A bias tee is a three-port network used for setting the DC biasing point of some electronic components without disturbing other components. The bias tee is a diplexer. The low-frequency port is used to set the bias; the high-frequency port passes the radio-frequency signals but blocks the biasing levels; the combined port connects to the device, which sees both the bias and RF. It is called a tee because the 3 ports are often arranged in the shape of a T.
Bias tees are designed for transmission-line environments. Typically, the characteristic impedance will be 50 Ohms or 75 Ohms. The impedance of the capacitor () is chosen to be much less than , and the impedance of the inductor () is chosen to be much greater than :
where is the angular frequency (in per second) and is the frequency (in Hertz).
Bias tees are designed to operate over a range of signal frequencies. The reactances are chosen to have minimal impact at the lowest frequency.
For wide-range bias tees, the inductive reactance must be large in value, even at the lowest frequency, hence the dimensions of the inductor must be large in size. A large inductor will have a stray capacitance (which creates its self-resonant frequency). At a high enough frequency, the stray capacitance presents a low-impedance shunt path for the RF signal, and the bias tee becomes ineffective. Practical wide-band bias tees must use elaborate circuit topologies to avoid the shunt path. Instead of one inductor, there will be a string of inductors in series, each with its own high resonant frequency, in addition to lower composite resonances shared between them. Additional resistors and capacitors will be inserted to prevent resonances. For example, a Picosecond Pulse Labs model 5580 bias tee works from 10 kHz to 15 GHz. Consequently, the simple design would need an inductance of at least 800 μH ( about 50 ohms at 10 kHz), and that inductor must still look like an inductor at 15 GHz. However, a typical commercial 820 μH inductor has a self-resonant frequency near 1.8 MHz – four orders of magnitude too low.
Johnson gives an example of a wideband microstrip bias tee covering 50 kHz to 1 GHz using four inductors (330 nH, 910 nH, 18 μH, and 470 μH) in series. His design cribbed from a commercial bias tee. He modeled parasitic element values, simulated results, and optimized component selection. To show the advantage of additional components, Johnson provided a simulation of a bias tee that used just inductors and capacitors without suppression. Johnson provides both simulated and actual performance details. Girardi duplicated and improved on Johnson's design and points out some additional construction issues.
Bias tees are used in a variety of applications, but are generally used to provide an RF signal and (DC) power to a remote device where running two separate cables would not be advantageous. Biasing is often used with photodiodes (vacuum and solid state), Microchannel plate detectors, , and , so that high frequencies from the signal do not leak into a common power supply rail. Conversely, noise from the power supply does not appear on the signal line. Other examples include: Power over Ethernet,PoE is a dubious bias tee. End of span power insertion is done with common mode injection between two signal pairs. Midspan insertion is done on unused pairs rather than the signal line. active antennas, low-noise amplifiers, and down converters.
The telephone line for plain old telephone service and some early microphones use a bias tee circuit—often with a gyrator replacing the inductor—this enables a thin cable with only 2 conductors to send power from the system to the device, and send audio from the device back to the system.
Modern microphones often use 3 conductors in a phantom power circuit very similar to a bias tee circuit.
Application
Construction
A particular construction
Capacitor
Coil
Oscillations
See also
Footnotes
Further reading
External links
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