Gilbert cell. Understanding the basic












2












$begingroup$


I am trying to understand a concept of Gilbert cell.
I have the next figure.



enter image description here



Quastion1:
If +1V is set up in (3), then in (4) is admitted -1V, and for (5) is -1V, (5) +1V.
The current source is sume up with LO-Input. (1) represent the symmetry between A and B.
Will be my conclusion correct?



Question 2:
can someone explain me more about this?










share|improve this question









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  • $begingroup$
    I don't understand your question.
    $endgroup$
    – Andy aka
    Nov 24 '18 at 9:19
















2












$begingroup$


I am trying to understand a concept of Gilbert cell.
I have the next figure.



enter image description here



Quastion1:
If +1V is set up in (3), then in (4) is admitted -1V, and for (5) is -1V, (5) +1V.
The current source is sume up with LO-Input. (1) represent the symmetry between A and B.
Will be my conclusion correct?



Question 2:
can someone explain me more about this?










share|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't understand your question.
    $endgroup$
    – Andy aka
    Nov 24 '18 at 9:19














2












2








2





$begingroup$


I am trying to understand a concept of Gilbert cell.
I have the next figure.



enter image description here



Quastion1:
If +1V is set up in (3), then in (4) is admitted -1V, and for (5) is -1V, (5) +1V.
The current source is sume up with LO-Input. (1) represent the symmetry between A and B.
Will be my conclusion correct?



Question 2:
can someone explain me more about this?










share|improve this question









$endgroup$




I am trying to understand a concept of Gilbert cell.
I have the next figure.



enter image description here



Quastion1:
If +1V is set up in (3), then in (4) is admitted -1V, and for (5) is -1V, (5) +1V.
The current source is sume up with LO-Input. (1) represent the symmetry between A and B.
Will be my conclusion correct?



Question 2:
can someone explain me more about this?







circuit-analysis multiplier mixer gilbert-cell






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 24 '18 at 9:00







user195287



















  • $begingroup$
    I don't understand your question.
    $endgroup$
    – Andy aka
    Nov 24 '18 at 9:19


















  • $begingroup$
    I don't understand your question.
    $endgroup$
    – Andy aka
    Nov 24 '18 at 9:19
















$begingroup$
I don't understand your question.
$endgroup$
– Andy aka
Nov 24 '18 at 9:19




$begingroup$
I don't understand your question.
$endgroup$
– Andy aka
Nov 24 '18 at 9:19










1 Answer
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6












$begingroup$

The Gilbert cell is properly viewed as a differential-inputs EXOR gate. With 200 milliVoltsPeakPeak signals on RF and on the LO, the current-source will be strongly steered to one or the other "mixer" outputs at the top.



If 1 is 200mV higher than 2, and if 3/6 is 200mV higher than 4/5, the current appears on the left output at top.



If 2 is high AND 4/5 is high, the current still appears on the left output at top.



This is the EXOR behavior.



However the Gilbert Cell (and Barry Gilbert gently says he did the translinear-principle invention for bipolars, but did not invent the "Gilbert Cell") is very useful for very small inputs on the RF inputs while the LO inputs remain strongly overdriven to ensure currents are fully switched in the top 4 transistors. Noise theory says the 4 top bipolars, operating in common-base mode, contribute very little noise.



With small RF inputs, and strong LO inputs, this circuit serves us well as a double-balanced-mixer, where the "double-balanced" assures us the output contains very little LO and very little RF energy. This eases filtering. The desired outputs are the Sum of RF and LO, and the Difference of RF and LO. Thus RF of FM radio at 89.5MHz, mixed with 100.2MHz LO, produced Sum at 189.7MHz and Difference at 10.7MHz; silicon ICs exist to handle the 10.7 Intermediate Frequency energy.



