ELL 100 Introduction To Electrical Engineering: Ecture Perational Mplifiers
ELL 100 Introduction To Electrical Engineering: Ecture Perational Mplifiers
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BASIC CONCEPTS
Amplifier: Electronic circuit that produces an output quantity
(voltage/current) in linear proportion to the input quantity.
Op-amp: Operational amplifier, a high-gain amplifier with an output
that corresponds to the difference between two input signals.
Microphone Amplifier
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REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
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REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
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REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Control of Motors
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REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Music Players
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REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Analog Computer
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REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Waveform Generator
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HISTORY OF OP-AMP
Harold S. Black develops the feedback amplifier for
1920- the Western Electric Company
1930 The First Op-Amp: Designed by Karl Swartzel
at Bell Labs
1930–
1940 Loebe Julie then develops an Op-Amp with
Vacuum-tube two inputs: Inverting and Non-inverting
based 1940-
electronic 1950 Advent of solid-state
circuits (semiconductor) electronics
1950- Bipolar junction transistors
1960
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HISTORY OF OP-AMP
Beginning of the Solid State Op-Amp, GAP/R P45
1960-
1961 The GAP/R PP65 makes the Op-Amp into a circuit
component as a potted module
1962 Robert J.Widlar develops the μA702 Monolithic
IC Op-Amp and shortly after the μA709
1963
National Semiconductors: The LM101
and then the LM101A (both by Widlar)
1967-
Integrated 1968 Fairchild Semiconductors:
circuits (ICs) The “famous” μA741 (by Dave
1968-
1969 Fullager) and then the μA748
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OP-AMP INTRODUCTION
• Multi-stage high-gain amplifier having a differential input and a
single-ended output that draws power from an external supply voltage.
• Contains a number of transistor-based differential amplifier stages to
achieve a very high voltage gain (~105).
• Contains several transistors, resistors, a few capacitors and diodes in
it’s internal circuitry
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OP-AMP INTRODUCTION
Differential Amplifier: Basic unit of the op-amp is a differential amplifier.
A number of differential amplifiers are connected in cascade to form op-amp.
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OP-AMP INTRODUCTION
Op-amp Basic Circuit
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OP-AMP INTERNAL CIRCUIT
The op-amp internal circuit can be divided into 3 stages:
(a) Input Stage
The function of the input stage is to amplify the input difference, Vp − Vn,
and convert it to a single-ended signal.
(b) Second Stage
It further amplifies the signal and provides frequency compensation via
the capacitor, CC
(c) Output Stage
The output stage provides output current drive capability.
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OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Differential mode operation:
Vo
Vd
Vo = AdVi
Ad typically very large Vi1 Vi2
Vo = AcVi
Vi
Ac << Ad
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OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Output voltage Vo = AdVd + AcVc
Vo
Vd = (Vi1 – Vi2) , Vc = (Vi1 + Vi2)/2 Vd
Ad >> Ac
Vi1 Vi2
Differential
Mode
Common
Mode
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE 2
Vo 8
Soln: The differential gain is given by Ad 8000
Vd 1m
Vo 12m
Common mode gain is given as Ac 12
Vc 1m
Ad 8000
CMRR: 666.7
Ac 12
Ad
CMRR (dB): CMRR 20log10 56.48dB
Ac
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OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Slew Rate: Maximum rate of change of output voltage vs time
fmax is the highest signal frequency and Vp is the maximum output voltage
required to be supported by the op-amp.
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE 1
Problem: For an op-amp having a slew rate of SR = 2 V/s, what is the
maximum closed-loop voltage gain that can be used when the input signal
varies by 0.5 V in 10 s?
Vo Vi
Soln: For voltage gain A, Vo AVi => A
t t
Vo
=> A t
SR
2
40
Vi Vi 0.5
10
t t
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE 2
Problem: Determine the maximum frequency for an input a.c. signal
of 0.02 V peak that may be amplified without any distortion using an
op-amp with slew rate SR = 0.5 V/s and closed-loop voltage gain of 24.
SR
The max signal frequency is given by f max 175 103 Hz
2 Vo
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OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Input Bias Current: The average magnitude of the two base currents at
the input terminals with the output at a specified level.
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OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Input Offset Current: The difference between the base currents into the
two input terminals with the output at a specified level.
It is because of an imbalance between the two input terminals e.g. due to
slight differences in transistor characteristics or biasing elements.
