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ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY EE 303 H. Chan; Mohawk College.

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1 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY EE 303 H. Chan; Mohawk College

2 Main Topics Thyristors and Other Devices Operational Amplifiers
Op-Amp Frequency Response Basic Op-Amp Circuits and Applications Active Filters Oscillators Voltage Regulators H. Chan; Mohawk College

3 Thyristors Thyristors are devices constructed of four semiconductor layers (pnpn). Thyristors include: Shockley diode, silicon-controlled rectifier (SCR), diac and triac. They stay on once they are triggered, and will go off only if current is too low or when triggered off. Usage: lamp dimmers, motor speed controls, ignition systems, charging circuits, etc. H. Chan; Mohawk College

4 The Shockley Diode A Anode (A) A p Q1 n p n Q2 Cathode (K) K K Basic
Construction Schematic Symbol Equivalent Circuit H. Chan; Mohawk College

5 Shockley Diode Characteristic Curve
IA RS IA V On IH IS Off VBR(F) VAK VBR(F) = forward-breakover voltage IS = switching current IH = holding current H. Chan; Mohawk College

6 Shockley Diode Basic Operation
Between 0 V and VBR(F), the Shockley diode is in the forward-blocking region, i.e. off state. At VBR(F), the diode switches to the forward-conduction region and VAK drops to VBE+VCE(sat); IA increases rapidly. When IA is reduced to < IH, the diode rapidly switches back to the off state. H. Chan; Mohawk College

7 A Shockley Diode Application
VBR(F) RS C VC VS D VS > 0 V Voltage Waveform Relaxation Oscillator Capacitor charges through RS and discharges through D. H. Chan; Mohawk College

8 Silicon-Controlled Rectifier
SCR is another four-layer pnpn device. Has 3 terminals: anode, cathode, and gate. In off state, it has a very high resistance. In on state, there is a small on (forward) resistance. Applications: motor controls, time-delay circuits, heater controls, phase controls, etc. H. Chan; Mohawk College

9 SCR Anode (A) A A p Q1 n Gate (G) p G n G Q2 Cathode (K) K K Basic
Construction Schematic Symbol Equivalent Circuit H. Chan; Mohawk College

10 Turning The SCR On +V IA RA IA IH0 Q1 IG2>IG1 IG1>IG0 IG0=0 IH1
IB1 IB2 IH2 VF VBR(F2) IG Q2 VBR(F1) VBR(F0) IK SCR characteristic curves for different IG Values H. Chan; Mohawk College

11 Notes on SCR Turn-On The positive pulse of current at the gate turns on Q2 providing a path for IB1. Q1 then turns on providing more base current for Q2 even after the trigger is removed. Thus, the device stays on (latches). The SCR can be turned on without gate triggering by increasing VAK to  VBR(F0). But IG controls the value of the forward-breakover voltage: VBR(F) decreases as IG is increased. H. Chan; Mohawk College

12 Turning The SCR Off +V +V +V RA RA G RA G G
a) Anode Current Interruption b) Forced Commutation H. Chan; Mohawk College

13 SCR Characteristics & Ratings
Forward-breakover voltage, VBR(F): voltage at which SCR enters forward-conduction (on) region. Holding current, IH: value of anode current for SCR to remain in on region. Gate trigger current, IGT: value of gate current to switch SCR on. Average forward current, IF(avg): maximum continuous anode current (dc) that the SCR can withstand. Reverse-breakdown voltage, VBR(R): maximum reverse voltage before SCR breaks into avalanche. H. Chan; Mohawk College

14 Half-Wave Power Control
IL IP A Vin RL R1 qf B R2 where qf = firing angle = 900 max. D1 H. Chan; Mohawk College

15 Silicon-Controlled Switch (SCS)
A A GA GA Q1 GK GK Q2 K K Schematic Symbol Equivalent Circuit H. Chan; Mohawk College

16 Notes On SCS SCS can be turned on either by a positive pulse at the cathode or a negative pulse at the anode. SCS can be turned off by using pulses of the reversed polarity or by anode current interruption methods. SCS and SCR are used in similar applications. SCS has faster turn-off with pulses on either gate terminal; but it has lower maximum current and voltage ratings than SCR. H. Chan; Mohawk College

17 The Diac and Triac Both the diac and the triac are types of thyristors that can conduct current in both directions (bilateral). They are four-layer devices. The diac has two terminals, while the triac has a third terminal (gate). The diac is similar to having two parallel Shockley diodes turned in opposite directions. The triac is similar to having two parallel SCRs turned in opposite directions with a common gate. H. Chan; Mohawk College

18 The Diac IF A1 A1 n p IH -VBR(R) VF n VR VBR(F) p -IH n A2 A2 IR
Symbol Basic Construction Characteristic Curve H. Chan; Mohawk College

19 Diac Equivalent Circuit
Vin A2 Q2 Q4 Current can flow in both directions A2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

20 The Triac A1 A1 A1 Q3 n n Q1 p n p G n n G A2 Q4 Q2 Gate A2 Symbol
Basic Construction A2 Equivalent circuit H. Chan; Mohawk College