The distortion level for the RF input, with the 2 emitters tied together (no resistors between them, to increase the linear range and reduce distortion) is indicated by the IP levels: intercept points. For both IP2 and IP3, these are about -10dBv, or about 0.316 volts (1/sqrt(10)). These numbers are not exact, and you'll have to figure out if RMS or Peak or PeakPeak is the proper dimension. Willy Sansen has papers on this. He says IM2 is zero (the 2nd harmonic distortion cancels out, thus IP2 is infinite) and says IP3 is (4 * 0.026 volts).



For excellent output filtering, consider this circuit:





schematic





simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab



Here is link to chapter 18 on distortion



http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwj10MbK4uzeAhUGJHwKHfJMB18QFjAAegQIABAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fextras.springer.com%2F2006%2F978-0-387-25746-4%2FChapter_18.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3CiQeDWhSBr9-fi0ReWfef



By the way, because of the low Noise Density (a bit more than 50 ohms, but there is no magic about that) of this Mixer, you might bring the Antenna into a single-to-differential-plus-matching circuit that directly drives the two RF pins of this Gilbert Cell.



The NE602, first designed by Signetics in Sunnyvale, then acquired by Philips, now is an NXP product. The Gilbert Cell is used in other NXP ICs for Phase Locked Loop circuits, e.g NE567 tone decoder.






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    $begingroup$

    The Gilbert cell is properly viewed as a differential-inputs EXOR gate. With 200 milliVoltsPeakPeak signals on RF and on the LO, the current-source will be strongly steered to one or the other "mixer" outputs at the top.



    If 1 is 200mV higher than 2, and if 3/6 is 200mV higher than 4/5, the current appears on the left output at top.



    If 2 is high AND 4/5 is high, the current still appears on the left output at top.



    This is the EXOR behavior.



    However the Gilbert Cell (and Barry Gilbert gently says he did the translinear-principle invention for bipolars, but did not invent the "Gilbert Cell") is very useful for very small inputs on the RF inputs while the LO inputs remain strongly overdriven to ensure currents are fully switched in the top 4 transistors. Noise theory says the 4 top bipolars, operating in common-base mode, contribute very little noise.



    With small RF inputs, and strong LO inputs, this circuit serves us well as a double-balanced-mixer, where the "double-balanced" assures us the output contains very little LO and very little RF energy. This eases filtering. The desired outputs are the Sum of RF and LO, and the Difference of RF and LO. Thus RF of FM radio at 89.5MHz, mixed with 100.2MHz LO, produced Sum at 189.7MHz and Difference at 10.7MHz; silicon ICs exist to handle the 10.7 Intermediate Frequency energy.



    The distortion level for the RF input, with the 2 emitters tied together (no resistors between them, to increase the linear range and reduce distortion) is indicated by the IP levels: intercept points. For both IP2 and IP3, these are about -10dBv, or about 0.316 volts (1/sqrt(10)). These numbers are not exact, and you'll have to figure out if RMS or Peak or PeakPeak is the proper dimension. Willy Sansen has papers on this. He says IM2 is zero (the 2nd harmonic distortion cancels out, thus IP2 is infinite) and says IP3 is (4 * 0.026 volts).



    For excellent output filtering, consider this circuit:





    schematic





    simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab



    Here is link to chapter 18 on distortion



    http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwj10MbK4uzeAhUGJHwKHfJMB18QFjAAegQIABAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fextras.springer.com%2F2006%2F978-0-387-25746-4%2FChapter_18.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3CiQeDWhSBr9-fi0ReWfef



    By the way, because of the low Noise Density (a bit more than 50 ohms, but there is no magic about that) of this Mixer, you might bring the Antenna into a single-to-differential-plus-matching circuit that directly drives the two RF pins of this Gilbert Cell.



    The NE602, first designed by Signetics in Sunnyvale, then acquired by Philips, now is an NXP product. The Gilbert Cell is used in other NXP ICs for Phase Locked Loop circuits, e.g NE567 tone decoder.






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$


















      6












      $begingroup$

      The Gilbert cell is properly viewed as a differential-inputs EXOR gate. With 200 milliVoltsPeakPeak signals on RF and on the LO, the current-source will be strongly steered to one or the other "mixer" outputs at the top.



