摘要 |
1,115,432. Switching circuits; keying carrier frequencies. APPLIED DYNAMICS Inc. 11 June, 1965 [11 June, 1964], No. 24875/65. Headings H3R and H3T. In a switching circuit the input signal controls the application of R.F. (over 500 kc/s.) to a transformer (e.g. by keying an oscillator or gating its output) whose rectified unsmoothed output operates the switching transistor. In Fig. 1 the 19 Mc/s. R.F. signal is generated by an oscillator Q-2 which is shunted by a transistor Q-1 . With no input at 10, Q-1 is non-conducting and Q-2 oscillates, but application of a - 6 v. signal at 10 turns on Q-1 and short-circuits the oscillator. The R.F. signal is applied to the switching transistors 13 via an air-cored screened transformer T-1 nominally balanced to earth, but provided with a trimmer capacitor C-T to compensate for residual asymmetry. The transformer output is rectified by diodes CR-1 and CR-2 but is unsmoothed for fast response; the whole secondary circuit is floating as regards earth. The switching transistors can comprise four junctions on the same crystal. The oscillator frequency should be at least twice the reciprocal of the recovery time of the switching transistors. Instead of the rectifier circuit shown, half-wave rectification may be used, or (Fig. 3, not shown), this may be performed by the base-collector junctions of the switching transistors. For multiple switching, the same oscillator may feed a number of transformers and switching transistors, or a plurality of oscillators may be used. The switching transistors may be PNP. The circuit is useful for switching the inputs to summing and integrating amplifiers in analogue computers. |