IIO = IIB+ − IIB−
e.g. For an input offset current IIO = 5 nA and input bias current IIB = 30 nA,
the base currents at the two input terminals will be
I IO I IO
I I IB
IB 30 5 / 2 32.5nA I I IB
IB 30 5 / 2 27.5nA
2 2 29
OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Input Offset Voltage: DC voltage that must be applied between the input
terminals to provide a DC output voltage of zero. A direct consequence of
a finite input offset current.
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OP-AMP CHARACTERISTICS
Drift: Variation in the output offset voltage due to change in temperature.
It depends on the IIO (input offset current) and VIO (input offset voltage)
sensitivities w.r.t temperature
VosIO I osIO
Vdrift TAnoise
v TR f
T T
“Feedback”
nA/oC Resistance
μV/oC Effective from output
Voltage gain to inptut
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE
Problem: Determine the output voltage drift for the circuit shown below
at a target temperature of 80°C. Assume that the circuit has been nulled
at 25°C and the closed-loop voltage gain is 100. The input offset voltage
and current for the op-amp vary with temperature as ΔVIO/ΔT = 5 μV/°C
and ΔIIO/ΔT = 1 nA/°C.
Rf = 100 kΩ
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE
Soln:
VosIO I osIO
Vdrift TAnoise
v TR f
T T
Given ΔVIO/ΔT = 5 μV/°C, ΔIIO/ΔT = 1 nA/°C,
ΔT = 80 – 25 = 55°C, Av = 100, Rf = 105 Ω
Rin RL
vout vs A
Rin Rs L
R Rout
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EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT
• Op-amps do not have a 0-V ground terminal. Ground reference is
established externally via the power-supply common terminal.
• A is called the open-loop voltage gain because it is the gain of the
op-amp without any external feedback from output to input.
• A practical limitation of the op-amp is that the magnitude of its
output voltage cannot exceed supply voltages |VCC| or |VEE|
• In the linear region, the curve of output vs input voltage is
approximately a straight line and its slope represents the voltage gain.
• In the saturation region, the amplifier produces a clipped output a.c.
waveform (Vout clipped at +VCC or –VEE)
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OP-AMP INPUT-OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Vo
Vin,min Vin,max
0 Vd
Linear region
Negative Saturation -VEE (slope = voltage gain)
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IDEAL OP-AMP
iN =0
VN
Vo
VD
AV D
VP
iP =0
Rroout Vo
VD Rrdin x
AV D in
A is large but finite (~20,000 - 200,000), Rin is large but finite (~0.3 - 2 MΩ)
Rout is small but non-zero (~75 Ω), Bandwidth is finite (Capacitances take effect)
CMRR ~70-90 dB (~3000 - 30,000), Slew Rate <~0.5 V/μs
VIO ~2-5 mV, IIO ~20-200 nA, IIB ~80-500 nA 38
COMMONLY USED ICS & PIN CONFIGURATIONS
741: General purpose op-amp IC
Offers high slew rate, low input bias & offset current, and low output-drift.
Used in high speed integrators, fast D/A converters, sample & hold circuits etc.
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+VCC
VIRTUAL GROUND CONCEPT
• Vo ≤ |VCC| ~ 5 - 15 V
ro Vo
• e.g. for Vo = 10 V & A = 105, VD rd
AV D
VD = 0.1 mV Iin
-VCC
i1 R1 i
v
vi v
vo
Vi
Closed loop gain: Ve V
Vi e Aol
Acl = Vo/Vi = Aol /(1 + βAol) Vo
Vf iload
For βAol >> 1, Acl ~ 1/β
Vo
Vf Feedback
Sacrifice factor S = Aol / Acl ~ βAol β
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Effects of Negative Feedback
• Fixes the gain at a precise value using external circuit elements, thus
becoming immune to variations of op-amp open-loop gain.
• Tends to stabilize operations and reduce fluctuations.
• Reduces the effect of device nonlinearities.
• Increases the bandwidth of the system by factor of S.
• Exercises control over the input and output impedances of the circuit.
• The system gain decreases by factor of S. Thus, there’s a tradeoff
between bandwidth and gain.
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE
Problem: The open loop gain (Aol) of an amplifier is 200, operating from
DC (f1 ~ 0) to an upper cutoff frequency (f2-ol) of 10 kHz. If the feedback
factor (β) is 0.04, what are the closed loop gain (Acl) and new upper cutoff
frequency (f2-cl)?