21 Triac Phase-Control Circuit
Trigger Point (adjusted by R1) RL D1 A1 Vin R1 G Trigger Point A2 D2 Voltage Waveform across RL H. Chan; Mohawk College

22 The Unijunction Transistor
B2 Base 2 B2 r’B2 n E E Emitter p r’B1 B1 B1 Base 1 Equivalent Circuit Symbol Construction H. Chan; Mohawk College

23 Notes on UJT UJT has only one pn junction.
It has an emitter and two bases, B1 and B2. r’B1 and r’B2 are internal dynamic resistances. The interbase resistance, r’BB = r’B1 + r’B2. r’B1 varies inversely with emitter current, IE r’B1 can range from several thousand ohms to tens of ohms depending on IE. H. Chan; Mohawk College

24 Basic UJT Biasing Vr’B1 = hVBB h = r’B1/r’BB is the standoff ratio. B2
If VEB1 < Vr’B1 + Vpn, IE  0 since pn junction is not forward biased (Vpn = barrier potential of pn junction) r’B2 E + VBB _ + VEB1 _ At VP = hVBB + Vpn, the UJT turns on and operates in a negative resistance region up to a certain value of IE. r’B1 hVBB B1 It then becomes saturated and IE increases rapidly with VE. H. Chan; Mohawk College

25 UJT Characteristic Curve
Negative Resistance Cutoff Saturation VP Peak Valley VV IE IP IV H. Chan; Mohawk College

26 Waveforms for UJT relaxation oscillator
Applications of UJT UJT can be used as trigger device for SCRs and triacs. Other applications include nonsinusoidal oscillators, sawtooth generators, phase control, and timing circuits. VE +VBB VP R1 VV t VE VR2 VR2 C R2 t Waveforms for UJT relaxation oscillator Relaxation oscillator H. Chan; Mohawk College

27 Conditions For UJT Oscillator Operation
In the relaxation oscillator, R1 must not limit IE at the peak point to less than IP at turn-on, i.e., VBB - VP > IPR1. To ensure turn-off of the UJT at the valley point, R1 must be large enough that IE can decrease below IV, i.e., VBB - VV < IVR1. So, for proper operation: R2 is usually << R1, and the frequency of oscillations is H. Chan; Mohawk College

28 The Programmable UJT The PUT is actually a type of thyristor
It can replace the UJT in some oscillator applications. It is more similar to an SCR (four-layer device) except that its anode-to-gate voltage can be used to both turn on and turn off the device. H. Chan; Mohawk College

29 PUT Construction & Symbol
+V Anode (A) R1 R2 A p Gate (G) n G p Vin R3 n K Cathode (K) Basic Construction PUT Symbol and Biasing H. Chan; Mohawk College

30 Notes On PUT Notice that the gate is connected to the n region adjacent to the anode. The gate is always biased positive with respect to the cathode. When VA - VG > 0.7 V, the PUT turns on. The characteristic plot of VAK versus IA is similar to the VE versus IE plot of the UJT. H. Chan; Mohawk College

31 The Phototransistor The phototransistor has a light-sensitive, collector-base junction and is exposed to light through a lens opening in the transistor package. When there is no incident light, there is a small thermally generated leakage current, ICEO, called the dark current and is typically in the nA range. When light strikes the collector-base pn junction, a base current, Il, is produced that is directly proportional to the light intensity. H. Chan; Mohawk College

32 Symbol & Characteristic of Phototransistor
IC (mA) 50 mW/cm2 +VCC 10 40 mW/cm2 8 RC 30 mW/cm2 6 20 mW/cm2 4 10 mW/cm2 2 Dark current 5 10 15 20 25 VCE (V) Bias circuit Collector characteristic curves H. Chan; Mohawk College

33 Notes on Phototransistor
A phototransistor can be either a two-lead or three-lead device. The collector characteristic curves show the collector current increasing with light intensity. Phototransistors are sensitive only to light within a certain range of wavelengths as defined by their spectral response curve. Photodarlingtons have higher light sensitivity than phototransistors but slower switching speed . H. Chan; Mohawk College

34 Applications of Phototransistors
+V Phototransistors are used in a wide variety of applications such as automatic door activators, process counters, and various light-activated alarms. Alarm R1 SCR Reset switch R2 Q1 Light-interruption alarm H. Chan; Mohawk College

35 The Light-Activated SCR
The light-activated SCR (LASCR) operates essentially as does the conventional SCR except it can also be light-triggered. Most LASCRs have an available gate terminal for conventional triggering. The LASCR is most sensitive to light when the gate terminal is open. Symbol H. Chan; Mohawk College

36 Optical Couplers Optical couplers provide complete electrical isolation between an input circuit and an output circuit. They provide protection from high voltage transients, surge voltage, and low-level noise. They also allow voltage level translation, and different grounds for interfacing circuits. Input circuit of optical coupler is typically an LED Output circuit can take many forms. H. Chan; Mohawk College

37 Common Types of Optical-Coupling Devices
Phototransistor Output LASCR Output Photodarlington Output Phototriac Output H. Chan; Mohawk College

