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The cascode is a two-stage
amplifier An amplifier, electronic amplifier or (informally) amp is an electronic device that can increase the magnitude of a signal (a time-varying voltage or current). It may increase the power significantly, or its main effect may be to boost th ...
that consists of a common-emitter stage feeding into a common-base stage. Compared to a single amplifier stage, this combination may have one or more of the following characteristics: higher input–output isolation, higher
input impedance The input impedance of an electrical network is the measure of the opposition to current ( impedance), both static (resistance) and dynamic ( reactance), into the load network that is ''external'' to the electrical source. The input admittance (the ...
, high output impedance, higher bandwidth. In modern circuits, the cascode is often constructed from two
transistor upright=1.4, gate (G), body (B), source (S) and drain (D) terminals. The gate is separated from the body by an insulating layer (pink). A transistor is a semiconductor device used to Electronic amplifier, amplify or electronic switch, switch ...
s ( BJTs or FETs), with one operating as a
common emitter In electronics, a common-emitter amplifier is one of three basic single-stage bipolar-junction-transistor (BJT) amplifier topologies, typically used as a voltage amplifier. It offers high current gain (typically 200), medium input resistance an ...
or
common source In electronics, a common-source amplifier is one of three basic single-stage field-effect transistor (FET) amplifier topologies, typically used as a voltage or transconductance amplifier. The easiest way to tell if a FET is common source, comm ...
and the other as a
common base In electronics, a common-base (also known as grounded-base) amplifier is one of three basic single-stage bipolar junction transistor (BJT) amplifier topologies, typically used as a current buffer or voltage amplifier. In this circuit the emitter ...
or common gate. The cascode improves input–output isolation (reduces reverse transmission), as there is no direct coupling from the output to input. This eliminates the
Miller effect In electronics, the Miller effect accounts for the increase in the equivalent input capacitance of an inverting voltage amplifier due to amplification of the effect of capacitance between the input and output terminals. The virtually increased inpu ...
and thus contributes to a much higher bandwidth.


History

The use of a cascode (sometimes verbified to ''cascoding'') is a common technique for improving
analog circuit Analogue electronics ( en-US, analog electronics) are electronic systems with a continuously variable signal, in contrast to digital electronics where signals usually take only two levels. The term "analogue" describes the proportional rela ...
performance, applicable to both
vacuum tube A vacuum tube, electron tube, valve (British usage), or tube (North America), is a device that controls electric current flow in a high vacuum between electrodes to which an electric voltage, potential difference has been applied. The type kn ...
s and
transistor upright=1.4, gate (G), body (B), source (S) and drain (D) terminals. The gate is separated from the body by an insulating layer (pink). A transistor is a semiconductor device used to Electronic amplifier, amplify or electronic switch, switch ...
s. The name "cascode" was coined in an article written by Frederick Vinton Hunt and Roger Wayne Hickman in 1939, in a discussion on the application of
voltage stabilizer A voltage regulator is a system designed to automatically maintain a constant voltage. A voltage regulator may use a simple feed-forward design or may include negative feedback. It may use an electromechanical mechanism, or electronic componen ...
s. They proposed a cascade of two
triode A triode is an electronic amplifying vacuum tube (or ''valve'' in British English) consisting of three electrodes inside an evacuated glass envelope: a heated filament or cathode, a grid, and a plate (anode). Developed from Lee De Forest's 1 ...
s (the first one with a common
cathode A cathode is the electrode from which a conventional current leaves a polarized electrical device. This definition can be recalled by using the mnemonic ''CCD'' for ''Cathode Current Departs''. A conventional current describes the direction i ...
setup, the second one with a common
grid Grid, The Grid, or GRID may refer to: Common usage * Cattle grid or stock grid, a type of obstacle is used to prevent livestock from crossing the road * Grid reference, used to define a location on a map Arts, entertainment, and media * News g ...
) as a replacement for a
pentode A pentode is an electronic device having five electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a three-grid amplifying vacuum tube or thermionic valve that was invented by Gilles Holst and Bernhard D.H. Tellegen in 1926. The pentode (called a ''tripl ...
, and so the name may be assumed to be an abbreviation of "casc(aded triode amplifier having characteristics similar to, but less noisy than, a single pent)ode". Cascode circuits were employed in early television sets for the 'front-end' or tuner because of their low noise and wider bandwidth.


