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Electronics Questions

An instrumentation amplifier is a differential op-amp circuit that provides high input impedances and allows easy gain adjustment by varying a single resistor. For a circuit with two NMOS transistors connected in series with gates connected to 5V and one end connected to a 10V supply with Vth=1V, the output voltage is 4V. Important characteristics of a source follower include a gain close to 1, acting as a voltage buffer, and drawbacks like non-linearity from body effect and poor driving capability.

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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
10K views

Electronics Questions

An instrumentation amplifier is a differential op-amp circuit that provides high input impedances and allows easy gain adjustment by varying a single resistor. For a circuit with two NMOS transistors connected in series with gates connected to 5V and one end connected to a 10V supply with Vth=1V, the output voltage is 4V. Important characteristics of a source follower include a gain close to 1, acting as a voltage buffer, and drawbacks like non-linearity from body effect and poor driving capability.

Uploaded by

rAM
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Q1. What is Instrumentation Amplifier (IA) and what are all the advantages?

Ans1. An instrumentation amplifier is a differential op-amp circuit providing high input impedances with ease of gain
adjustment by varying a single resistor

Q2. Two Nmos Transistors are connected in series and the gates of both the transistors are connected to 5V. One end of
the Transistor is connected to a 10V supply and the Vth=1V. What is the voltage at the other end?
PS:This was a quick interview question asked by a company called Alcatel, to short list one of my friend for the interview

Ans2. The output voltage is 4V.

Consider a single NMOS as a switch.


The max voltage at the other end can reach max of VG - Vt, after that NMOS will be off.
So if the voltage at one end is less than VG-Vt it passes that value to the other end, but if it is more, it reaches VG-Vt at
the end and stops there bcoz after that the MOS switch will be off.

So in this case, first NMOS which has 12v, at the input, gives 4v out at its source, the other Transistor which has 4v at the
input transmits samething to the other end as it is.

So final voltage is 4V.

Q3. What are the important characteristics of a Source Follower ?

Ans3. Source follower need not be for an opamp.


1.Give the input to the gate and take the output at the source of a Mosfet, we get the configuration called Source
follower.The gain of such a stage is very close to 1.
2.It acts as a voltage buffer
3.Some of the drawbacks of this are non-linearity due to body effect,voltage headroom consumption due to level shift,
and poor driving capability

Q4:

How will the output signal of an ideal integrator look like after
- a positive pulse is applied to the input;
- a series of 10 positive pulses ?

Ans4
Among the above 3 waveforms,
1 --> Input pulses.
2 --> O/P for one pulse.
3 --> O/P for cont pulses of 1 waveform.

Q5. In the above circuit (Ref Q4), let R = 10KOhm C = 10nF. If the integrator capacitor is shunted by a 1MOhm resistor,
how will be the response for an input pulse of 1-V height and 1ms width?

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