38 Optocoupler Parameters
Isolation Voltage is the maximum voltage between the input and output terminals without dielectric breakdown; typically 7500 V ac peak. DC Current Transfer Ratio = Iout/Iin (in %); typically 2 to 100% for phototransistors. LED Trigger Current is the current (mA) required to trigger light-activated thyristor output devices. Transfer Gain = Vout/Iin applies to optically isolated ac linear couplers; typically 200 mV/mA. H. Chan; Mohawk College

39 Introduction To Operational Amplifiers
Inverting input 1 8 - Output NC Invert V+ Noninvert Output + Noninverting input V- Symbol Typical Package Op-amps are linear IC devices with two input terminals, and one output terminal. One input is inverting (-), and the other noninverting (+). Standard symbol usually does not show dc supply terminals. H. Chan; Mohawk College

40 Ideal versus Practical Op-Amp
Ideal op-amp characteristics: Zin = ; Av = ; bandwidth = ; Zout = 0 - Zin Vout Vin AvVin Zo Practical op-amp characteristics: Zin = very high (MW); Av = very high (100,000); Zout = very low (<100 W) bandwidth = few MHz range Vout and Iout have limitations + Op-amp representation H. Chan; Mohawk College

41 The Differential Amplifier
+VCC 1 1 Inputs Outputs RC1 RC2 Outputs 2 2 Input 1 Input 2 1 2 Symbol Q1 Q2 An op-amp typically consists of two or more differential amplifier stages. RE Circuit VEE H. Chan; Mohawk College

42 Basic Operation of Diff-Amp
Assuming the transistors are perfectly matched and both inputs are grounded: IE1 = IE2 = IRE /2 where Also, IC1 = IC2  IE1 and VC1 = VC2 = VCC - IC1RC1 If input 2 is grounded but a positive voltage is applied to input 1, IC1 increases, VC1 decreases, and VE = VB rises. This causes VBE2 to decrease, IC2 to decrease and VC2 to increase. Similarly, if input 1 is grounded, but a positive voltage is applied to input 2, IC2 increases, VC2 decreases, IC1 decreases and VC1increases. A negative input would have the reversed effects. H. Chan; Mohawk College

43 Single-Ended Input Operation
Vp Vin 1 Vout1 1 Vp Vout2 2 2 Vp 1 1 Vout1 Vp 2 2 Vout2 Vin H. Chan; Mohawk College

44 Differential Input Operation
2Vp Vin 1 1 Vout1 2Vp 2 2 -Vin Vout2 Differential or double-ended input has two out-of-phase signals at the inputs. Output has a peak that is doubled the peak (Vp) for single-ended operation. H. Chan; Mohawk College

45 Common-Mode Input Operation
Vin 1 1 0 V 0 V 2 2 Vin Two signals with the same phase, frequency, and amplitude are applied to the inputs. Output is zero due to cancellations. Thus, unwanted signals (noise) appearing at both input lines are essentially cancelled by the diff-amp and do not appear at the outputs. H. Chan; Mohawk College

46 Common-Mode Rejection Ratio
Ideally, a diff-amp provides a very high gain for desired signals (single-ended or differential), and zero gain for common-mode signals. Common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) is a measure of the amplifier’s ability to reject common-mode signals and is the ratio of the differential voltage gain (Avd = |vo1/vin|) to the common mode gain (Acm = |vo1(cm)/vin(cm)|): H. Chan; Mohawk College

47 Op-Amp Parameters Input Offset Voltage, VOS is the difference in the voltage between the inputs that is necessary to make Vout(error) = 0. Vout(error) is caused by a slight mismatch of VBE1 and VBE2. Typical values of VOS are  2 mV. Input Offset Voltage Drift specifies how VOS changes with temperature. Typically a few mV/oC. Input Bias Current is the dc current required by the inputs of the amplifier to properly operate the first stage. By definition, it is the average of the two input bias currents, IBIAS = (I1 + I2)/2. H. Chan; Mohawk College

48 Op-Amp Parameters (cont’d)
Differential Input Impedance is the total resistance between the inverting and non-inverting inputs. Common-mode Input Impedance is the resistance between each input and ground. Input Offset Current is the difference of the input bias currents: IOS = |I1 - I2|, and VOS = IOSRin(CM). Typically in nA range. Output Impedance is the resistance viewed from the output terminals. Open-Loop Voltage Gain, Aol, is the gain of the op-amp without any external feedback connections. H. Chan; Mohawk College

49 Op-Amp Parameters (cont’d)
Common-mode Rejection Ratio for op-amp is defined as CMRR = Aol/Acm or 20 log (Aol/Acm) in dB. Slew Rate is the maximum rate of change of the output voltage in response to a step input voltage. Slew rate = Dvout/Dt, where Dvout = +Vmax - (-Vmax). The units for slew rate is V/ms. Frequency Response is the change in amplifier gain versus frequency and is limited by internal junction capacitances. Other features include short circuit protection, no latch-up, and input offset nulling. H. Chan; Mohawk College

