The Blocking Oscillator
Yet another oscillator, one that is not commonly seen these days, but which is quite interesting
The blocking oscillator is closely related to the two-transistor or two-tube astable circuit, except that it uses only one amplifying device. The other is replaced by a pulse transformer, which provides strong positive feedback at all frequencies. As a monostable, it was useful in the 1950's for producing what were then short pulses, in the microsecond range. It was much faster than the Abraham-Bloch monostable. It the transistor era, however, it fell from grace because it could not be miniaturized, since it requires a transformer, and was also rather hard on transistors. It is an interesting circuit, however, and is worth study. Its theory, which is difficult and not exceptionally enlightening, will not be explained here. We shall be satisfied by observing its actions in the laboratory.
A transistor blocking oscillator is shown at the right. The transformer is phased so that any increase in collector current pulls the base up, further increasing the current. The transformer seemed the most appropriate of those I had on hand, but may not be optimum. The 10k resistor biases the transistor on, so that any fluctuation in the collector current is fed back and reinforced. The base is eventually driven strongly negative, and the transistor is cut off. Periods of conduction and cutoff then succeed automatically. A pulse-shaping circuit is shown at the output. The series resistor and Zener limit the maximum value of the wave to +12V (inductive effects make it considerably larger at the ouput, up to 20V and starting with ringing). Study the circuit with the oscilloscope to understand how the base and collector voltages vary.
Two components are in this circuit to protect the transistor from harm. The more necessary is the Zener diode across the emitter junction. Without it, the base would be driven to -8 V in this circuit, which soon destroys the emitter junction. This is a disadvantage of transistors, one of the few. The emitter must be heavily doped to ensure that the injected carriers of one type predominate, so that a high beta can be achieved. Unfortunately, at the same time this reduces the reverse breakdown voltage of the junction to only about 5 V. The Zener does not improve the action of the circuit--in fact, it makes the duty cycle depart from 50% and has other deleterious effects, but these are not serious.
The 4.7k resistor is to damp the oscillations when the transistor is turned off at the end of a period of conduction. A particularly atrocious waveform at the collector when the circuit is used as a monostable is shown at the left. There is a nice, sharp leading edge as the transistor turns on. When the transistor turns off, however, there is a strong ringing. Without the 4.7k resistor, and with a 10k resistor between base and ground, the first oscillation was from +30 V to -8 V. A high-voltage transistor (such as the MPSA06) avoids any problem with collector breakdown, but the strong ringing is not desirable. A smaller value of the base resistor also helps; 1k gives only moderate ringing. In the circuit above, the Zener in the ouput clipper also clips off the ringing. The usual cure for turn-off transients, a diode across the offending inductance, does not work here because it destroys the necessary inductive action.
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