I have buit in the mean time a lot of these massively paralleled JFET amplifiers.
Virtually all of them that I have checked shared one misfeature: Somewhere,
they show negative input impedance. If you don't have the right cable /
inductive source at the input, that may have no consequences.
But the vector network analyzer on the table is cruel and shows the shortcomings.
Bootstrapping seems to help to some extend, and also making the feedback loop
ultra fast.
You may think that the sources are near ground potential. After all, there is only
a 1 Ohm or so resistor from sources to ground. But that's not true. The feedback
makes the sources follow the gate AC.
In the view of the transistor, the drain is low impedance (looks into a cascode emitter
or mild load resistance) while the source follows the gate closely. Look, Ma, I'm a
follower! And it oscillates like followers like to do.
Note that you cannot see that in the bode plot of the feedback loop. It is only the
FET that oscillates. The loop only creates the preconditions. And if it is slow,
the source voltage looks capactively loaded.
The usual, and the only easy way to remove the negative input impedance is a
gate stopper resistor. But you definitely do not want that in a low noise amplifier.
First pic is one of my massively par amplifiers. The added BUF634 is meant
to minimize the feedback delay, but it is still much worse than a VCVS in LTspice.
The amplifier uses the new FETs from ON semi, individually cascoded with a
large pinch off JFET.
I'd say the new ON semi FETs are on par with the BF862, not better. Maybe a little
bit lower 1/f corner, but no reason to stop using BF862 as long as you have them.
The other pic uses 2 Interfet IF3602 FET pairs. The TO-5 coolers are just there
to provide thermal mass. 30 Hz 1/f, 300 pV/rt Hz per FET. Available from Mouser
for €55 each or so. The data sheet values seem quite optimistic; I need a lot more
current to get the 300 pV per transistor. The 4 of them could be measured at
180 pV/rt Hz. The FZT851 is the cascode; it is bootstrapped from the source.
While the normal feedback removes the gate-source capacitance, the bootstrapped
cascode also removes the gate-drain capacitance. We talk of several hundred pF
for each of these huge FETs. Minimizing capacitance has a very good influence on stability.
Everything is nice & well behaved until 1 MHz, where it all collapses. When I
damp everything down to, say, 250 KHz, it is probably unconditionally stable.
But I insist in 1 MHz bandwidth.
I have removed the bias loop on this one. The input capacitor in these amplifiers
must be huge to effectively short the noise of the bias resistor throught the DUT.
The DUT must be low-resistance, or such a low noise amplifier would be futile
from start. The bias loop must be much slower than the input RC or it would interact.
A TL431 minus a diode drop was about right for temperature compensation.
The blue 10-turn-pot sets the OP. In the upper right of the board is a window
comparator that checks the operating point. When we are far off, as when we
just connected the preamp to a large DC voltage, the bias resistor is reduced
via a MAX393 analog switch so that we don't have to wait forever.