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Operational Amplifiers. What is an Op Amp?. High voltage gain IC with differential inputs Designed to have characteristics near ideal Inexpensive, widely used IC Available in wide range of packages Typically require a positive and a negative power supply.
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What is an Op Amp? • High voltage gain IC with differential inputs • Designed to have characteristics near ideal • Inexpensive, widely used IC • Available in wide range of packages • Typically require a positive and a negative power supply • Uses: amplifier, buffer, summer, differentiator, integrator, comparator, instrumentation amp, Schmitt trigger, negative impedance, super diode, logarithmic/exponential output, simulated inductor
History of Op Amps • Originally designed for analog computers using vacuum tubes • Output voltage is a function of input voltage (addition, subtraction, integration, differentiation, exponential, logarithm…) • K2-W: first mass produced op amp (1952) • Invented by George Philbrick • $22. Gain ≈ 20,000. Gain-bandwidth ≈ 1MHz. Input impedance ≈ 50kΩ • See picture (K2-W with and without shell)
History of Op Amps • First transistor op amp (μA702) used 12 BJTs • Invented in 1964 by Bob Widlar • Sold for $300 • Prone to short circuits • μA709 improved on μA702 (used 14 transistors) • Invented in 1965 also by Bob Widlar • Higher gain, more bandwidth, cheaper, more robust • Sold for $70 to start, then $2 within a few years
741 Op Amp • Introduced in 1968, and versions still available and in use today
Op Amp Flavours • High output power • High speed • large bandwidth • Low noise • Low power • Low voltage • Precision • Rail-to-Rail • Small package • >1 Op Amp per package
Ideal Op Amp • Input resistance is infinite • Output resistance is zero • Bandwidth is infinite • Input current is zero • Open loop gain is infinite • Output voltage is zero when input voltages are zero
Ideal Op Amp Gain • If open loop gain of ideal op amp → ∞, what’s the use? • Any input will result in + or – saturation • Even non-ideal op amps not useful with open loop • Only small input voltages before + or - saturation • Op amps almost never use open loop. • Use feedback to control the actual gain • Feedback!
Feedback • Positive Feedback • Output feeds back to input, and increase output leading to out of control system • E.g., microphone picks up speaker output, driving speaker output higher which is picked up by microphone… • Negative Feedback • Output feeds back to input to allow system to adjust and keep output within a certain range • E.g., body controlling blood glucose levels
Feedback in Op Amps • If output is fed back to non-inverting input – positive feedback occurs • Not useful • If output is fed back to inverting input – negative feedback occurs • Widely used configuration
Golden Rules for Op-Amps 1. With negative feedback:The op amp drives the output so that the two inputs are at equal voltage 2. Assume that the input current is zero.
Buffer or Voltage Follower • No voltage difference between the output and the input • Buffer draws no current, so it puts no load on the source. Output current supplied by VCC. • Used to isolate sources from loads
Non-Inverting Amplifier • AV = Vo/VI • VI = V2 (i.e., Vin+ = Vin- ) … from “Golden Rules” • No current flows into Vin+ (Golden Rule) therefore: VI = V2 = Vo * R1/(R1 + R2) … voltage divider • AV = Vo/VI = (R1 + R2)/R1 = 1 + (R2 / R1) V2
Non-Inverting AmplifierOther Considerations • R2 can’t be too low since the Op Amp has limited current capability • R1 should be much smaller than the input impedance • Circuit voltage gain should be much less than the open loop gain of the Op Amp • The output voltage swing has to be less than the supply voltages
Non-Inverting Amplifier Examples (from course package)
Inverting Amplifier • Current through R1 equals the current through Rf • No current into the inputs • The voltage at both op amp inputs is zero
Inverting Amplifier • Current through R1 • Current through Rf
Inverting Amplifier • Why the minus sign for the current through Rf? • The convention for Ohm’s Law is that the current flows from the high voltage to the low voltage for a resistor • Here the current flows from the low voltage (ground) to the high voltage (VO)
Inverting Amplifier • The current through R1 must equal the current through R2 since there is no current in the inputs. • Combining the two equations for the currents
Inverting Amplifier Examples (from course package)
Op Amp Applications • Arithmetic • Summing, differencing • Calculus • Integration, differentiation • Level detectors • Comparators, Schmitt Triggers