Aol 200
Soln: Acl Acl 22.22
1 Aol =>
1 0.04*200
Aol 200
Sacrifice factor S 9
Acl 22.22
vi v
vi / R1 = -vo / Rf
vo Av = vo /vi = -(Rf / R1)
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE
Problem: Find vo for the circuit shown below
As v = v’ = 0, KCL at (−): R1
R2
v1
v1 0 -vv32 0 vo 0
R1 R1 R2
1 v0 v
=> v1 v2 -vv23
R1 v
R1 R2
vo
R2
vo v2 v1
R1
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NON-INVERTING AMPLIFIER
Input is applied to non-inverting (+) terminal.
Output has same polarity/phase as input signal.
Rf if
By the virtual ground concept,
i1 R1
v = v’ = vi and i1 = -if
v
v -vi / R1 = (vi – vo) / Rf
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NUMERICAL EXAMPLE 1
Problem: Given vi = 1 V in the circuit below.
Find the output voltage vo and output current io
v i =0
Soln: v = v’= vi = 1 V
v i=0
As i=0,
io
vi 0 vo vi
vi
40 RkΩ
1
52kΩ
R vo R20
3 kΩ 5k 40k
vo 9V
vo vo vi
io io 0.65mA
20k 40k 54
NUMERICAL EXAMPLE 2
Problem: Design a non-inverting amplifier with a gain of 26-dB and an
input impedance of 47 kΩ.
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NUMERICAL 1
Problem: A 741 op-amp with slew rate SR = 0.5 V/μs is used as part of a
motor control system. If the highest reproducible frequency is 3 kHz and
the maximum output level is 12 V peak, does slewing ever occur?
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Soln: KCL at
inverting (-) terminal:
2 V1
0
10 20
=> V1 4V
V1 V1 V1 V0
KCL at node V1: 0 => V0 2V1 8V
5 20 4
8 8 (4)
Output current is given by I 0 2mA
8 4 59
NUMERICAL 3
Problem: Determine vo in the op-amp circuit below.
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Soln: KCL at node a:
va vo 6 va
40k 20k
=> va vo 12 2va
=> vo 3va 12
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NUMERICAL 4
Problem: Find the output voltage Vo for the circuit below.
2
6 8
Vo
12
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2
Soln: KCL at the non-
4
inverting (+) input,
V V Vo V 6
0
12 8 6 6 8
Vo
=> Vo 3V 8 12
By voltage division,
4 2 2
V V
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Vo Vo => Vo 3 Vo 8 => Vo 8V
3 3
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NUMERICAL 5
Problem: Determine the input impedance and output voltage for the
op-amp circuit shown below. RL is the load resistance.
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NUMERICAL 5
Soln: Since V− = 0, the input impedance is Zin = Vin / Iin = 5 kΩ
Vo AVi Iin V−
Vin
Rf 20k
A 4
R1 5k
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PRACTICE NUMERICAL 1
Problem:
Determine Vo.
Ans. Vo = -1.95V
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PRACTICE NUMERICAL 2
Problem: (a) A differential amplifier has an open-circuit voltage gain of
100. The input signals are 3.25 and 3.15 V. Determine the output voltage.
(b) The differential amplifier has a common input signal of 3.20 V to both
terminals. This results in an output signal of 26 mV. Determine the
common-mode gain and the CMRR.
Ans. 21V
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PRACTICE NUMERICAL 5
Problem: Design an inverting amplifier with a gain of 10 and an input
impedance of 15 kΩ. Rf if
i1 R1
v
vi v
vo
Ans. R1 = 15 kΩ , Rf = 150 kΩ
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REFERENCES
1. Edward Hughes; John Hiley, Keith Brown, Ian McKenzie Smith,
“Electrical and Electronic Technology”, 10th edition, Pearson
Education Limited, Year: 2008.
2. Alexander, Charles K., and Sadiku, Matthew N. O., “Fundamentals of
Electric Circuits”, 5th Ed, McGraw Hill, Indian Edition, 2013.
3. Robert-Boylestad, Louis-Nashelsky, “Electronic-Devices-and-Circuit-
Theory”, 7th-Edition.
4. Ramakant A. Gayakwad, “Op-Amps and Linear Integrated Circuits”,
4th edition, 2008. 72