Wes Stewart wrote:
....
More often than not, looking back into the output of an RF PA you will
-not- see an impedance match because the impedance matched condition
is not the condition for greatest efficiency.
In addition, an amplifier is generally designed to produce suitably low
distortion products, both in-band (in the modulation bandwidth) and out
of band (i.e. harmonics). Proper performance in this regard depends on
the amplifier being loaded with an impedance within some tolerance of
the one it was designed for. There is NOTHING that says the
amplifier's output impedance must be the same as the design load
impedance; in fact, with negative feedback, you can cause the output
impedance to be just about anything you want, with little effect on the
optimal load impedance.
Someone already mentioned that audio amps typically have a high
"damping factor"--that is, a very low output impedance relative to the
load they are intended to drive. Perhaps a more graphic example of how
we use loads which are NOT matched to the source impedance is found in
AC power wiring: the source impedance is quite low compared with the
load. You would NOT want your 120V line to sag to 60V by putting a
matched load on it! (That would blow a fuse/breaker very quickly.)
If you are considering the input of the amplifier as the load for an
interstage transmission line, then that might well cause reflections
on the line but in narrow-band amplifiers this if often of little
consequence.
If the amplifier takes significant power to drive, it would be a good
idea for the amplifier to present a reasonable load to the driving
stage, so the driving stage doesn't have to be over-rated for the job
its doing. And in some cases, reflections are bad. You'd want to
avoid them in a video system, for example, because they'd cause a
"ghost" image. Given that the driving stage output impedance may not
match the line used to connect to the amplifier, you'd do well to have
a reasonable match at the amplifier end, at least. Also, if the
amplifier is linear, the output power will be proportional to the input
power, up to the point where the amplifier becomes nonlinear. So if
the driving stage can produce only enough clean power to drive the
amplifier, you'd want a match to get that power to the amplifier.
In summary, I don't think there's one simple "one size fits all" answer
for the O.P. There are many nuances to consider. Simple
complex-conjugate matching per EE/physics circuit theory is the least
of your worries, and likely isn't even the best place to begin thinking
about the issue. I'd start with something more like, "what system will
give me the power I want, with low enough distortion products, and high
enough efficiency?" The matching will fall out of the answers to that.
But it goes non-linear long before "saturation". Driving beyond the
linear region does produce more power, even if it's contained in
distortion products. [g]
Wes
Yes, indeed.
Cheers,
Tom