50 Negative Feedback Since the open-loop gain of the op-amp is very high, an extremely small input voltage (such as VOS) would drive the op-amp into saturation. By feeding a portion of the output voltage to the inverting input of the op-amp (negative feedback), the closed-loop voltage gain (Acl) can be reduced and controlled (i.e. stable) for linear operations. Negative feedback also provides for control of Zin, Zout, and the amplifier’s bandwidth. H. Chan; Mohawk College

51 Noninverting Amplifier
Rf Feedback voltage, Vf = BVout, where Vf - Vout = Aol (Vin - Vf) Aol Ri + Rearranging, Since BAol>>1, Vin H. Chan; Mohawk College

52 Voltage-Follower VF is a special case of the non-inverting amplifier.
Since B = 1, Acl(VF)= 1 It has a very high Zin, and a very low Zout Ideal as a buffer amplifier. - Vout + Vin H. Chan; Mohawk College

53 Inverting Amplifier Virtual Ground Rf Assuming Zin between -ve and +ve terminals is infinite, current into -ve terminal is zero. Therefore, Iin = Vin/Ri is equal to If = -Vout/Rf Rearranging, Ri - Vin 0V Vout + H. Chan; Mohawk College

54 Impedances of Feedback Amplifiers
Noninverting Amplifier: Zin(NI) = (1 + BAol)Zin Voltage Follower: Zin(VF) = (1 + Aol)Zin Inverting Amplifier: Zin(I) Ri ; Zout(I)  Zout H. Chan; Mohawk College

55 Bias Current Compensation
Rf = Rs Rf - Vout Ri Rs Vin + Voltage Follower - Vin Vout + Rf Rc = Ri//Rf - + Noninverting Amplifier Ri Inverting Amplifier Rc = Ri//Rf Vin H. Chan; Mohawk College

56 Input Offset Voltage Compensation
7 +V 2 1 8 - Offset null NC 6 Invert V+ 741 741 Noninvert Output V- + Offset null 3 1 5 8-pin DIP or SMT Package 10 kW 4 -V With no input, the potentiometer is adjusted until the output voltage is 0V. H. Chan; Mohawk College

57 Bode Plot of Open-Loop Gain
Aol(dB) Midrange 100 3 dB open-loop bandwidth: BWol = fc(ol) 75 -20 dB/decade roll-off 50 Critical frequency (fc(ol)) Unity-gain frequency (fT) 25 f(Hz) 1 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M 10M H. Chan; Mohawk College

58 Op-Amp Representation
Aol(mid) Vout Vin + C Op-amp fc f Phase shift: -45o -90o q H. Chan; Mohawk College

59 Closed-Loop vs Open-loop Gain
Av Open-loop gain Aol(mid) Closed-loop gain Acl(mid) f fc(ol) fc(cl) H. Chan; Mohawk College

60 Op-Amp Bandwidth Open-loop bandwidth: BWol = fc(ol)
Closed-loop critical frequency: fc(cl) = fc(ol)(1 + BAol(mid)) Since fc(cl) = BWcl , the closed-loop bandwidth is: BWcl = BWol(1 + BAol(mid)) Gain Bandwidth Product is a constant as long as the roll-off rate is fixed: Aclfc(cl) = Aolfc(ol) = unity-gain bandwidth H. Chan; Mohawk College

61 Positive Feedback & Stability
Positive feedback, where the output signal being fed back is in-phase to the input, will cause the amplifier to oscillate when the loop gain, AolB > 1. Phase margin, qpm , is the amount of additional phase shift required to make the total phase shift around the feedback loop 360o. To ensure stability for all midrange frequencies, an op-amp must be operated with an Acl such that the roll-off rate beginning at fc is  -20 dB/decade. H. Chan; Mohawk College

62 Phase Compensation Aol Uncompensated Aol -20 dB/dec With some
With more compensation f fc1 fc2 fc3 H. Chan; Mohawk College

63 Compensating Circuit Compensation is used to either eliminate open-loop roll-off rates greater than -20 dB/dec or extend the -20 dB/dec rate to a lower gain. Two basic methods of compensation for IC op-amps: internal and external. In either case an RC series circuit is added so that its critical frequency is less than the dominant (i.e. lowest) fc of the internal lag circuits of the op-amp. H. Chan; Mohawk College

64 Op-Amp Compensation Some op-amps (e.g. 741) are fully compensated internally, i.e., their -20 dB/dec slope is extended all the way down to unity gain. Hence, they are unconditionally stable. A disadvantage of fully compensated op-amps is that the bandwidth and slew rate are reduced. Many op-amps (e.g. LM101A) have provisions for external compensation with a small capacitor. This allows for optimum performance. H. Chan; Mohawk College

65 Zero-Level Detector - +Vsat Vout Vout t + -Vsat Vin t Vin
t + -Vsat Vin t Vin Because of the high open-loop voltage gain, a very small difference voltage between the + and - inputs drives the amplifier output into either +Vsat or -Vsat. H. Chan; Mohawk College

66 Nonzero-Level Detector
+Vsat R1 Vout t - Vref Vout R2 -Vsat + Vref Vin t Vin Vref can also be set by other means, e.g. a battery or a zener diode. H. Chan; Mohawk College

