OPAMP
OPAMP
OPAMP
Techniques
1
2
Operational-Amplifier
and its Applications
3
The Ideal Op Amplifier
4
The Ideal Op Amplifier
5
Characteristics of the Ideal Op
Amplifier
• Differential input resistance is infinite.
• Differential voltage gain is infinite.
• Very high gain (10,000 to 1,000,000)
• CMRR is infinite.
• Bandwidth is infinite.
• Output resistance is zero.
• Offset voltage and current is zero.
b) No input currents.
6
Equivalent Circuit of the Ideal Op
Amp
7
The Inverting Configuration
8
The Inverting Configuration
9
The Inverting Configuration
10
The Inverting Configuration
11
The Noninverting Configuration
13
The Voltage follower
14
The Weighted Summer
15
The Weighted Summer
Ra Rc Ra Rc Rc Rc
vo v1 ( )( ) v2 ( )( ) v3 ( ) v4 ( )
R1 Rb R2 Rb R3 R4
16
A Single Op-Amp Difference
Amplifier
Linear amplifier.
Theorem of linear
Superposition.
17
A Single Op-Amp Difference
Amplifier
Application of superposition
Inverting configuration
R2
vo1 vI 1
R1
18
A Single Op-Amp Difference
Amplifier
Application of superposition.
Noninverting configuration.
R2 R4
vo 2 (1 )( )v I 2
R1 R4 R3
19
Integrators
20
The Inverting Integrators
21
Frequency Response of the
integrator
22
The op-amp Differentiator
23
The op-amp Differentiator
R. W. Knepper
SC412, slide 2-19
Schmitt Trigger Op-amp Circuit
• The open-loop comparator from the previous two slides
is very susceptible to noise on the input
– Noise may cause it to jump erratically from + rail to – rail
voltages
• The Schmitt Trigger circuit (at the left) solves this
problem by using positive feedback
– It is a comparator circuit in which the reference voltage is
derived from a divided fraction of the output voltage, and
fed back as positive feedback.
– The output is forced to either VPOS or VNEG when the input
exceeds the magnitude of the reference voltage
– The circuit will remember its state even if the input
comes back to zero (has memory)
• The transfer characteristic of the Schmitt Trigger is
shown at the left
– Note that the circuit functions as an inverter with
hysteresis
– Switches from + to – rail when vIN > VPOS(R1/(R1 + R2))
– Switches from – to + rail when vIN< VNEG(R1/(R1 + R2))
R. W. Knepper
SC412, slide 2-20
Schmitt Trigger Op-amp Example (2.9 in text)
• Assume that for the Schmitt trigger circuit shown at
the left, VPOS/NEG = +/- 12 volts, R1 = R2, and vIN is a
10V peak triangular signal. What is the resulting
output waveform?
• Answer:
– The output will switch between +12 and –12 volts
– The switch to VNEG occurs when vIN exceeds
VPOS(R1/(R1 + R2)) = +6 volts
– The switch to VPOS occurs when vIN drops below
VNEG(R1/R1 + R2)) = -6 volts
– See waveforms at left
• Consider the case where we start out the Schmitt
Trigger circuit with vIN = 0 and vOUT = 0 (a quasi-
stable solution point for the circuit)
– However, any small noise spike on the input will push
the output either in the + or – direction, causing v+ to
also go in the same direction, which will cause the
output to move further in the same direction, etc. until
the output has become either VPOS or VNEG.
R. W. Knepper
SC412, slide 2-21
Bistable Circuit
29
Bistable Circuit
30
Bistable Circuit
VTH L
31
Bistable Circuit
VTL L
32
Bistable Circuit
33
A Bistable Circuit with Noninverting
Transfer Characteristics
R2 R1
v v I vo
R1 R2 R1 R2
34
A Bistable Circuit with Noninverting
Transfer Characteristics
VTH L(
R1 R2)
VTL L(
R1 R2)
35
Application of Bistable Circuit as a
Comparator
• Comparator is an analog-circuit building block
used in a variety applications.
• To detect the level of an input signal relative to a
preset threshold value.
• To design A/D converter.
• Include single threshold value and two threshold
values.
• Hysteresis comparator can reject the interference.
36
Application of Bistable Circuit as a
Comparator
37