Operation

Figure 1 shows an example of a cascode amplifier with a common-source amplifier as the input stage driven by a signal source, ''V''in. This input stage drives a common-gate amplifier as the output stage, with output signal ''V''out. As the lower FET conducts it changes the upper FET's source voltage, and the upper FET conducts due to the changed potential between its gate and source. The major advantage of this circuit arrangement stems from the placement of the upper
field-effect transistor The field-effect transistor (FET) is a type of transistor that uses an electric field to control the flow of current in a semiconductor. FETs ( JFETs or MOSFETs) are devices with three terminals: ''source'', ''gate'', and ''drain''. FETs con ...
(FET) as the load of the input (lower) FET's output terminal (drain). Because at operating frequencies the upper FET's gate is effectively grounded, the upper FET's source voltage (and therefore the input transistor's drain) is held at nearly constant voltage during operation. In other words, the upper FET exhibits a low input resistance to the lower FET, making the voltage gain of the lower FET very small, which dramatically reduces the
Miller effect In electronics, the Miller effect accounts for the increase in the equivalent input capacitance of an inverting voltage amplifier due to amplification of the effect of capacitance between the input and output terminals. The virtually increased inpu ...
feedback capacitance from the lower FET's drain to gate. This loss of voltage gain is recovered by the upper FET. Thus, the upper transistor permits the lower FET to operate with minimal negative (Miller) feedback, improving its bandwidth. The upper FET gate is electrically grounded, so charge and discharge of the stray capacitance, ''Cdg'', between drain and gate is simply through ''RD'' and the output load (say ''R''out), and the frequency response is affected only for frequencies above the associated
RC time constant The RC time constant, also called tau, the time constant (in seconds) of an RC circuit, is equal to the product of the circuit resistance (in ohms) and the circuit capacitance (in farads), i.e. : \tau = RC econds It is the time required to c ...
''τ'' = ''C''dg ''R''D//''R''out, namely ''f'' = 1/(2''πτ''), a rather high frequency because ''Cdg'' is small. That is, the upper FET gate does not suffer from Miller amplification of ''Cdg''. If the upper FET stage were operated alone using its source as input node (that is, common-gate (CG) configuration), it would have a good voltage gain and wide bandwidth. However, its low input impedance would limit its usefulness to very low-impedance voltage drivers. Adding the lower FET results in a high input impedance, allowing the cascode stage to be driven by a high-impedance source. If one were to replace the upper FET with a typical inductive/resistive load and take the output from the input transistor's drain (that is, a common-source (CS) configuration), the CS configuration would offer the same input impedance as the cascode, but the cascode configuration would offer a potentially greater gain and much greater bandwidth.


Stability

The cascode arrangement is also very stable. Its output is effectively isolated from the input both electrically and physically. The lower transistor has nearly constant voltage at both drain and source, and thus there is essentially "nothing" to feed back into its gate. The upper transistor has nearly constant voltage at its gate and source. Thus, the only nodes with significant voltage on them are the input and output, and these are separated by the central connection of nearly constant voltage and by the physical distance of two transistors. Thus in practice there is little feedback from the output to the input. Metal shielding is both effective and easy to provide between the two transistors for even greater isolation when required. This would be difficult in one-transistor amplifier circuits, which at high frequencies would require neutralization.


Biasing

As shown, the cascode circuit using two "stacked" FETs imposes some restrictions on the two FETs — namely, the upper FET must be biased so its source voltage is high enough (the lower FET drain voltage may swing too low, causing it to saturate). Ensurance of this condition for FETs requires careful selection for the pair or special biasing of the upper FET gate, increasing cost. The cascode circuit can also be built using bipolar transistors, or MOSFETs, or even one FET (or MOSFET) and one BJT. This circuit arrangement was very common in VHF television tuners when they employed
vacuum tube A vacuum tube, electron tube, valve (British usage), or tube (North America), is a device that controls electric current flow in a high vacuum between electrodes to which an electric voltage, potential difference has been applied. The type kn ...
s.


