"johna@m"  schreef in bericht 
  oups.com... 
 Hello All, 
 
 I am trying to simulate a simple AM receiver circuit with diode 
 detector. I am assuming that the signal received from the antenna 
 (simulated with a voltage source) has a weak amplitude (around 100 uV) 
 and a high frequency (around 600 Khz). The issue is that the current 
 after the diode does not get rectified. The output current is very weak 
 (less than 250pA) and still contains the full sine signal (both halves 
 of signals). 
 
 When I try the simulation with smaller frequencies (around 5kHz) and 
 higher amplitude (around 0.2 v), the signal gets correctly 
 half-rectified, but not anymore when I work with higher frequencies and 
 smaller signals. 
 
 In real schematic for AM simple receiver, there is no amplification 
 bewteen the antenna (and the tuning LC circuit) and the diode. So how 
 the diode manage to half-rectifies correctly in real operating mode 
 when the signal is weak and high frequencies, which is the case of real 
 radio signals. 
 
 I use Ansoft Simplorer mainly. Any other simulators recommended ? 
 Thanks in advance and best regards, 
 
The answer to your question is that real, simple AM receivers - crystal 
sets - only work where the received signal is quite high. They tend to use 
fast, low capacitance diodes. The term "rectifier" tends to be used for 
bigger, slower diodes basically intended to handle around an ampere of 
current from a 50/60Hz source, that look like capacitors in RF circuits. 
 
Practical AM receivers always amplify the signal before they detect it, and 
usually "mix" the amplified signal from the antenna with the output from a 
local oscillator at different, if similar, frequency chosen to be 455kHz 
away for the transmitted signal. The nominally 455kHz component coming out 
of the mixer is then filtered by an elaborate bandpass filter to reject all 
the other components, further amplified, and only then detected. 
 
Search on "superheterodyne". 
 
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Bill Sloman, Nijmegen 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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