuitable. What about a silicon diode with a negligible Io? The answer is obvious -- bias it so that at no signal the current through the diode is 100nA. Or on the load it will translate into 50mV of DC voltage drop. That is the rule: bias a silicon diode to have 50mV across the load. (Use a hi-Z multimeter for this purpose). The bias voltage must be temperature compensated, so it must be taken from an auxiliary forward biased diode. If you want to use a germanium diode, you need to reverse (!!!) bias it, so that Io + I = 100nA. For example, if your Ge diode has 1uA of reverse current, then you need reverse bias it so that --900nA is flowing, or --45mV is on the load. Needless to say, it is impractical to do so given that Io depends on temperature. So, do not use Ge diodes in Hi-Z detectors. (With Io=1uA a Ge diode will be perfect in a detector with R=50K, not 500K.) What to do if you are not looking forward to complications with forward biasing Si diodes? Then... use Schottky diodes!!!! They have Io from 10nA to 500nA depending on the type. Buy a dozen of 1N5711 Schootky diodes and select the ones with suitable Io. To measure Io use a multimeter in a mV range in series with the diode under test and any battery, e.g., 9V battery. Multimeters have either 1M or 10M input resistance. (To find this out measure say a 9V battery with 1M in series with the DVM. It will either show 4.5V or 8.5V). Aim at lower than 100nA taking into account heating of the chassis in operation. Not many schottky diodes are being sold at electronics stores here. The conversion of the highZ IFT signal in an AM radio to low Z by use of a tube CF seems to overcome the problems of using SS diodes at the high Z circuit. The more you say about SS diodes, the less I like them, unless the signal source d low Z, and the problems you are saying would then all dissappear, no? My CRO tells me the CF detector I like to use is the best type I have ever observed or listened to. What about properly biasing a tube detector. The above concept still applies, but because of higher temperature, for a tube diode Rd is 4 times greater. Rd = 100R / I. So for a boooring detector with R=500K emission current at no signal should be around 400nA, or 200mV across the load. If your detector diode is decent, like 6AL5, you will probably have more. For example, in my Lafayette HE-80 receiver I have about 390mV. The detector is overbiased and is excessively loading the IFT. Therefore I need to additionally reverse bias the circuit by connectin the load resistor not to GND, but to some negative voltage. Even better to reduce the heater voltage to have, without signal, about 200mVdc on the load . If your vacuum diode is feeble as 6AV6 or 6Q7, etc. your emission current might be not enough to deliver 200mV at 500K load. In this case you might like to add slight positive bias to the circuit. A schematic of just what the heck you are saying might improve everyone's comprehension. I think I might have to wait years though, so meanwhile I'll stay with what I know works real well. Patrick Turner. |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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On Jul 18, 7:02*am, Patrick Turner wrote:
On Jul 18, 8:18*pm, "Alex Pogossov" wrote: We have seen that: 1. Sensitivity determines the minimum carrier level which allows to handle required modulation index. A pn diode has the best *potential* sensitivity. (Only liquid nitrogen can improve it further. Sigh...) A tube is four times worse. 2. For an unbiased detector modulation handling always reduces with audio frequency, for the biased one -- it stays close to 100% till a certain frequency, then starts to fall. 3. An unbiased detector HF high-level performance does not depend on the signal level, whilst for the biased detector works worse and worse (slew rate wise) with the carrier increasing. This it requires an efficient (delayed and amplified AGC). === How to properly bias the diode in an unbiased detector ==== Everyone knows that differential resistance of a pn diode is approximately Rd = 25 Ohms / I, where I - current trough the diode in mA. What is the differential resistance of a diode with no bias, at low voltage (10mV)? Is it infinitely high? The answer is "No". A diode acts as a resistor at low voltages. In fact, the above formula is not correct. More correct version of it should be: Rd = 25 Ohm / (Io + I), where Io - so called saturation current or reverse current of the diode in mA; I - current flowing through the diode in mA. This equation is derived from I = Io * (exp (e*V / kT) - 1). Note that in part 1 I deliberately omitted " -1" for simplicity. For a silicon diode Io, the reverse current, is of the order of picoamps, therefore, with no bias (I = 0) its resistance Rd is gigaohms, virtually infinite. For a germanium diode reverse current Io is in the range of 0.5...5uA. for example, if Io = 1uA, then Rd = 25KOhm. Now consider you use a germanium diode with Io=1uA in a conventional booooring detector fed from a Hi-Z IFT with no cathode follower. For a low signal the rectifier is virtually shunted by Rd which is as low as 25K in this case. Needless to say that the low Rd=25K will be greatly shunting the LC tank which normally has 100...300K of resonance impedance. The detector will lose its sensitivity. Reducing Io improves performance. You can try the following experiment. In a booring radio replace a vacuum diode