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EE 220 Chap 4 Draft

The document discusses operational amplifiers (op amps), including their characteristics, ideal op amp model, and various op amp circuits such as inverting amplifiers, non-inverting amplifiers, summing amplifiers, difference amplifiers, voltage followers, and cascaded op amps. Example problems are provided for each circuit.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views23 pages

EE 220 Chap 4 Draft

The document discusses operational amplifiers (op amps), including their characteristics, ideal op amp model, and various op amp circuits such as inverting amplifiers, non-inverting amplifiers, summing amplifiers, difference amplifiers, voltage followers, and cascaded op amps. Example problems are provided for each circuit.

Uploaded by

om
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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EE 220

Operational Amplifiers

1
Operational Amplifiers (Op Amps)

1. Op Amp Characteristics
2. Ideal Op Amp
3. Inverting Amplifier
4. Non-Inverting Amplifier
5. Summing Amplifier
6. Difference Amplifier
7. Voltage Follower
8. Cascaded Op Amps

2
What is an Op Amp?
 It is an electronic circuit that behaves like a
voltage-controlled voltage source.
 It is often used to perform mathematical
operations such as inversion, addition, subtraction,
multiplication, division, differentiation and integration.

3
Inside The Op Amp
Operational Amplifier
 Two input terminals, positive (non-
inverting) and negative (inverting)
 One output
 Power supply V+ , and

Op Amp showing power supply Op Amp with power supply not


shown (which is how we usually
display op amp circuits)
Op Amp Gain
 Key important aspect of op amp: high voltage gain output,

◦ A is the op-amp gain (or open-loop gain)


◦ Linear response
Op Amp Equivalent Circuit
Circuit Analysis With Ideal Op-Amps

 Use nodal analysis as before.




 N
 Do not apply KCL at op amp output
Inverting Amplifier
 An inverting amplifier reverses the polarity of the input
signal while amplifying it.

Rf
vo   vi
R1 9
Inverting Amplifier
Example 1:
Refer to the op amp circuit below. If vi = 0.5V, calculate the
output voltage vo and the current in the 10 k resistor.

Answer: (a) -1.25V; (b) 50μA

10
Non-Inverting Amplifier
 Non-inverting amplifier is designed to produce positive
voltage gain.

 Rf 
vo  1  vin Vo = (1+R1/R2)vs
 R1 

11
Non-Inverting Amplifier
Example 2:
For the op amp circuit shown below, calculate the output
voltage vo.

Answer: -1V
12
Summing Amplifier
 Summing Amplifier is an op amp circuit that combines
several inputs and produces an output that is equal to the
weighted sum of the inputs.

 Rf Rf Rf 
vo   v1  v2  v3 
 R1 R2 R3 
13
Summing Amplifier
Example 3:
Calculate vo and io in the op amp circuit shown below.

Answer: -3.8V, -1.425mA


14
Difference Amplifier
 Difference amplifier is a device that amplifies the difference
between two weighted inputs.

R2 (1  R1 / R2 ) R2 R2 R3
vo  v2  v1  vo  v2  v1 , if  1
R1 (1  R3 / R4 ) R1 R1 R4
15
Voltage Follower/Buffer

depends on load resistor.

is immune to load resistor.


Cascaded Op Amps
 It is a head-to-tail arrangement of two or more op amp
circuits such that the output to one is the input of the
next.

17
Cascaded Op Amps
Example 4:
Find vo and io in the circuit shown below.

Answer: 350mV, 25μA


18
Cascaded Op Amps
Example 5:
Find vo in terms of v1, v2 and v3.

19
20
Practice Problems (Chap. 4)
 Solve the following problems:
4, 8, 12, 16, 20, … 52.

21
Another Transistor: the MOSFET
 A MOSFET (metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor) is
a voltage-controlled electronic switch.
 A MOSFET has three terminals: the gate (G), the source (S),
and the drain (D).
 Because the gate G is separated from the rest of the transistor
by the thin insulating layer, no dc current can flow from G to
either D or S.

22
More to come on MOSFETs

23

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