67 Comparator With Hysteresis (Schmitt Trigger)
Vin +Vsat - Vout t + R1 -Vsat VUT R2 VHYS = VUT -VLT Vin t VLT Hysteresis is achieved by positive feedback and makes the comparator less sensitive to noise on the input. H. Chan; Mohawk College

68 Output Bounding With One Zener
+VZ R Vin Vout - t -0.7 Vout + Vin t A single zener diode can be used to limit the output voltage to the zener voltage in one direction and to the forward diode on the other. H. Chan; Mohawk College

69 Output Bounding With two Zeners
+VZ +0.7 R Vin Vout - t Vout -VZ -0.7 + Vin t Two zener diodes would limit the output voltage to the zener voltage plus the forward voltage drop (0.7V) of the forward-biased zener . H. Chan; Mohawk College

70 Window Comparator VU _ D1 VU Vin VL + Vin t _ D2 Vout VL + R Vout t
t _ D2 Vout VL + R Vout t The window comparator detects when an input voltage is between two limits, an upper and a lower, called a “window”. H. Chan; Mohawk College

71 Comparator Application #1
+V Wheatstone bridge R1 is a thermistor. At temperatures below set value, R1 > R2; op-amp output is -Vsat and does not trigger alarm circuit. When temperature rises and exceeds critical value, R1 < R2; op-amp output turns to +Vsat which turns on alarm or initiate an appropriate response. R1 R To alarm circuit - + R2 R Over-temperature sensing circuit H. Chan; Mohawk College

72 Comparator Application #2
Vref The simultaneous or flash analog-to- digital converter (ADC) uses parallel comparators to compare the linear input signal with various reference voltages developed by a voltage divider. R Vin (analog) + _ R D1 + _ Binary output Priority encoder D0 R + _ R Enable input H. Chan; Mohawk College

73 Operation of Flash ADC When Vin exceeds Vref for a given comparator, its output becomes high. The priority encoder produces a binary number representing the highest value input. The encoder samples its input only when enabled. The higher the sampling rate the better the accuracy. 2n - 1 comparators are required for conversion to an n-digit binary number. H. Chan; Mohawk College

74 Summing Amplifier - Rf R1 Vin1 By making R1 = R2 = … = RN = R: R2 Vin2
Vout + RN VinN If Rf = R, it is a unity-gain summing amplifier. If Rf = R/N, it is an averaging amplifier. N-input summing amplifier H. Chan; Mohawk College

75 Op-Amp Integrator - Vin C Ri Vin Vout t + t Slope of integrator: Vout
t Slope of integrator: Vout H. Chan; Mohawk College

76 Op-Amp Differentiator
Vin Rf C Vin - Vout t + Vout t H. Chan; Mohawk College

77 Basic Instrumentation Amplifier
Vin1 +Vcm + R3 R5 RG is an external gain-setting resistor. 1 - R1 RG - Vout = Acl(Vin2 - Vin1) 3 R2 + For R1 = R2 = R, and R3 = R4 = R5 = R6, - R4 2 Vin2 +Vcm + R6 H. Chan; Mohawk College

78 Notes on Instrumentation Amplifier
The main purpose of an instrumentation amplifier is to amplify small signals that are riding on large common-mode voltages. Commonly used in environments with high common-mode noise, e.g., remote temperature- or pressure sensing over a long transmission line. Its main characteristics are: high Zin, high CMRR, low output offset, and low Zout A typical IC instrumentation amplifier : AD521 H. Chan; Mohawk College

79 Operational Transconductance Amplifiers
The OTA is primarily a voltage-to-current amplifier where Iout = gmVin. The voltage-to-current gain of an OTA is the transconductance, gm = KIBIAS where K is dependent on the internal circuit design. IBIAS _ Inputs Output + H. Chan; Mohawk College

80 Basic OTA Circuit The voltage gain of the amp., |AV| = gmRL
For variable gain, connect a pot. to RBIAS If RBIAS is connected to a separate bias voltage: RBIAS R1 _ Vin Vout OTA + R2 RL -V Inverting amp with fixed voltage gain H. Chan; Mohawk College

81 OTA Amplitude Modulator
+V VMOD VMOD RBIAS R1 Vin _ Vin Vout OTA + R2 RL Vout -V H. Chan; Mohawk College

82 Log Amplifiers The basic log amplifier produces an output voltage as a function of the logarithm of the input voltage; i.e., Vout = -K ln(Vin), where K is a constant. Recall that the a diode has an exponential characteristic up to a forward voltage of approximately 0.7 V. Hence, the semiconductor pn junction in the form of a diode or the base-emitter junction of a BJT can be used to provide a logarithm characteristic. H. Chan; Mohawk College

83 Diode & BJT Log Amplifiers
Vin Vin R1 R1 _ _ Vout Vout + + V V IEBO = emitter-to-base leakage current IR = reverse leakage current H. Chan; Mohawk College

84 Basic Antilog Amplifier
Rf Vin A transistor or a diode can be used as the input element. The operation of the circuit is based on the fact that Vout = -RfIC, and IC = IEBOeVin/K where K  V _ Vout + H. Chan; Mohawk College

