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Winfield Hill wrote:
Phil Hobbs wrote... Tom Bruhns wrote: So the right way to do this is to lower the _effective_ minimum capacitance. You can do that by adding an inductor, to cancel out capacitance. You can end up making the tuning range as wide as you want, but at the expense of the crystal (ceramic resonator in your case) being less of the overall frequency determination. In other words, there comes a point where you'd be as well off to just do an LC oscillator. But to double, say, the range, it's a good way to go. I guess I re-discovered what was already well known, but a few years ago I designed such a VCXO, and was amazed how linear the freq-vs-controlvoltage curve was (a good thing for use in a PLL). Don't know what range you're trying to achieve, but I had no trouble getting a bit more than 0.1% (~20kHz at 14MHz) that way, with a crystal. An inductor in series with the varactors, then another one in parallel with the series combo can get you a very wide range of impedance from a decent varactor. Sounds good. How about a specific example? Thanks, - Win whill_at_picovolt-dot-com Last time I used this was with an MV104 common-cathode dual hyperabrupt, to make a 110-MHz phase shifter. It used a Mini-Circuits quadrature hybrid in the usual way, coming in the 0 degree port, coming out the 180 degree port, and hanging matched reactances on the 90 degree ports. Each section had its own inductors, and the cathodes were bypassed heavily (1000 pF) to ground so that the two sides didn't interact too much. The component values were 45 nH in series and 43 nH in parallel. It was linear to within +-4 degrees, and the one section gave phase shifts from 12 to 164 degrees, both dramatically better than I could get with a bare varactor. The idea is to have the varactor resonate with the series inductor just off the low-voltage end of the range, and have the series combination resonate with the parallel L just off the high-voltage end of the range. Since the series-resonance doesn't even notice the parallel L, the design equations decouple nicely, too. You adjust the placement of the resonances to get the range and linearity desired. Cheers, Phil Hobbs |