with a germanium point contact one.. Most likely sensitivity of the radio will drop. Now cool the diode by spraying it with CO2 or some quickly evaporating liquid. The radio will come to life. Warm the diode by a soldering iron -- the radio will become completely dead. OK, at last you are saying something to make me think. Temperature sensitivity of Ge diodes. I didn't give that any thought. Note that Io changes 2 times per 10 degrees, Rd changes reciprocally in the same proportion. Now it is easy to explaim why Partick ended up with 3 germanium diodes in series. He connected them in series to increse Rd. Probably each of his diodes had about 0.5uA of reverse current (Rd = 50K). Three diodes would have 150K which is sort of OK. Connecting more diodes in series though increases Rd, reduces the sensitivity as the RF voltage is divided between the diodes. If one diode needs 25mV of RF to rectify, three diodes need 75mV, etc. So there somwhere lies the optimum number of the diodes in the chain. Too few -- you shunt the LC tank and lose gain, too many -- you raise the sensitivity threshold. If Patrick happen to experiment on a cold winter day, perhaps we would have heard about "two diodes". If Partick had chosen to fix his radio during a scourching 45C heatwave, then today we would have heard his stories about four Germanium diodes... I did the circuit on a cool but not icy day, and found diodes seemed to give much less THD than 1 diode. But then in practice, the set will warm up on a hot day under the chassis, and so that Ge diode idea might have to be chopped right out and better proven solution be installed. Mystery solved... But what is the best Rd of a diode to use as a detector? To answer the question consider the following. Everyone knows that an equivalent load the detector presents to the IFT at high signal is R/2. It is logical to presume that at low signal (25mV) the load on IFT shall also be R/2 -- so that IFT does not "see" a differenc in load over the whole range and thus works with the least distortion and losses. In a common boooooring detector R is about 500K. Thus Rd shall be 250K, which translates into 100nA of the diode reverse current. One germanium diode has higher reverse current and therefore unsuitable. What about a silicon diode with a negligible Io? The answer is obvious -- bias it so that at no signal the current through the diode is 100nA. Or on the load it will translate into 50mV of DC voltage drop. That is the rule: bias a silicon diode to have 50mV across the load. (Use a hi-Z multimeter for this purpose). The bias voltage must be temperature compensated, so it must be taken from an auxiliary forward biased diode.. If you want to use a germanium diode, you need to reverse (!!!) bias it, so that Io + I = 100nA. For example, if your Ge diode has 1uA of reverse current, then you need reverse bias it so that --900nA is flowing, or --45mV is on the load. Needless to say, it is impractical to do so given that Io depends on temperature. So, do not use Ge diodes in Hi-Z detectors. (With Io=1uA a Ge diode will be perfect in a detector with R=50K, not 500K.) What to do if you are not looking forward to complications with forward biasing Si diodes? Then... use Schottky diodes!!!! They have Io from 10nA to 500nA depending on the type. Buy a dozen of 1N5711 Schootky diodes and select the ones with suitable Io. To measure Io use a multimeter in a mV range in series with the diode under test and any battery, e.g., 9V battery. Multimeters have either 1M or 10M input resistance. (To find this out measure say a 9V battery with 1M in series with the DVM. It will either show 4.5V or 8.5V). Aim at lower than 100nA taking into account heating of the chassis in operation. Not many schottky diodes are being sold at electronics stores here. The conversion of the highZ IFT signal in an AM radio to low Z by use of a tube CF seems to overcome the problems of using SS diodes at the high Z circuit. *The more you say about SS diodes, the less I like them, unless the signal source d low Z, and the problems you are saying would then all dissappear, no? My CRO tells me the CF detector I like to use is the best type I have ever observed or listened to. What about properly biasing a tube detector. The above concept still applies, but because of higher temperature, for a tube diode Rd is 4 times greater. Rd = 100R / I. So for a boooring detector with R=500K emission current at no signal should be around 400nA, or 200mV across the load. If your detector diode is decent, like 6AL5, you will probably have more. For example, in my Lafayette HE-80 receiver I have about 390mV. The detector is overbiased and is excessively loading the IFT. Therefore I need to additionally reverse bias the circuit by connectin the load resistor not to GND, but to some negative voltage. Even better to reduce the heater voltage to have, without signal, about 200mVdc on the load . If your vacuum diode is feeble as 6AV6 or 6Q7, etc. your emission current might be not enough to deliver 200mV at 500K load. In this case you might like to add slight positive bias to the circuit. A schematic of just what the heck you are saying might improve everyone's comprehension. I think I might have to wait years though, so meanwhile I'll stay with what I know works real well. Patrick Turner.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Cat's whisker ! |
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