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  2. Impedance matching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impedance_matching

    Typical push–pull audio tube power amplifier, matched to loudspeaker with an impedance-matching transformer. Audio amplifiers typically do not match impedances, but provide an output impedance that is lower than the load impedance (such as < 0.1 ohm in typical semiconductor amplifiers), for improved speaker damping.

  3. Balun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balun

    Transmission line transformers commonly use small ferrite cores in toroidal rings or two-hole, binocular, shapes. The Guanella transmission line transformer (Guanella 1944) is often combined with a balun to act as an impedance matching transformer. Putting balancing aside a transformer of this type consists of a 75 Ω transmission line divided ...

  4. Quarter-wave impedance transformer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quarter-wave_impedance...

    The quarter wave transformer is an alternative to a stub; but, whereas a stub is terminated in a short (or open) circuit and the length is chosen so as to produce the required impedance transformation, the λ/4 transformer is in series with the load and its length and characteristic impedance are designed to produce the required impedance ...

  5. Transformer types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformer_types

    At radio frequencies and microwave frequencies, a quarter-wave impedance transformer can provide impedance matching between circuits over a limited range of frequencies, using only a section of transmission line no more than a ⁠ 1 / 4 ⁠ wave long. The line may be coaxial cable, waveguide, stripline, or microstrip.

  6. Equivalent impedance transforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivalent_impedance...

    An equivalent impedance is an equivalent circuit of an electrical network of impedance elements [note 2] which presents the same impedance between all pairs of terminals [note 10] as did the given network. This article describes mathematical transformations between some passive, linear impedance networks commonly found in electronic circuits.

  7. Network synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_synthesis

    Impedance matching at a single frequency requires only a trivial network—usually one component. Impedance matching over a wide band, however, requires a more complex network, even in the case that the source and load resistances do not vary with frequency. Doing this with passive elements and without the use of transformers results in a ...

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