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Rubber diode

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
VBE multiplier biasing
VBE multiplier (inside grey box) used in push-pull amplifier biasing

In electronics, a rubber diode or VBE multiplier is a bipolar junction transistor circuit that serves as a voltage reference. It consists of one transistor and two resistors, and the reference voltage across the circuit is determined by the selected resistor values and the base-to-emitter voltage (VBE) of the transistor. The circuit behaves as a voltage divider, but with the voltage across the base-emitter resistor determined by the forward base-emitter junction voltage.

It is commonly used in the biasing of push-pull output stages of amplifiers, where one benefit is thermal compensation: The temperature-dependent variations in the multiplier's VBE, approximately -2.2 mV/°C, can be made to match variations occurring in the VBE of the power transistors by mounting to the same heat sink.[1] In this context, it is sometimes called a bias servo.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Crecraft, David; Gergely, Stephen (May 21, 2002). Analog Electronics. Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 188. ISBN 0080475833. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  2. ^ Elliott, Rod (27 Dec 2006). "Power Amplifier Design Guidelines". Elliott Sound Products. Retrieved Oct 1, 2021.