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| I know that the question in my message title may seem weird. The thing is I have to design a sine wave oscillator. It's probably going to be a Colpitts kind, built around a JFET device. I think I know how to do it, at least, I have a few links (epanorama.net and so on) related to it. But the problem is that the operating frequency will be 10 MHz and I don't know if I have to model the transistor with the S or Y parameters. I've read small frequencies go up to 100 KHz and I do know 1 GHz is high-frequency (well, so anybody does !!). What about a 10 Mhz circuit, then ? Thanks beforehand Last edited by Electrolinux; 5th September 2006 at 10:56 PM. | |
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| Would it be the same for a band pass filter with 10 MHz as the center frequency? | |
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| The wavelength of 10MHz in air is about 30 meters, so you shouldn't need to worry about impedance matching except when driving an antenna (for optimum power transfer) or long transmission lines (like 3 meters or more). In my experience, Smith charts are mostly useful for looking at port impedances, return loss, etc., so the same thing is true. As your prof said, pay fairly close attention to layout, including planes, crosstalk, supply decoupling, etc. For a bandpass filter, you will have to consider stray and device capacitance if you want the design to be predictable. Last edited by Roff; 6th September 2006 at 03:14 AM. | |
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