Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

4. Operational Amplifiers

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "4. Operational Amplifiers"— Presentation transcript:

1 4. Operational Amplifiers
CIRCUITS by Ulaby & Maharbiz All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

2 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

3 Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Wafer: Thin slice of semiconductor material with highly polished surface Processed wafer is cut into many dies or chips. Lithography: Defining spatial pattern Photoresist: Polymer material that does not allow etching or deposition of areas underneath it.

4 Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication

5 Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication
Lithography: Defining spatial pattern Photoresist: Polymer material that does not allow etching or deposition of areas underneath it. All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

6 Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication

7 Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

8 Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Tech Brief 5: IC Fabrication

9 Operational Amplifier “Op Amp”
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Operational Amplifier “Op Amp” Two input terminals, positive (non- inverting) and negative (inverting) One output Power supply V+ , and Op Amp with power supply not shown (which is how we usually display op amp circuits) Op Amp showing power supply

10 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Inside The Op-Amp (741)

11 Gain Key important aspect of op amp: high voltage gain
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Gain Key important aspect of op amp: high voltage gain Output , A is op-amp gain (or open-loop gain) – different from circuit gain G Linear response

12 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Equivalent Circuit

13 Example 4-1: Op Amp Amplifier
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Example 4-1: Op Amp Amplifier KCL at Node a: Node a KCL at Node b: Node b For infinite A: = 5 =

14 Negative Feedback Feedback: return some of the output to the input
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Negative Feedback Feedback: return some of the output to the input Negative feedback decreases input signal Achieves desired circuit gain, with wide range for input Negative Feedback No Feedback Range of Range of 5 Gain = 5 Range of : ‒2 V to +2 V : ‒10 mV to +10 mV Gain = 1million Range of

15 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Negative Feedback

16 Circuit Analysis With Ideal Op Amps
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Circuit Analysis With Ideal Op Amps Use nodal analysis as before, but with “golden rules” N Do not apply KCL at op amp output No voltage drop across op amp input No current into op amp

17 Noninverting Amplifier
At node (max) = Vcc All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

18 Inverting Amplifier All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

19 Example 4-2: Input Current Source
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Example 4-2: Input Current Source Relate output voltage to input current source

20 Summing Amplifier All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

21 Example 4-3: Solution: All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

22 Difference Amplifier Note negative gain of channel 1
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Difference Amplifier Note negative gain of channel 1

23 “Buffers” Sections of Circuit
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Voltage Follower “Buffers” Sections of Circuit depends on both input and load resistors is immune to input and load resistors What is the op amp doing?

24 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

25 Example 4-5: Elevation Sensor
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Example 4-5: Elevation Sensor h = elevation, inversely proportional to air pressure Sensor Response Desired Output

26 Example 4-6: Multiple Op-Amp Circuit
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Example 4-6: Multiple Op-Amp Circuit

27 Measurement Uncertainty
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Measurement Uncertainty Direct Measurement v2 V0 = V2 ± 1% of V2 Thermistor G = 1 ± 1% (T = 21°C) 21°C ± 0.21°C Differential Measurement v2 G = 1 1% Thermistor V0 = (V2 ‒ V1) ± 1% of (V2 ‒ V1) (T = 21°C) 1°C ± 0.01°C v1 Much better measurement uncertainty Fixed Reference Temp = 20°C

28 Instrumentation Amplifier
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Instrumentation Amplifier Highly sensitive differential amplifier

29 Digital to Analog Converter
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Digital to Analog Converter Converts digital value into analog voltage 4-digit example

30 Digital to Analog Converter
Represent digital value with analog voltage All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

31 MOSFET (Field Effect Transistor)
Active Device: Voltage Controlled Current Source Gate voltage controls drain/source current All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

32 MOSFET Equivalent Circuit
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press MOSFET Equivalent Circuit Characteristic curves Idealized response

33 Example 4-9: MOSFET Amplifier
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Example 4-9: MOSFET Amplifier Given: Determine

34 Load Line You can use a “load line” to graphically determine
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Load Line You can use a “load line” to graphically determine Vout = VDS for a given Vin = VGS VDD/RD RL VDD

35 Digital Circuit: MOSFET Inverter
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Digital Circuit: MOSFET Inverter VDD = 15 V RL G S D ID 1 2 3 4 5 10 15 V GS =V in DS out VDD Output “High” Logic 1 Output “High” Logic 1 Output “Low” Logic 0 Output “Low” Logic 0 In Out 1 In Out Input “Low” Input “High”

36 Read-Only Memory (ROM) Circuits
VREAD = 1 VBIT = 0100 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

37 Another Digital Circuit Element: NAND
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Another Digital Circuit Element: NAND No current flows through resistor, unless both A and B inputs turn their transistors on to “pull down” Vout VDD A B Out A B Out 1 Vout A B NAND gates can be used to build any binary logic function

38 Another Digital Circuit Element: NOR
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press Another Digital Circuit Element: NOR Current will flow if either A or B inputs turn their transistors on to “pull down” Vout VDD A B Out A B Out 1 Vout A B NOR gates can be used to build any binary logic function

39 Example: Multisim Instruments
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

40 Multisim Table All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

41 All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

42 Multisim: MOSFET I-V Analyzer
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

43 Tech Brief 6: Display Technologies
All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

44 Tech Brief 6: Display Technologies
Digital Light Processing (DLP) All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press

45 Summary All rights reserved. Do not copy or distribute. © 2013 National Technology and Science Press


Download ppt "4. Operational Amplifiers"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google