NI Multisim Tutorials
NI Multisim Tutorials
Overview
NI Multisim is a powerful schematic capture and simulation environment that engineers, students, and professors can use to
simulate electronic circuits and prototype Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs). This article shows you how to capture,simulate, and
layout your first design in Multisim.
The example circuit in the article is an amplifier circuit. This non-inverting operational amplifier configuration consists of one active
component (the operational amplifier) and two passive resistor components that will be used to complete the feedback network to
provide gain in this circuit.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Part A: Selecting Components
3. Part B: Wiring the Schematic
4. Part C: Simulating the Circuit
5. Part D: Transferring to PCB Layout
6. Part E: Routing the Board
7. Additional Resources
1. Introduction
For this introductory example, you will simulate a standard non-inverting operational amplifier circuit (shown in Figure 1). The gain
of this non-inverting amplifier is calculated by the expression Gain = 1 + R1/R2. Therefore, if R1 = R2, then the gain is equal to 2,
which you will verify when you run interactive simulation in Multisim.
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Figure 2. Select a Component window.
The Component Browser organizes the database components into three logical levels. The Master Database contains all
shipping components in a read-only format. The Corporate Database is where you can save custom components to be shared
with colleagues. Finally, the User Database is where custom components are saved that can be used only by the specific
designer.
Additional Points
The components (or parts) are organized into Groups and Families to intuitively and logically group common parts together
and make searching easier and more effective.
The Component Browser shows the component name, symbol, functional description, model, and footprint all in a single
popup.
1. Select the Sources Group and highlight the POWER_SOURCES family.
2. Select the GROUND component (as shown in Figure 2).
3. Click OK. The Select a Component window temporarily closes and the ground symbol is ghosted to the mouse pointer.
4. Move the mouse to the appropriate place on the workspace and left-click once to place the component. After placing the
component, the Select a Component window will open again automatically.
5. Go to the Sources Group again and highlight the POWER_SOURCES Family (if not already highlighted from the previous
selection).
6. Select the DC_POWER component.
7. Place the DC_POWER component on the schematic.
8. Repeat steps 7, 8 and 9 to place a second DC_POWER component.
Additional Points
Without a power and ground your simulation cannot run.
If you need multiple components you can repeat the placement steps as shown or place one component and use copy (Ctrl+C)
and paste (Ctrl+V) to place additional components as needed.
By default, the Select a Component window keeps returning as a pop-up until you have completed placing your components.
Close the window to return to the schematic entry window.
Now place the remaining circuit components using the techniques discussed in the previous steps.
1. Select the Analog Group and the OPAMP family.
2. Type AD712 in the Component field.
3. Select the AD712SQ/883B component, as shown in the next figure:
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Figure 3. Selecting the operational amplifier.
Note that this component is a multisection component, as shown by the A and B tabs.
1. Place section A of the AD712SQ/883B component on the workspace area.
2. Return to the Select a Component window.
3. Select the Basic Group, Resistor Family.
4. Select a 1 k resistor. In the Footprint manufacturer/type field select IPC-2221A/2222/RES1300-700X250.
5. Place the resistor.
Note that you can rotate a component before placement by using the <Ctrl+R> shortcut on your keyboard when the component is
ghosted to the mouse pointer.
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Figure 5. Wiring the schematic.
The last key step is to connect the power supply terminals to the positive and negative power rails of the opamp via a virtual
connection using On-page connectors.
1. Select PlaceConnectorsOn-page connector and connect it to the positive terminal of the V1 power supply. The On-page
Connector window will open.
2. Enter +V in the Connector name field and click OK.
3. Select another On-page connector and connect it to terminal 8 of the opamp. The On-page Connector window will open
again.
4. Select the +V connector in the Available connectors list and click OK. The positive terminal of the V1 DC power supply is now
connected to pin 8 of the opamp via a virtual connection.
5. Repeat steps 6 to 9 to connect the negative terminal of V2 to pin 4 of the opamp. Name the On-page connector V. The
schematic should now look like the following figure:
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Figure 8. Connecting the Oscilloscope to the schematic.
1. Select SimulateRun to start the simulation.
2. Double-click on the Oscilloscope to open its Front Panel and observe the simulation results (see Figure 9). As expected, the
input signal is being amplified by a factor of 2.
3. Stop the simulation by pressing the red stop button in the simulation toolbar.
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Figure 10. Connecting the terminal block.
1. Place another 282834-4 terminal block on the workspace. This connector will be used to connect the input and output signals.
2. Connect pin 1 of the connector to pin 3 (input) of the opamp.
3. Connect pin 2 of the connector to pin 1 (output) of the opamp.
4. Connect pin 3 of the connector to ground. The schematic will look like the next figure:
Figure 12. Default board outline and parts transferred from Multisim.
For this exercise we will use a 2x2 inch board. Follow these steps to resize the board outline.
1. Locate the Design Toolbox on the left side of the screen.
2. Select the Layers tab and double-click Board Outline to enable this layer, as shown below.
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Figure 13. Design Toolbox.
The Layers tab of the Design Toolbox is where you move between layers of your design and control the appearance of layers.
1. Go to the toolbar area and locate the Select toolbar, refer to the following figure.
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Figure 16. Placing a trace.
1. Double-click the the Copper Bottom layer in the Design Toolbox.
2. Select PlaceLine.
3. Click pin 2 of part U1, draw a line to R1 and click its pin to finish the trace. Press Esc to exit the routing mode. Note that the
color of the trace is red, which is the color configure for the Copper Bottom layer.
4. Finish placing traces for the rest of the connections. Your board should look like Figure 17.
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Figure 18. 3D Preview.
7. Additional Resources
NI Multisim and Ultiboard Technical Resources (http://www.ni.com/multisim/technical-resources/)
National Instruments Circuit Design Technical Library (http://www.ni.com/white-paper/5579/en/)
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