85 Signal Compression With Log Amp.
Logarithmic signal compression When a signal with a large dynamic range is compressed with a logarithmic amplifier, the higher voltages are reduced by a greater percentage than the lower voltages, thus keeping the lower signals from being lost in noise. H. Chan; Mohawk College

86 Constant-Current Source
IL For the basic constant-current circuit, the op-amp has a very high Zin, thus, IL = Ii. If RL changes, IL remains constant as long as VIN and Ri are held constant. Ri RL _ Ii + VIN H. Chan; Mohawk College

87 Current-to-Voltage Converter
Rf Since the inverting terminal is at virtual ground, Vout = -IfRf = -IiRf As the amount of light changes, the current through the photocell changes; thus Vout = |Ii|Rf Ii If Vin _ l Vout + Circuit for sensing light level and converting it to a proportional output voltage H. Chan; Mohawk College

88 Voltage-to-Current Converter
Neglecting VIO, the (-) and (+) terminals are at the same voltage, Vin. Therefore, VR1 = Vin. Since I = 0, IL = I1 = Vin/R1 Vin + _ IL RL I = 0 I1 R1 H. Chan; Mohawk College

89 Peak Detector When a positive voltage is applied, the output charges the capacitor until VC = Vin(max). If a greater input peak occurs, the capacitor charges to the new peak. Ri Vin + _ Vout Rf C H. Chan; Mohawk College

90 Low-Pass Filter Response
Gain (dB) BW = fc Vo Ideal -20 1 -20 dB/dec -40 -60 dB/dec 0.707 -40 dB/dec Passband -60 BW f f fc fc 10fc 100fc 1000fc Basic LPF response LPF with different roll-off rates H. Chan; Mohawk College

91 High-Pass Filter Response
Gain (dB) Vo -20 1 -20 dB/dec -40 0.707 -40 dB/dec -60 dB/dec Passband -60 fc f 0.01fc 0.1fc fc f Basic HPF response HPF with different roll-off rates H. Chan; Mohawk College

92 Band-Pass Filter Response
Centre frequency: Vout 1 Quality factor: 0.707 Q is an indication of the selectivity of a BPF. Narrow BPF: Q > 10. Wide-band BPF: Q < 10. BW f fc1 fo fc2 Damping Factor: BW = fc2 - fc1 H. Chan; Mohawk College

93 Band-Stop Filter Response
Also known as band-reject, or notch filter. Frequencies within a certain BW are rejected. Useful for filtering interfering signals. Gain (dB) -3 Pass band Passband f fc1 fo fc2 BW H. Chan; Mohawk College

94 Filter Response Characteristics
Av Chebyshev Bessel Butterworth f H. Chan; Mohawk College

95 Notes On Filter Characteristics
Butterworth: very flat amplitude response in the passband and a roll-off rate of -20 dB/dec/pole; phase response however is not linear. (A pole is simply a circuit with one R and one C). Chebyshev: roll-off rate > -20 dB/dec/pole; ripples in passband; very nonlinear phase response. Bessel: linear phase response, therefore no overshoot on the output with a pulse input; roll-off rate is < -20 dB/dec/pole. H. Chan; Mohawk College

96 General diagram of active filter
Damping Factor The damping factor (DF) of an active filter sets the response characteristic of the filter. Frequency selective RC circuit Vin Vout + _ R1 R2 Its value depends on the order (# of poles) of the filter. (See Table in text for DF values.) General diagram of active filter H. Chan; Mohawk College

97 Active Filters Advantages over passive LC filters:
Op-amp provides gain high Zin and low Zout mean good isolation from source or load effects less bulky and less expensive than inductors when dealing with low frequency easy to adjust over a wide frequency range without altering desired response Disadvantage: requires dc power supply, and could be limited by frequency response of op-amp. H. Chan; Mohawk College

98 Single-pole Active LPF
R Vin Vout + _ C R1 R2 Roll-off rate for a single-pole filter is -20 dB/decade. Acl is selectable since DF is optional for single-pole LPF H. Chan; Mohawk College

99 Sallen-Key Low-Pass Filter
CA Selecting RA = RB = R, and CA = CB = C : RA RB Vin Vout + _ CB The roll-off rate for a two-pole filter is -40 dB/decade. R1 Sallen-Key or VCVS (voltage-controlled voltage-source) second- order low-pass filter R2 For a Butterworth 2nd- order response, DF = 1.414; therefore, R1/R2 = H. Chan; Mohawk College

100 Cascaded Low-Pass Filter
Roll-off rate: -60 dB/dec RA1 RB1 RA2 Vin + _ + CB1 Vout CA2 _ R1 R3 R2 2 poles 1 pole R4 Third-order (3-pole) configuration H. Chan; Mohawk College

101 Single-Pole High-Pass Filter
Roll-off rate, and formulas for fc , and Acl are similar to those for LPF. Ideally, a HPF passes all frequencies above fc. However, the op-amp has an upper-frequency limit. C Vin Vout + _ R R1 R2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

