No supply inductance is shown, so it is not a Royer oscillator as one reply suggests
The "classic" Royer oscillator is voltage fed and relies on a transformer with a square BH loop. In Royer's 1955 paper, "A Switching Transistor D-C to A-C Converter Having an Output Frequency Proportional to the D-C Input Voltage" he used a square loop core as part of a push pull oscillator and the output frequency f = V
in/4Nphi
m where phi
m is the saturation flux. Royer used Hipernik V as a core material with a saturation flux temperature coefficient of 0.07%/C.
The problem with the voltage fed Royer oscillator is the high collector current spike at the end of the transistor ON time, also sometimes at the start of the ON period. By feeding the transformer center tap with a small choke, i.e. making it current fed, fixes the current spikes and also improves the efficiency. Placing a capacitor across the transformer then turns it into a current fed resonant Royer which is not really the same as the original Royer which relied on saturation to get the switching action.
Small voltage fed Royer oscillators were often used in calculators to supply vacuum flourescent displays and also supply the heater voltage, usually the transformer was wound on a small pot core. I've got an old desktop calculator PCB somewhere so I will have to dig it out and have a look at the waveforms.
They are also used in some small fixed ratio DC-DC converter modules, usually 1-2W rating. If the data sheet specifies a minimum Vin risetime and recommends a lot of input filtering then it's probably a voltage fed Royer. Taken a few apart to see why they let the magic smoke out. Classic voltage fed Royer not really recommended if you want reliability.
Forget to mention. If you use a material with a very square BH loop like Metglas for example or where B
rem is very close to B
sat then you can also get a "latch up" condition where only one transistor conducts, see Pressman and Billings. One topology that used a smaller square loop core as a driver stage and a larger conventional core for the power stage is the Jensen converter, I think Severns and Bloom is the reference for that one but it's history.