Abstract

The receiver protection scheme being presented relies on frequency channelization of incident signals to accomplish +amplitude limiting on a frequency-selective, self-induced, instantaneous basis. A demultiplexer separates signals into contiguous subbands for parallel processing, after which they are reunited by a multiplexer to yield a signal composite of original bandwidth. The scheme's attractiveness lies in its ability to combine the advantages of fast response, broadband, passive limiters with the benefits of narrowband signal rejection techniques that employ frequency-tunable or switched notch filters. The concept is demonstrated with an experimental five-channel modified-logarithmic-periodic limiter prototype circuit, configured as a 7.5- to 12.5-GHz channelized self-limiting amplifier. The measured results confirm the circuit's transparency to small-amplitude signals and illustrate its effectiveness in confining large-signal effects, such as gain compression and intermodulation products, to narrow frequency intervals.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call