102 Sallen-Key High-Pass Filter
RA Again, formulas and roll-off rate are similar to those for 2nd-order LPF. CA CB Vin Vout + _ RB To obtain higher roll- off rates, HPF filters can be cascaded. R1 R2 Basic Sallen-Key second-order HPF H. Chan; Mohawk College

103 BPF Using HPF and LPF CA1 RA2 Vin + Vout _ + RA1 _ CA2 R1 R3 Av (dB)
-3 -20 dB/dec HP response -20 dB/dec LP response f fc1 fo fc2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

104 Notes On Cascading HPF & LPF
Cascading a HPF and a LPF to yield a band-pass filter can be done as long as fc1 and fc2 are sufficiently separated. Hence the resulting bandwidth is relatively wide. Note that fc1 is the critical frequency for the HPF and fc2 is for the LPF. Another BPF configuration is the multiple-feedback BPF which has a narrower bandwidth and needing fewer components H. Chan; Mohawk College

105 Multiple-Feedback BPF
Making C1 = C2 = C, R2 C2 R1 _ Vin Vout Q = fo/BW + R3 Max. gain: R1, C1 - LP section R2, C2 - HP section Ao < 2Q2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

106 Multiple-Feedback Band-Stop Filter
The multiple-feedback BSF is very similar to its BP counterpart. For frequencies between fc1 and fc2 the op-amp will treat Vin as a pair of common-mode signals thus rejecting them accordingly. R2 C2 R1 _ Vin Vout + R3 R4 When C1 = C2 =C H. Chan; Mohawk College

107 Filter Response Measurements
Discrete Point Measurement: Feed a sine wave to the filter input with a varying frequency but a constant voltage and measure the output voltage at each frequency point. A faster way is to use the swept frequency method: Sweep Generator Filter Spectrum analyzer The sweep generator outputs a sine wave whose frequency increases linearly between two preset limits. H. Chan; Mohawk College

108 Oscillator Principles
Conditions for sustained oscillation: the phase shift around the feedback loop must be 0o or 360o (i.e. positive feedback) the loop gain |BAv| = 1, where B = attenuation of feedback circuit, and Av = amplifier’s gain. Vout Av B Basic elements of an oscillator H. Chan; Mohawk College

109 Basic Wien-Bridge Oscillator
Voltage Divider _ C1 _ R2 + Vout C1 R4 Vout + R2 R3 R3 Lead-lag circuit C2 C2 Two forms of the same circuit H. Chan; Mohawk College

110 Notes on Wien-Bridge Oscillator
At the resonant frequency the lead-lag circuit provides a positive feedback (purely resistive) with an attenuation of 1/3 when R3=R4=XC1=XC2. In order to oscillate, the non-inverting amplifier must have a closed-loop gain of 3, which can be achieved by making R1 = 2R2 When R3 = R4 = R, and C1 = C2 = C, the resonant frequency is: H. Chan; Mohawk College

111 Phase-Shift Oscillator
Rf _ C1 C2 C3 Vout + Choosing R1 = R2 = R3 = R, C1 = C2 = C3 = C, the resonant frequency is: R1 R2 R3 Each RC section provides 60o of phase shift. Total attenuation of the three-section RC feedback, B = 1/29. H. Chan; Mohawk College

112 Neglecting loading effect,
Colpitts Oscillator +VDD R2 C5 C3 Vout Neglecting loading effect, C4 R1 R3 where L C1 C2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

113 Clapp Oscillator +VDD The Clapp oscillator is a
variation of the Colpitts. It has a capacitor, C3 in series with L in the reso- nant circuit. Formulas are similar to those for Colpitts except R2 C5 Vout C4 R1 R3 L C3 C1 C2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

114 Neglecting loading effect
Hartley Oscillator +VDD R2 C4 C1 Vout Neglecting loading effect C3 R1 R3 C2 where LT = L1 + L2 L1 L2 H. Chan; Mohawk College

115 Crystal-Controlled Oscillators
For stable and accurate oscillations, a piezoelectric crystal (e.g. quartz) is used in the feedback loop. Piezoelectric effect: When a changing mechanical stress is applied to the crystal, a voltage develops at the frequency of mechanical vibrations. Conversely, when an ac voltage is applied across the crystal, it vibrates at the frequency of the applied voltage. The greatest vibration occurs at the crystal’s natural resonant frequency. H. Chan; Mohawk College

116 Symbol & Electrical Equivalent of Crystals
A crystal can operate either in series or parallel resonance. Crystals have very high Q. Resonant frequency depends on dimension, type of cut, thickness, temperature, etc. Ls Cp Cs XTAL Rs Symbol Electrical equivalent H. Chan; Mohawk College

117 Basic Crystal Oscillators
+VCC +VCC R3 Vo R1 R3 C3 Vo C5 C2 R1 R2 C4 R2 C1 R4 C1 C2 Xtal CC H. Chan; Mohawk College

118 Triangular-Wave Oscillator
+Vsat VA - R1 -Vsat VA - + Vout + R2 VUT R3 VLT Comparator Integrator H. Chan; Mohawk College

119 Square-Wave Oscillator
VUT VC VC _ VLT C Vout Vf + +Vsat R2 Vout -Vsat R3 If R3 = 0.859R2, then: Relaxation oscillator H. Chan; Mohawk College

