Miller Capacitance
Miller Capacitance
Miller Capacitance
For the circuit shown in Figure 1(a), the equivalent circuit for C1 is a high-pass filter, C3
and (RC + RL) form another high-pass filter.
With FETs, the input coupling capacitor is usually smaller because of the high input
resistance. The output capacitor may be smaller or larger depending on the drain and
load resistor size. For the circuit shown in Figure 1(b), the equivalent low-pass filter for
the input is simply C1 in series with RG because the gate input resistance is so high.
Figure 4: General case of Miller input and output capacitances, C represents Cbc or Cgd.
Av is the absolute value of the gain. For the input capacitance, the gain has a large effect
on the equivalent capacitance, which is an important consideration when using inverting
amplifiers. Notice that the effect of Miller’s theorem is an equivalent capacitance to
ground, which shunts high frequencies to ground and reduces the gain as frequency is
increased.
Figure 5: Amplifier ac equivalent circuits showing internal and effective Miller capacitances.
The Decibel
The decibel is a logarithmic ratio of two power levels and is used in electronics work in
gain or attenuation measurements. Decibels can be expressed as a voltage ratio when the
voltages are measured in the same impedance.
To express power gain in decibels, the formula is
Ap(dB)=10 log Ap
Sometimes, 0 dB is assigned as a convenient reference level for comparison. Then, other
power or voltage levels are shown with respect to 0 dB.
Low-Frequency Response
In capacitively coupled amplifiers, the coupling and bypass capacitors affect the low
frequency cutoff. These capacitors form a high-pass filter with circuit resistances. A
typical BJT amplifier has three high-pass filters. For example, the input coupling
capacitor forms a high-pass filter with the input resistance of the amplifier:
The input RC circuit for the BJT amplifier in Figure 6 is formed by C 1 and the
amplifier’s input resistance and is shown in Figure 7. The total input resistance is
expressed by the following formula:
𝐑 𝐢𝐧(𝐭𝐨𝐭) = 𝐑 𝟏 ‖𝐑 𝟐 ‖ 𝐑 𝐢𝐧(𝐛𝐚𝐬𝐞)
Figure 7: Input RC circuit formed by the input coupling capacitor and the amplifier’s
input resistance.
The output RC circuit is composed of the series combination of the collector and load
resistors with the output capacitor. The cutoff frequency due to the output circuit is
1
𝑓c =
2π(R C + 𝑅𝐿 )C3
Example: For the circuit in the following Figure, calculate the lower critical frequency
due to the input RC circuit. Assumed ré = 9.6Ω and β=200. Notice that a
swamping resistor, RE1, is used.
Example: For the circuit in the following Figure, calculate the lower critical frequency
due to the bypass RC circuit. Assume 𝑟́𝑒 = 9.6Ω and β=200.
High-Frequency Response
The high frequency response of inverting amplifiers is primarily determined by the
transistor’s internal capacitance and the Miller effect. The equivalent high-frequency ac
circuit is shown for a voltage-divider biased CE amplifier with a fully bypassed emitter
resistor.
If there is an unbypassed emitter resistor (RE1 in this case), the thevenin resistance is
modified to R th = R s ‖R1 ‖R 2 ‖β𝑎𝑐 (ŕ e + R E1 ).
The high frequency analysis of FETs is similar to that of BJTs. Like the CE amplifier,
the CS amplifier inverts the signal, so the Miller effect must be taken into account. You
may see special circuits such as cascode connections in very high frequency applications
to minimize the Miller effect. A high frequency ac model of a CS amplifier shown in
figure 12.
Solution:
R th = R s ‖R1 ‖R 2 ‖β(ŕ e + R E1 )
= 600Ω‖10kΩ‖4.7Ω‖200(3.5Ω + 100Ω) = 493Ω
Cin(tot) = Cbe +CMiller= Cbe +Cbc(Av(mid) + 1)
= 6pF +3.5 pF(9.7 + 1)=43pF
1 1
𝑓c = = = 7.4MHz
2πRC 2π(493Ω)(43pF)
Figure 13: A BJT amplifier and its generalized ideal response curve (Bode plot).
66 Assist. Prof. Dr. Hamad Rahman
Electronic Devices
For multistage amplifiers, the individual stages have an effect on the overall response.
In general, with different cutoff frequencies, the dominant lower cutoff frequency is
equal to the highest fcl; the dominant upper critical frequency is equal to lowest fcu.
When the critical frequencies for multistage amplifiers are equal, the lower critical
frequency is higher than any one as given by