Detailed Description
The MAX9930–MAX9933 family of logarithmic ampli-
fiers (log amps) comprises four main amplifier/limiter
stages each with a small-signal gain of 10dB. The output
stage of each amplifier is applied to a full-wave rectifier
(detector). A detector stage also precedes the first gain
stage. In total, five detectors, each separated by 10dB,
comprise the log amp strip. Figure 1 shows the functional
diagram of the log amps.
A portion of the PA output power is coupled to RFIN of the
logarithmic amplifier controller/detector, and is applied to
the logarithmic amplifier strip. Each detector cell outputs
a rectified current and all cell currents are summed and
form a logarithmic output. The detected output is applied
to a high-gain gm stage, which is buffered and then
applied to OUT. For the MAX9930/MAX9931/MAX9932,
OUT is applied to the gain-control input of the PA to
close the control loop. The voltage applied to SET deter-
mines the output power of the PA in the control loop. The
voltage applied to SET relates to an input power level
determined by the log amp detector characteristics. For
the MAX9933, OUT is applied to an ADC typically found
in a baseband IC which, in turn, controls the PA biasing
with the output (Figure 2).
Extrapolating a straight-line fit of the graph of SET vs.
RFIN provides the logarithmic intercept. Logarithmic
slope, the amount SET changes for each dB change of
RF input, is generally independent of waveform or termi-
nation impedance. The MAX9930/MAX9931/MAX9932
slope at low frequencies is about 25mV/dB.
Variance in temperature and supply voltage does not alter
the slope significantly as shown in the Typical Operating
Characteristics.
The MAX9930/MAX9931/MAX9932 are specifically
designed for use in PA control applications. In a control
loop, the output starts at approximately 2.9V (with supply
voltage of 3V) for the minimum input signal and falls to a
value close to ground at the maximum input. With a por-
tion of the PA output power coupled to RFIN, apply a volt-
age to SET (for the MAX9930/MAX9931/MAX9932) and
connect OUT to the gain-control pin of the PA to control its
output power. An external capacitor from CLPF to ground
sets the bandwidth of the PA control loop.
Transfer Function
Logarithmic slope and intercept determine the trans-
fer function of the MAX9930–MAX9933 family of log
amps. The change in SET voltage (OUT voltage for the
MAX9933) per dB change in RF input defines the logarith-
mic slope. Therefore, a 10dB change in RF input results
in a 250mV change at SET (OUT for the MAX9933). The
Log Conformance vs. Input Power plots (see Typical
Operating Characteristics) show the dynamic range of the
log amp family. Dynamic range is the range for which the
error remains within a band of ±1dB.
The intercept is defined as the point where the linear
response, when extrapolated, intersects the y-axis of
the Log Conformance vs. Input Power plot. Using these
parameters, the input power can be calculated at any SET
voltage level (OUT voltage level for the MAX9933) within
the specified input range with the following equations:
RFIN = (SET / SLOPE) + IP
(MAX9930/MAX9931/MAX9932)
RFIN = (OUT / SLOPE) + IP
(MAX9933)
where SET is the set-point voltage, OUT is the output
voltage for the MAX9933, SLOPE is the logarithmic slope
(V/dB), RFIN is in either dBm or dBV and IP is the loga-
rithmic intercept point utilizing the same units as RFIN.
Figure 2. MAX9933 Typical Application Circuit
VCC
OUT
N.C.
GND
CCLPF
50Ω
50Ω
RFIN
SHDN
CLPF
GND
DAC
ADC
0.01µF
CC
XX
VCC
PA
BASEBAND
IC
TRANSMITTER
MAX9933
MAX9930–MAX9933 2MHz to 1.6GHz 45dB RF-Detecting
Controllers and RF Detector
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated
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