      If 1 is 200mV higher than 2, and if 3/6 is 200mV higher than 4/5, the current appears on the left output at top.



      If 2 is high AND 4/5 is high, the current still appears on the left output at top.



      This is the EXOR behavior.



      However the Gilbert Cell (and Barry Gilbert gently says he did the translinear-principle invention for bipolars, but did not invent the "Gilbert Cell") is very useful for very small inputs on the RF inputs while the LO inputs remain strongly overdriven to ensure currents are fully switched in the top 4 transistors. Noise theory says the 4 top bipolars, operating in common-base mode, contribute very little noise.



      With small RF inputs, and strong LO inputs, this circuit serves us well as a double-balanced-mixer, where the "double-balanced" assures us the output contains very little LO and very little RF energy. This eases filtering. The desired outputs are the Sum of RF and LO, and the Difference of RF and LO. Thus RF of FM radio at 89.5MHz, mixed with 100.2MHz LO, produced Sum at 189.7MHz and Difference at 10.7MHz; silicon ICs exist to handle the 10.7 Intermediate Frequency energy.



      The distortion level for the RF input, with the 2 emitters tied together (no resistors between them, to increase the linear range and reduce distortion) is indicated by the IP levels: intercept points. For both IP2 and IP3, these are about -10dBv, or about 0.316 volts (1/sqrt(10)). These numbers are not exact, and you'll have to figure out if RMS or Peak or PeakPeak is the proper dimension. Willy Sansen has papers on this. He says IM2 is zero (the 2nd harmonic distortion cancels out, thus IP2 is infinite) and says IP3 is (4 * 0.026 volts).



      For excellent output filtering, consider this circuit:





      schematic





      simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab



      Here is link to chapter 18 on distortion



      http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwj10MbK4uzeAhUGJHwKHfJMB18QFjAAegQIABAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fextras.springer.com%2F2006%2F978-0-387-25746-4%2FChapter_18.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3CiQeDWhSBr9-fi0ReWfef



      By the way, because of the low Noise Density (a bit more than 50 ohms, but there is no magic about that) of this Mixer, you might bring the Antenna into a single-to-differential-plus-matching circuit that directly drives the two RF pins of this Gilbert Cell.



      The NE602, first designed by Signetics in Sunnyvale, then acquired by Philips, now is an NXP product. The Gilbert Cell is used in other NXP ICs for Phase Locked Loop circuits, e.g NE567 tone decoder.






      share|improve this answer











      $endgroup$
















        6












        6








        6





        $begingroup$

        The Gilbert cell is properly viewed as a differential-inputs EXOR gate. With 200 milliVoltsPeakPeak signals on RF and on the LO, the current-source will be strongly steered to one or the other "mixer" outputs at the top.



        If 1 is 200mV higher than 2, and if 3/6 is 200mV higher than 4/5, the current appears on the left output at top.



        If 2 is high AND 4/5 is high, the current still appears on the left output at top.



        This is the EXOR behavior.



        However the Gilbert Cell (and Barry Gilbert gently says he did the translinear-principle invention for bipolars, but did not invent the "Gilbert Cell") is very useful for very small inputs on the RF inputs while the LO inputs remain strongly overdriven to ensure currents are fully switched in the top 4 transistors. Noise theory says the 4 top bipolars, operating in common-base mode, contribute very little noise.



        With small RF inputs, and strong LO inputs, this circuit serves us well as a double-balanced-mixer, where the "double-balanced" assures us the output contains very little LO and very little RF energy. This eases filtering. The desired outputs are the Sum of RF and LO, and the Difference of RF and LO. Thus RF of FM radio at 89.5MHz, mixed with 100.2MHz LO, produced Sum at 189.7MHz and Difference at 10.7MHz; silicon ICs exist to handle the 10.7 Intermediate Frequency energy.