Advantages

The cascode arrangement offers high gain, high bandwidth, high
slew rate In electronics, slew rate is defined as the change of voltage or current, or any other electrical quantity, per unit of time. Expressed in SI units, the unit of measurement is volts/ second or amperes/second, but is usually expressed in terms of ...
, high stability, and high input impedance. As a two-transistor circuit, the parts count is very low.


Disadvantages

The cascode circuit requires two transistors and requires a relatively high supply voltage. For the two-FET cascode, both transistors must be biased with ample ''V''DS in operation, imposing a lower limit on the supply voltage.


Dual-gate version

A dual-gate MOSFET often functions as a "one-transistor" cascode. Common in the front ends of sensitive VHF receivers, a dual-gate MOSFET is operated as a common-source amplifier with the primary gate (usually designated "gate 1" by MOSFET manufacturers) connected to the input and the second gate grounded (bypassed). Internally, there is one channel covered by the two adjacent gates; therefore, the resulting circuit is electrically a cascode composed of two FETs, the common lower-drain-to-upper-source connection merely being that portion of the single channel that lies physically adjacent to the border between the two gates.


Mixer in superheterodyne receivers

A cascode circuit is very useful as a multiplying mixer circuit in
superheterodyne A superheterodyne receiver, often shortened to superhet, is a type of radio receiver that uses frequency mixing to convert a received signal to a fixed intermediate frequency (IF) which can be more conveniently processed than the original carrie ...
receivers. At the lower gate the RF signal is fed to the mixer, and at the upper gate the
local oscillator In electronics, a local oscillator (LO) is an electronic oscillator used with a mixer to change the frequency of a signal. This frequency conversion process, also called heterodyning, produces the sum and difference frequencies from the freque ...
signal is fed to the mixer. Both signals are multiplied by the mixer, and the difference frequency, the
intermediate frequency In communications and electronic engineering, an intermediate frequency (IF) is a frequency to which a carrier wave is shifted as an intermediate step in transmission or reception. The intermediate frequency is created by mixing the carrier sign ...
, is taken from the upper drain of the cascode mixer. This was further developed by cascoding whole differential-amplifier stages to form the balanced mixer, and then the '' Gilbert cell'' double-balanced mixer.


Other applications

With the rise of integrated circuits, transistors have become cheap in terms of silicon die area. In
MOSFET The metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET, MOS-FET, or MOS FET) is a type of field-effect transistor (FET), most commonly fabricated by the controlled oxidation of silicon. It has an insulated gate, the voltage of which d ...
technology especially, cascoding can be used in
current mirror A current mirror is a circuit designed to copy a current through one active device by controlling the current in another active device of a circuit, keeping the output current constant regardless of loading. The current being "copied" can be, an ...
s to increase the output impedance of the output
current source A current source is an electronic circuit that delivers or absorbs an electric current which is independent of the voltage across it. A current source is the dual of a voltage source. The term ''current sink'' is sometimes used for sources fe ...
. A modified version of the cascode can also be used as a
modulator In electronics and telecommunications, modulation is the process of varying one or more properties of a periodic waveform, called the ''carrier signal'', with a separate signal called the ''modulation signal'' that typically contains informatio ...
, particularly for amplitude modulation. The upper device supplies the audio signal, and the lower is the RF amplifier device. A cascode may also be combined with a voltage ladder to form a high-voltage transistor. The input transistor may be of any low-''U''CEO type, while the others, acting as stacked
linear series In algebraic geometry, a linear system of divisors is an algebraic generalization of the geometric notion of a family of curves; the dimension of the linear system corresponds to the number of parameters of the family. These arose first in the ...
voltage regulator A voltage regulator is a system designed to automatically maintain a constant voltage. A voltage regulator may use a simple feed-forward design or may include negative feedback. It may use an electromechanical mechanism, or electronic components ...
s, should be able to withstand a considerable fraction of the supply voltage. Note that for a large output-voltage swing, their base voltages should not be bypassed to ground by capacitors, and the uppermost ladder resistor should be able to withstand the full supply voltage. This shows that a linear series voltage regulator is actually a current buffer with its ''input'' and ''output'' designations swapped.


