Analog Circuits-II Answer Key
Analog Circuits-II Answer Key
and
output voltage
, where
is the differential gain. However, the output
of a real differential amplifier is better described as
where
is the common-mode gain, which is typically much smaller than the differential gain.
The CMRR is defined as the ratio of the powers of the differential gain over the common-mode
gain, measured in positive decibels (thus using the 20 log rule):
he 741 (a common op-amp chip) has a CMRR of 90 dB, which is reasonable in most cases. A
value of 70 dB may be adequate for applications which are insensitive to the effects on amplifier
output;some high-end devices may use op-amps with a CMRR of 120 dB or more.
An operational amplifier is a direct coupled high gain amplifier consisting of one or more
differential (OPAMP) amplifiers and followed by a level translator and an output stage
The block diagram of OPAMP is shown in fig. 1.
Fig. 1
The input stage is a dual input balanced output differential amplifier. This stage provides most of
the voltage gain of the amplifier and also establishes the input resistance of the OPAMP.The
intermediate stage of OPAMP is another differential amplifier which is driven by the output of
the first stage. This is usually dual input unbalanced output.
Because direct coupling is used, the dc voltage level at the output of intermediate stage is well
above ground potential. Therefore level shifting circuit is used to shift the dc level at the output
downward to zero with respect to ground. The output stage is generally a push pull
complementary amplifier. The output stage increases the output voltage swing and raises the
current supplying capability of the OPAMP. It also provides low output resistance.
3. Draw op-amp buffer. Explain its applications. Obtain its voltage gain.
Voltage follower (unity buffer amplifier)
Used as a buffer amplifier to eliminate loading effects (e.g., connecting a device with a high
source impedance to a device with a low input impedance).
Part B
6. Explain the need for current mirror circuits with neat diagrams.
A current mirror is a circuit designed to copy a current through one active device by controlling
the current in another active device of a circuit, keeping the output current constant regardless of
loading. The current being 'copied' can be, and sometimes is, a varying signal current.
Instrumentation amplifier is a kind of differential amplifier with additional input buffer stages.
The addition of input buffer stages makes it easy to match (impedance matching) the amplifier
with the preceding stage. Instrumentation are commonly used in industrial test and measurement
application. The instrumentation amplifier also has some useful features like low offset voltage,
high CMRR (Common mode rejection ratio), high input resistance, high gain etc.
A circuit providing an output based on the difference between two inputs (times a scale factor) is
given in the above figure. In the circuit diagram, opamps labelled A1 and A2 are the input
buffers. Anyway the gain of these buffer stages are not unity because of the presence of R1 and
Rg. Op amp labelled A3 is wired as a standard differential amplifier. R3 connected from the
output of A3 to its non inverting input is the feedback resistor. R2 is the input resistor. The
voltage gain of the instrumentation amplifier can be expressed by using the equation below.
Voltage gain (Av) = Vo/(V2-V1) = (1 + 2R1/Rg ) x R3/R2
An all-pass filter is a signal processing filter that passes all frequencies equally in gain, but
changes the phase relationship between various frequencies. It does this by varying its phase
shift as a function of frequency.
At high frequencies, the capacitor is a short circuit, thereby creating a unity-gain voltage buffer
(i.e., no phase shift).
At low frequencies and DC, the capacitor is an open circuit[disambiguation needed] and the
circuit is an inverting amplifier (i.e., 180 degree phase shift) with unity gain.
At the corner frequency =1/RC of the high-pass filter (i.e., when input frequency is 1/(2RC)),
the circuit introduces a 90 degree shift (i.e., output is in quadrature with input; it is delayed by a
quarter wavelength).
10. Explain the working principle o0f flash ADC with a neat diagram.
Also called the parallel A/D converter, this circuit is the simplest to understand. It is formed of a
series of comparators, each one comparing the input signal to a unique reference voltage. The
comparator outputs connect to the inputs of a priority encoder circuit, which then produces a
binary output. The following illustration shows a 3-bit flash ADC circuit:
Vref is a stable reference voltage provided by a precision voltage regulator as part of the
converter circuit, not shown in the schematic. As the analog input voltage exceeds the reference
voltage at each comparator, the comparator outputs will sequentially saturate to a high state. The
priority encoder generates a binary number based on the highest-order active input, ignoring all
other active inputs.
Part C
11. Discuss the characteristics of an ideal op-amp in detail.
Ideal characteristics of OPAMP
1. Open loop gain infinite
2. Input resistance infinite
3. Output impedance zero
4. Bandwidth infinite
OR
12. Explain in detail the following
1.Multistage differential amplifier
2.MOS differential amplifier
1.Multistage differential amplifier
Working
A reference bias current IBIAS is generated either externally or using on-chip circuits
The current mirror formed by M8 and M5 supplies the differential pair M1 and M2 with
bias current.
The i/p differential pair is actively loaded with the current mirror formed by M3 and M4
The second stage consists of M6 which is a common source amplifier actively loaded
with M8.
The voltage gain of the first stage
A1=-gm1(r02//r04)
A2=-gm1(r06//r07)
2.MOS differential amplifier
Resistively loaded mos differential amplifier
Zss = Rss//Css
Yss = 1/Rss +SCss
Actively loaded mos differential amplifier
From the above figure gain is high at dc and low frequencies,it starts to fall off at rather low
frequency.The uniform -20db/decade gain roll off shown is typical of internally compensated opamp.Thesse are units that have a network(usually a single capacitor)included within the same IC
chip whose function is to cause the op-amp gain to have the single time constant(STC) low pass
response shown.This process of modifying the open loop gain is termed frequency
compensation,and its purpose is to ensure that op-amp circuits will be stable.
