anyone have a pin diode linearizer schematic handy?
Thanks, Rich
Here is HSMP-3816 Application. I don't know whether it will help you or not.
No Tony, I am looking for the op amp driver circuit that drives the microwave portion.
I did find this one:
Application Notes
The last diagram on the page looks promising, but it looks unnecesarrily complex. I was hoping to do the same thing with one op amp and one transistor! That diagram also probably needs some speed-up capacitors around the output transitor.
Rich
maybe you can use HMC346 and ...
Do you mean something like this?
Sign under the figure in Russian means: the schematic of the absorbing ladder type attenuator with a certain law of change of diodes resistance.
Left connector is input.
Yes Ledum, that is the microwave structure I am trying to drive. I have 4 pin diodes, and they are all fed from one common bias point. I need to take a control voltage input, and convert it to a diode driving current so that dB Insersion Loss is propostional to Vcontrol input.
Tony, that is a good circuit, but the HMC device is a FET based switch (voltage controlled), so I am not so sure that driver will work with a PIN diode attenuator.
Hi, biff44,
HMC346LP3 is a voltage-variable attenuator, I think if use HMC346LP3E, you don't need use PIN diode any more. Attached is HMC346 voltage vs. attenuation. But I don't know what's your requirement on phase.
We used topology like at attachment (alumina 0.5mm, resistors - tantalum thin film 50 ohms per square). Diodes were old soviet 2A533A-3 p-i-n diodes (all sizes in mm, Cd=0.05pF, Ubr=70V). Control law was very close to the linear. Regulation range at Vmod 0-12V (current 0-100mA) was 35dB for 4 diodes configuration in half-octave band near 12GHz. Loss at 0V control voltage was something like 1.5 dB. But, it was 25 years ago. I think tony_lth is right about HMC346LP3
I have the above HMC346 + opamp circuit somewhere already milled onto a PCB. I tested this circuit a few years ago.
I don't recall it being that linear in terms of Volts vs attenuation. Also the control V vs attenuation was a bit iffy over temperature on the higher attenuation settings.
But it was still a useful attenuator :)
I guess biff44 need control circuits between detector and attenuators, not RF circuits.