Two-port parameters

The cascode configuration can be represented as a simple voltage amplifier (or more accurately, as a ''g''-parameter
two-port network A two-port network (a kind of four-terminal network or quadripole) is an electrical network (circuit) or device with two ''pairs'' of terminals to connect to external circuits. Two terminals constitute a port if the currents applied to them satis ...
) by using its
input impedance The input impedance of an electrical network is the measure of the opposition to current ( impedance), both static (resistance) and dynamic ( reactance), into the load network that is ''external'' to the electrical source. The input admittance (the ...
, output impedance, and voltage
gain Gain or GAIN may refer to: Science and technology * Gain (electronics), an electronics and signal processing term * Antenna gain * Gain (laser), the amplification involved in laser emission * Gain (projection screens) * Information gain in d ...
. These parameters are related to the corresponding ''g''-parameters below.In the ''g''-parameter two-port, ''g''12 is the reverse current gain. When no such feedback occurs, ''g''12 = 0, and the network is called unilateral. Other useful properties not considered here are circuit bandwidth and
dynamic range Dynamic range (abbreviated DR, DNR, or DYR) is the ratio between the largest and smallest values that a certain quantity can assume. It is often used in the context of signals, like sound and light. It is measured either as a ratio or as a base- ...
.


BJT cascode: low-frequency small-signal parameters

The idealized small-signal equivalent circuit can be constructed for the circuit in figure 2 by replacing the current sources with open circuits and the capacitors with short circuits, assuming they are large enough to act as short circuits at the frequencies of interest. The BJTs can be represented in the small-signal circuit by the hybrid-π model.


MOSFET cascode: low-frequency small-signal parameters

Similarly, the small-signal parameters can be derived for the MOSFET version, also replacing the MOSFET by its hybrid-π model equivalent. This derivation can be simplified by noting that the MOSFET gate current is zero, so the small-signal model for the BJT becomes that of the MOSFET in the limit of zero base current: :I_B \to 0 \rArr r_\pi = \frac \to \infty, where ''VT'' is the thermal voltage. The combination of factors ''gmrO'' occurs often in the above formulas, inviting further examination. For the bipolar transistor this product is (see
hybrid-pi model The hybrid-pi model is a popular circuit model used for analyzing the small signal behavior of bipolar junction and field effect transistors. Sometimes it is also called Giacoletto model because it was introduced by L.J. Giacoletto in 1969. The m ...
): :g_m r_O = \frac \frac = \frac. In a typical discrete bipolar device the Early voltage ''VA'' ≈ 100 V and the thermal voltage near room temperature is ''VT'' ≈ 25 mV, making ''gmrO'' ≈ 4000, a rather large number. From the article on
hybrid-pi model The hybrid-pi model is a popular circuit model used for analyzing the small signal behavior of bipolar junction and field effect transistors. Sometimes it is also called Giacoletto model because it was introduced by L.J. Giacoletto in 1969. The m ...
, we find for the MOSFET in the active mode: :g_m r_O = \frac \frac = \frac. At the 65-nanometer technology node, ''ID'' ≈ 1.2 mA/μ of width, supply voltage is ''VDD'' = 1.1 V; ''Vth'' ≈ 165 mV, and ''Vov = VGS-Vth ≈ 5%VDD'' ≈ 55 mV. Taking a typical length as twice the minimum, ''L'' = 2 ''Lmin'' = 0.130 μm and a typical value of λ ≈ 1/(4 V/μm ''L''), we find 1/λ ≈ 2 V, and ''gmrO'' ≈ 110, still a large value. The point is that because ''gmrO'' is large almost regardless of the technology, the tabulated gain and the output resistance for both the MOSFET and the bipolar cascode are very large. That fact has implications in the discussion that follows.