The gain A(s) of an internally compensated op-amp may be expressed as
A(s) = A0/1+s/wb
Put s = jw
A(jw) = A0/1+jw/wb
= A0 wb /wb+jw
Consider wb << w
A(jw) = A0wb/jw
A0wb/w
From above figure the gain reaches to unity at a frequency denoted by wt and is given by
wt = A0wb
A(jw) = wt/jw
For w>>wb the open loop gain becomes
A(s) = A0/1+s/wb
=
A0 wb /wb+s
w>>wb
= A0 wb/s where A0wb = wt
A(s) = wt/s
= wt/w = ft/f
Increasing f by a factor of 10 results in reducing
OR
14. Discuss in detail the frequency compensation and slew rate in 2 stage
opamp with neat diagrams
The need for compensation arises because BH doesnot drop to unity well before <BH
reaches -180
Frequency compensation by
1) Moving phase cross over point Px out
2) Moving gain cross over point Gx in
For getting a stable system
1) Minimizing the overall phaseshift thus pushing the phase cross over out.
2) Dropping the gain thereby pushing the gain crossover in.
Miller compensation
Gain,ACL=VO/VIN = -R2/R1
2. Non-Inverting Amplifier
VOUT = VIN
4.Integrator
Waveforms
5. Differentiator
6. Summing Amplifier
a.Non-inverting Summing Amplifier
R = R1 =Rf/2
VO = ( Va + Vb + Vc)/3
OR
16. Draw an OP-amp RC Phase shift Oscillator circuit.Explain its
Working principle in detail.Derive the condition for oscillation
RC Phase Shift Oscillator
Opamp acts as the amplifying stage and RC network acts as feedback circuit.
The feedback circuit provides feedback voltage back into the input.
The opamp is used in inverting mode, so the signal is shifted by 180 at the output.
An additional 180 degree phase shift is provided by RC cascaded network.So the total phase
shift is 360 degrees.
Frequency of oscillation Fo = 1/26RC
Conditions for oscillation
1.The magnitude of the loopgain must be atleast 1.
2. The total phase shift around the loop must be 360 or 0
Degrees.
3.There should be an amplifier section and a feedback section.
Output waveform
17. Bring out the design details of first order high pass filter,with an
example.
First order high pass filter
Circuit diagram
Frequency Response
OR
18. Give an account on
1.Switched capacitor integrator
2.First order SC filter
Dual-Slope ADC
Working
Now assume positive input voltage is applied to the input through the switch
(SW) as selected by the control logic.
Inverting input of A1 is at virtual ground
Assuming that Vin is constant for a period of time, there will be constant current
through the input resistor R and therefore through the capacitor C.
Capacitor C will charge linearly because the current is constant, and as a result,
there will be a negative-going linear voltage ramp on the output of A1.
Start by assuming counter is reset and the output of the integrator is zero.
When the counter reaches a specified count, it will be reset, and the control
logic will switch the negative reference voltage (- V REF ) to the input of A1.
At this point the capacitor is charged to a negative voltage (- V) proportional
to the input analog voltage.
Now the capacitor discharges linearly because of the constant current from the V REF.
This linear discharge produces a positive-going ramp on the A1 output, starting
at V and having a constant slope that is independent of the charge voltage.
As the capacitor discharges the counter advances from its RESET state.
The time it takes the capacitor to discharge to zero depends on the initial voltage
- V (proportional to Vin) because the discharge rate (slope) is constant.
When the integrator (A1) output voltage reaches zero, the comparator (A 2 )
switches to the LOW state and disables the clock to the counter.
The binary count is latched, thus completing one conversion cycle.
The binary count is proportional to Vin because the time it takes the capacitor to
discharge depends only on - V, and the counter records this interval of time.
OR
20.Write technical notes on
1.Building Blocks of PLL
2.VCO
3.Monostable multivibrator using 555
Phase detector
The phase detector compares the i/p frequency and VCO frequency and generates a
dc voltage that is proportional to thephase difference between the two frequencies.
Low pass filter
The function of low pass filter is to remove the high frequency components in the
o/p of the phase detector and to remove high frequency noise.
Voltage controlled oscillator
VCO generates an o/p frequency that is proportional to its i/p voltage.
Working
Initially, when the output at pin 3 is low i.e. the circuit is in a stable state, the
transistor is on and capacitor- C is shorted to ground.
When a negative pulse is applied to pin 2, the trigger input falls below +1/3 VCC,
the output of comparator goes high which resets the flip-flop and consequently the
transistor turns off and the output at pin 3 goes high.
This is the transition of the output from stable to quasi-stable state. As the
discharge transistor is cutoff, the capacitor C begins charging toward +VCC through
resistance RA with a time constant equal to RAC.
When the increasing capacitor voltage becomes slightly greater than +2/3 VCC, the
output of comparator 1 goes high, which sets the flip-flop.
The transistor goes to saturation, thereby discharging the capacitor C and the output
of the timer goes low
Thus the output returns back to stable state from quasi-stable state.
The output of the Monostable Multivibrator remains low until a trigger pulse is
again applied. Then the cycle repeats.
tp = 1.0986 RAC
vc = VCC (1- e-t/RaC)
Substituting vc = 2/3 VCC in above equation we get the time taken by the capacitor to charge
from 0 to +2/3VCC.
So +2/3VCC. = VCC. (1 e-t/RAC) or
t RAC loge 3 = 1.0986 RAC
So pulse width, tP = 1.0986 RAC
= 1.1 RAC