ARLA/CLUSTER: Série "Foundations of Amateur Radio" aborda a questão técnica: Como funciona um oscilador a cristal com compensação de temperatura?
João Costa > CT1FBF
ct1fbf gmail.com
Segunda-Feira, 20 de Novembro de 2017 - 13:49:02 WET
Foundations of Amateur Radio
*How does a Temperature Compensated Crystal Oscillator work?*
You know when you walk down the street and you lift your foot and all of a
sudden you realise that you stepped in something and now it's stuck to your
shoe? I had that feeling during the week.
Last week I mentioned that I had purchased a TCXO, a Temperature Controlled
External Oscillator. Lowell NE4EB set me straight by pointing out that XO
stood for crystal and that TCXO stood for Temperature Compensated Crystal
Oscillator, which then lead me on a merry goose-chase trying to learn about
all that.
I mention this because while the stickiness on my shoe kept me busy, it
also highlighted that I'm still a babe in the woods on a steep learning
curve to knowledge with some roadblocks, diversions and potholes along the
way.
That reminds me, if you ever feel the urge to pull me up on something I've
said, you can email me via my callsign at gmail.com.
So, how does this Temperature Compensated Crystal Oscillator actually work?
Without getting into the circuitry behind the scenes, as I mentioned
previously, a crystal oscillates and the frequency is dependent on
temperature. Turns out this is a predictable curve, which makes it possible
to account for changes in temperature.
In addition to keeping the temperature stable, another way to keep the
frequency of a crystal stable is to have an electrical circuit that changes
depending on temperature and have that create something like an opposing
curve, so you can add the two together and end up with a pretty stable
frequency. Before you start asking how exactly, let me just remind you of
the shoe with the stickiness on it.
In essence you have something like a resistor that changes resistance
depending on temperature, it's a component called a thermistor, and that in
turn affects a resonant circuit, also known as an Electronic Oscillator, or
LC circuit, which in turn affects the circuit that is driving the crystal.
These days most if not all of that is on a chip and you get a neat little
package that you can plug into your radio to give it frequency stability
and hopefully accuracy.
I did say I was going to talk about accuracy this week, but the doo-doo I
stepped in put a swift halt to that. Besides, now I know that there is a
thing called a thermistor, the second portmanteau I ever learned, together
with Gerrymander, so there's that - oh, also, Tanzania, Eurasia and
Oxbridge.
Back to Amateur Radio. The oven controlled crystal I mentioned last week,
they exist in high-end measuring gear, not in the $26 TCXO I have installed
in my radio. While I'm on the subject, you can also compensate for
temperature with software, using either a purpose built micro-processor, or
even the host processor that is using the crystal, but that gets into magic
self-referencing voodoo pretty quickly.
And while I've been playing, Japan is finally being received here and I
heard a station 18656km away during the week. Mind you, AA3GZ in
Doylestown, Pensylvania, on the Atlantic Ocean side of the United States
was putting out 100 Watts, so there's that.
I'll leave you with a thought that I hope to be able to answer next week.
If your radio has a crystal that determines what frequency it's tuned to,
how do you use that to determine the accuracy of the frequency, more
self-references, just because I can and besides, I'm a software developer
and recursion is part of my make-up.
I'll give you a hint, it's not all to do with MHz.
I'm *Onno VK6FLAB*.
Listen to the podcast: http://podcasts.itmaze.com.au/foundations/
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