The Butler oscillator is a crystal-controlled oscillator that uses the crystal near its series resonance point. They are used where a simple low-cost circuit is needed which can oscillate at high frquencies (>50MHz[1]) by using overtones of a crystal, and also giving low low phase noise.[2]
It was described by Butler in 1946 as the earthed grid oscillator, a derivative of the Hartley oscillator.[3] It is also known as the bridged-T oscillator or the grounded-base oscillator.[4]
Contents
1Circuit operation
2References
3Further reading
4External links
Circuit operation
The classic Butler oscillator circuit is a two-stage circuit with two non-inverting stages, a grounded base stage and an emitter follower.[5] The crystal is inserted in series in the overall feedback path.[5]
AC equivalent circuit
The more common modern form of the circuit uses just the emitter follower stage.[1][6] The circuit may be analysed by considering it as a equivalent AC circuit with three parts. The emitter follower forms an amplifier with no phase shift. The crystal and its loading capacitor then produce a phase lag network, followed by the LC network of the resonant tank circuit. This then produces a phase lead, which overall meets the Barkhausen criteria for self-oscillation.[1]
The Butler circuit is a free-running or tuned oscillator. If the crystal is replaced temporarily with a low value resistor, the circuit will still oscillate at approximately the design frequency of the tank circuit. This allows the circuit to be set-up and adjusted initially without the crystal, and also encourages the selection of the correct crystal harmonic.[6] To avoid the circuit oscillating at the strong resonance of the crystal's fundamental, a small inductor may be placed in parallel with the crystal.[1][6]
Both the better-known Pierce and Colpitts oscillator circuits may be considered as derivatives of the Butler.[6][lower-roman 1]
References
↑In the sense of circuit analysis, rather than historical origin.
↑ 1.01.11.21.3"Butler Crystal Oscillator Design". Understanding Quartz Crystals and Oscillators. pp. 237–247. https://www.mikrocontroller.net/attachment/499019/Butler_OT_XO.pdf.
↑Cushing, Richard; Swift, Steven. "A Discrete, Low Phase Noise, 125 MHz Crystal Oscillator for the AD9850 Complete Direct Digital Synthesizer". Analog Devices. http://www.analog.com/static/imported-files/application_notes/AN-419.pdf.
↑Butler, F. (June 1946). "Series-Resonant Crystal Oscillators". Wireless Engineer23: 157–160.
↑Karlquist, Richard (January 1999), A New Type of Balanced-Bridge Controlled Oscillator, Hewlett-Packard, HPL-1999-6, http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/1999/HPL-1999-6.pdf Butler, Meacham, Sultzer, ...
↑ 5.05.1Gottlieb, Irving M. (1997), Practical Oscillator Handbook, Newnes, pp. 164–165, ISBN 0-7506-3102-3, https://books.google.com/books?id=e_oZ69GAuxAC&q=butler+oscillator&pg=PA164
Carr, Joe (September 1999), "Crystals Made Clear I", Electronics World: 780–783
Carr, Joe (October 1999), "Crystals Made Clear II", Electronics World: 849–855
Sibrai, Andreas & Kurt Fritzwenwallner, "High quality serial resonance oscillator", US patent 6741137, published 6 January 2003, issued 25 May 2004
Feistel, Claude Herbert & Theodore Gianos, "Butler oscillator", US patent 3996530, published June 30, 1975, issued Dec 7, 1976, assigned to International Business Machines Corporation
External links
Two-transistor Butler
"Technicana: Series Resonant Crystal Oscillators", Radio Manufacturing and Broadcasting: 6–7, October 1946, http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Radio/40s/Radio-1946-10.pdf
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Electronic oscillators
Theory
Barkhausen stability criterion
Harmonic oscillator
Leeson's equation
Nyquist stability criterion
Oscillator phase noise
Phase noise
LC oscillators
Armstrong or Meissner oscillator
Clapp oscillator
Colpitts oscillator
Hartley oscillator
Lampkin oscillator
Meacham bridge oscillator
Seiler oscillator
Vackář oscillator
resonant Royer
RC oscillators
Phase-shift oscillator
Twin-T oscillator
Wien bridge oscillator
Quartz oscillators
Butler oscillator
Pierce oscillator
Tri-tet oscillator
Relaxation oscillators
Blocking oscillator
Multivibrator
ring oscillator
Pearson–Anson oscillator
basic Royer
Other
Cavity oscillator
Delay-line oscillator
Opto-electronic oscillator
Robinson oscillator
Transmission-line oscillator
Klystron oscillator
Cavity magnetron
Gunn oscillator
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