Low-frequency design

The g-parameters found in the above formulas can be used to construct a small-signal voltage amplifier with the same gain, input and output resistance as the original cascode (an
equivalent circuit In electrical engineering and science, an equivalent circuit refers to a theoretical circuit that retains all of the electrical characteristics of a given circuit. Often, an equivalent circuit is sought that simplifies calculation, and more broadly, ...
). This circuit applies only at frequencies low enough that the transistor parasitic capacitances do not matter. The figure shows the original cascode (Fig. 1) and the equivalent voltage amplifier or g-equivalent two-port (Fig. 4). The equivalent circuit allows easier calculations of the behavior of the circuit for different drivers and loads. In the figure a Thévenin equivalent voltage source with Thévenin resistance ''RS'' drives the amplifier, and at the output a simple load resistor ''RL'' is attached. Using the equivalent circuit, the input voltage to the amplifier is (see
Voltage divider In electronics, a voltage divider (also known as a potential divider) is a passive linear circuit that produces an output voltage (''V''out) that is a fraction of its input voltage (''V''in). Voltage division is the result of distributing the i ...
): ::_ = _s \begin \frac \end, which shows the importance of using a driver with resistance ''RS << Rin'' to avoid attenuation of the signal entering the amplifier. From the above amplifier characteristics, we see that ''Rin'' is infinite for the MOSFET cascode, so no attenuation of input signal occurs in that case. The BJT cascode is more restrictive because ''Rin = rπ2''. In a similar fashion, the output signal from the equivalent circuit is ::_ = A_v \ _ \begin \frac \end. In low-frequency circuits, a high voltage gain is typically desired, hence the importance of using a load with resistance ''RL >> Rout'' to avoid attenuation of the signal reaching the load. The formulas for ''Rout'' can be used either to design an amplifier with a sufficiently small output resistance compared to the load or, if that cannot be done, to decide upon a modified circuit, for example, to add a voltage follower that matches the load better. The earlier estimate showed that the cascode output resistance is very large. The implication is that many load resistances will not satisfy the condition ''RL >> Rout'' (an important exception is driving a MOSFET as the load, which has infinite low frequency input impedance). However, the failure to satisfy the condition ''RL >> Rout'' is not catastrophic because the cascode gain also is very large. If the designer is willing, the large gain can be sacrificed to allow a low load resistance; for ''RL'' << ''Rout'' the gain simplifies as follows: ::_ = A_v \ _ \begin \frac \approx A_v \ _ \frac = \frac \ _ R_L \approx -g_ R_L _\end. This gain is the same as that for the input transistor acting alone. Thus, even sacrificing gain, the cascode produces the same gain as the single-transistor transconductance amplifier, but with wider bandwidth. Because the amplifiers are wide bandwidth, the same approach can determine the bandwidth of the circuit when a
load capacitor Load or LOAD may refer to: Aeronautics and transportation * Load factor (aeronautics), the ratio of the lift of an aircraft to its weight * Passenger load factor, the ratio of revenue passenger miles to available seat miles of a particular trans ...
is attached (with or without a ). The assumption needed is that the
load capacitance Load or LOAD may refer to: Aeronautics and transportation * Load factor (aeronautics), the ratio of the lift of an aircraft to its weight * Passenger load factor, the ratio of revenue passenger miles to available seat miles of a particular trans ...
is large enough that it controls the frequency dependence, and bandwidth is not controlled by the neglected parasitic capacitances of the transistors themselves.


High-frequency design

At high frequencies, the parasitic capacitances of the transistors (gate-to-drain, gate-to-source, drain-to body, and bipolar equivalents) must be included in the hybrid-π models to obtain an accurate frequency response. The design goals also differ from the emphasis on overall high gain as described above for low-frequency design. In high frequency circuits,
impedance matching In electronics, impedance matching is the practice of designing or adjusting the input impedance or output impedance of an electrical device for a desired value. Often, the desired value is selected to maximize power transfer or minimize si ...
at the input and output of the amplifier is typically desired in order to eliminate signal reflections and maximize power gain. In the cascode, the isolation between the input and output ports is still characterized by a small reverse transmission term g12, making it easier to design matching networks because the amplifier is approximately unilateral.


References

{{Authority control Multi-stage transistor amplifiers