Again, the common emitter amplifier gives you 180deg of phase change. If
this were to be applied directly to the base of the transistor through only
a resistor, you would get direct cancellation at a level determnined by the
size of the resistor. The feedback network throws in a phase change
proportional to the tangent of the reactance and the resistance part of the
network. I think the tangent function for the feedback will look something
like:
w(k1) / [k2 + w(k3)]
where w is the radian freq. and k1, k2, and k3 are constants made up of R1,
R2, and C. k1 = C(R2)**2 or something like that.
As the freq goes up the phase change gets larger - i.e. it moves the phase
difference between the collector and the base away from 180deg., which
means less negative feedback. The maximum phase change contribution from
the RC network would be 45deg as w gets very, very large (arctan 1 = 45).
As the frequency goes down, the phase change contribution from the RC
circuit gets to be smaller and smaller which means the feedback moves
closer and closer to being 180deg - which means more negative feedback. (as
w approaches zero arctan 0 = 0)
This is probably only good for RF frequencies. Say, above 1Mhz. I would have
to actually write out the transfer characteristic and graph it to see
exactly what happens. Conceptually, it makes sense though.
I think to actually figure this out you will need to write the gain
transfer equation for the amplifier. Many of the replies here are talking
about an RF amplifier but are analyzing the feedback at DC.
Remember that the output of a transistor is NOT in phase with the input.
As the base voltage goes UP the collector voltage goes DOWN. (think of a
transistor used as a switch - when the base is biased off the no current
flows and the collector is at power supply potential - when the switch is
biased on then current flows and the collector is driven toward the
potential of the emitter -- i.e. the collector voltage goes down) For RF
the actual phase difference between input and output is dependent upon
the input and output impedances of the transistor as well as the gain
transfer characteristic (things like transit times of the current
carriers and junctions widths and all sorts of stuff figure in here).
*THEN* you have to consider the phase contribution of the RC network in
the collector to base network. At some RF frequency the collector is
180deg out of phase with the input so a direct feedback link from the
collector to the base would be *negative*. It is quite possible that the
phase relationships of this particular amplifier are such that the
negative feedback increases as the frequency goes down.
You would just have to write the equations and see where they take you.