Operational Amplifiers
Operational Amplifiers
Without negative Aol Is too high for linear amplifier Relativity high Relativity Low narrow
feedback applications
With negative feedback Acl Is set by feedback circuit to Can be increased or Can be reduced Wider
desired value reduced to a desired to a desired value
value depending on type
of circuit
Applications of Op-Amp
• Inverting Amplifier
• From figures: If = Ii.
Input and Output Impedance of
Inverting Amplifier
(i) Input impedance: While an OP-amp has an
extremely high input impedance, the inverting
amplifier does not. (Zi = Ri).
(ii) Output impedance: From figure the output
impedance of the inverting amplifier is the parallel
combination of Rf and the output impedance of OP-
amp itself.
• Example: Determine the output voltage for
the circuit of Fig.
Noninverting Amplifier
• Voltage gain:
Voltage Follower
• The voltage follower arrangement is a special
case of noninverting amplifier.
OP-Amp Integrator
• Circuit Analysis: i=ic
Output voltage of integrators circuits
(at fixed voltage)
Critical Frequency of Integrators
• All integrators have a critical frequency fc below which they
do not perform proper integration.
• The following equation is used to calculate the critical
frequency of an integrator:
OP-Amp Differentiator
Circuit analysis:
Comparator Circuits
• A comparator is an OP-amp circuit without negative feedback.
• It uses no feedback so that the voltage gain is equal to the
open-loop voltage gain (AOL) of OP-amp.
• It is operated in a non-linear mode.
Applications of comparators circuits
1. As a square wave generator or As a zero-crossing detector.
2. As a level detector.