        The distortion level for the RF input, with the 2 emitters tied together (no resistors between them, to increase the linear range and reduce distortion) is indicated by the IP levels: intercept points. For both IP2 and IP3, these are about -10dBv, or about 0.316 volts (1/sqrt(10)). These numbers are not exact, and you'll have to figure out if RMS or Peak or PeakPeak is the proper dimension. Willy Sansen has papers on this. He says IM2 is zero (the 2nd harmonic distortion cancels out, thus IP2 is infinite) and says IP3 is (4 * 0.026 volts).



        For excellent output filtering, consider this circuit:





        schematic





        simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab



        Here is link to chapter 18 on distortion



        http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwj10MbK4uzeAhUGJHwKHfJMB18QFjAAegQIABAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fextras.springer.com%2F2006%2F978-0-387-25746-4%2FChapter_18.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3CiQeDWhSBr9-fi0ReWfef



        By the way, because of the low Noise Density (a bit more than 50 ohms, but there is no magic about that) of this Mixer, you might bring the Antenna into a single-to-differential-plus-matching circuit that directly drives the two RF pins of this Gilbert Cell.



        The NE602, first designed by Signetics in Sunnyvale, then acquired by Philips, now is an NXP product. The Gilbert Cell is used in other NXP ICs for Phase Locked Loop circuits, e.g NE567 tone decoder.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$



        The Gilbert cell is properly viewed as a differential-inputs EXOR gate. With 200 milliVoltsPeakPeak signals on RF and on the LO, the current-source will be strongly steered to one or the other "mixer" outputs at the top.



        If 1 is 200mV higher than 2, and if 3/6 is 200mV higher than 4/5, the current appears on the left output at top.



        If 2 is high AND 4/5 is high, the current still appears on the left output at top.



        This is the EXOR behavior.



        However the Gilbert Cell (and Barry Gilbert gently says he did the translinear-principle invention for bipolars, but did not invent the "Gilbert Cell") is very useful for very small inputs on the RF inputs while the LO inputs remain strongly overdriven to ensure currents are fully switched in the top 4 transistors. Noise theory says the 4 top bipolars, operating in common-base mode, contribute very little noise.



        With small RF inputs, and strong LO inputs, this circuit serves us well as a double-balanced-mixer, where the "double-balanced" assures us the output contains very little LO and very little RF energy. This eases filtering. The desired outputs are the Sum of RF and LO, and the Difference of RF and LO. Thus RF of FM radio at 89.5MHz, mixed with 100.2MHz LO, produced Sum at 189.7MHz and Difference at 10.7MHz; silicon ICs exist to handle the 10.7 Intermediate Frequency energy.



        The distortion level for the RF input, with the 2 emitters tied together (no resistors between them, to increase the linear range and reduce distortion) is indicated by the IP levels: intercept points. For both IP2 and IP3, these are about -10dBv, or about 0.316 volts (1/sqrt(10)). These numbers are not exact, and you'll have to figure out if RMS or Peak or PeakPeak is the proper dimension. Willy Sansen has papers on this. He says IM2 is zero (the 2nd harmonic distortion cancels out, thus IP2 is infinite) and says IP3 is (4 * 0.026 volts).



        For excellent output filtering, consider this circuit:





        schematic





        simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab



        Here is link to chapter 18 on distortion



        http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwj10MbK4uzeAhUGJHwKHfJMB18QFjAAegQIABAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fextras.springer.com%2F2006%2F978-0-387-25746-4%2FChapter_18.pdf&usg=AOvVaw3CiQeDWhSBr9-fi0ReWfef



        By the way, because of the low Noise Density (a bit more than 50 ohms, but there is no magic about that) of this Mixer, you might bring the Antenna into a single-to-differential-plus-matching circuit that directly drives the two RF pins of this Gilbert Cell.



        The NE602, first designed by Signetics in Sunnyvale, then acquired by Philips, now is an NXP product. The Gilbert Cell is used in other NXP ICs for Phase Locked Loop circuits, e.g NE567 tone decoder.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 26 '18 at 4:55

























        answered Nov 24 '18 at 9:42









        analogsystemsrfanalogsystemsrf

        14.9k2718




        14.9k2718






























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