120 Functional Block Diagram of LM555
VCC (8) 5k Threshold + (6) FF _ Buffer Control voltage #1 R (5) Output Comparator Q 5k (3) S #2 + (2) _ Trigger (7) Qd Discharge 5k (4) Reset Gnd (1) H. Chan; Mohawk College

121 Operation of 555 Voltage divider sets reference of  VCC for comparator #1 and  VCC for comparator #2. When trigger voltage (pin 2) is <  VCC, FF output is LO, output at pin 3 is HI, and Qd is OFF. This allows capacitor connected to pin 6 to charge up. When threshold voltage (pin 6) is >  VCC, FF output turns HI, output at pin 3 is LO, and Qd is ON, thereby discharging capacitor. The cycle then repeats once VC <  VCC. H. Chan; Mohawk College

122 Notes on 555 Timer/Oscillator IC
Widely used as a monostable or astable multivibrator. Can operate between 4.5 and 16 V. Output voltage is approximately VCC - 2 V. Max. output frequency is about 10 kHz. fo varies somewhat with VCC. Threshold input (pin 6) and trigger input (pin 2) are normally tied together to external timing RC. H. Chan; Mohawk College

123 555 as a Simple Oscillator Duty cycle is: Given fo and D,
Note that D must always be > 0.5. To get 50% duty cycle, R1 = 0, which would short out VCC. tch = 0.693(R1 + R2)C1 tdisch = R2C1 T = 0.693(R1 + 2R2)C1 H. Chan; Mohawk College

124 555 Square-Wave Oscillator
For 50% duty cycle, tch = R1C1 ; tdisch = R2C1 H. Chan; Mohawk College

125 Line Regulation is a measure of the effectiveness of a voltage regulator to maintain the output dc voltage constant despite changes in the supply voltage. OR H. Chan; Mohawk College

126 Load Regulation is a measure of the ability of a regulator to maintain a constant dc output despite changes in the load current. OR H. Chan; Mohawk College

127 Regulator Block Diagram
The essential elements in a series voltage regulator is shown in the block diagram below: Control element VIN VOUT Error detector Sensing circuit Reference voltage H. Chan; Mohawk College

128 Op-Amp Voltage Regulators
Series Shunt H. Chan; Mohawk College

129 Notes on Op-Amp Voltage Regulator
More flexibility possible in design of voltage output than IC voltage regulator packages. The essential circuit elements are: a zener reference, a pass or shunt transistor, a sensing circuit, and an error/amplifier circuit. Equation indicates that Vo depends on R2, R3, and VZ. However, Vi must be greater than Vo. The shunt configuration is less efficient but R2 offers short-circuit current limiting. H. Chan; Mohawk College

130 Constant Current Limiting
can be used for short-circuit or overload protection of the series voltage regulator. Q2 and R4 form the current limiter. Output current is limited to: H. Chan; Mohawk College

131 Three-Terminal Fixed Voltage Regulators
Less flexible, but simple to use Come in standard TO-3 (20 W) or TO-220 (15 W) transistor packages 78/79XX series regulators are commonly available with 5, 6, 8, 12, 15, 18, or 24 V output Max. output current with heat sink is 1 A Built-in thermal shutdown protection 3-V dropout voltage; max. input of 37 V H. Chan; Mohawk College

132 Basic Circuits With 78/79XX Regulators
Both the 78XX and 79XX regulators can be used to provide +ve or -ve output voltages C1 and C2 are generally optional. C1 is used to cancel any inductance present, and C2 improves the transient response. H. Chan; Mohawk College

133 Dual-Polarity Output with 78/79XX Regulators
H. Chan; Mohawk College

134 78XX Regulator with Pass Transistor
Q1 starts to conduct when VR2 = 0.7 V. R2 is typically chosen so that max. IR2 is 0.1 A. Power dissipation of Q1 is P = (Vi - Vo)IL. Q2 is for current limiting protection. It conducts when VR1 = 0.7 V. Q2 must be able to pass max. 1 A; but note that max. VCE2 is only 1.4 V. H. Chan; Mohawk College

135 78XX Floating Regulator or
It is used to obtain an output > the Vreg value up to a max.of 37 V. R1 is chosen so that R1  0.1 Vreg/IQ, where IQ is the quiescent current of the regulator. or H. Chan; Mohawk College

136 3-Terminal Variable Regulator
The floating regulator could be made into a variable regulator by replacing R2 with a pot. However, there are several disadvantages: Minimum output voltage is Vreg instead of 0 V. IQ is relatively large and varies from chip to chip. Power dissipation in R2 can in some cases be quite large resulting in bulky and expensive equipment. A variety of 3-terminal variable regulators are available, e.g. LM317 (for +ve output) or LM 337 (for -ve output). H. Chan; Mohawk College

137 Basic LM317 Variable Regulator Circuits
Circuit with capacitors to improve performance Circuit with protective diodes H. Chan; Mohawk College

138 Notes on Basic LM317 Circuits
The function of C1 and C2 is similar to those used in the 78/79XX fixed regulators. C3 is used to improve ripple rejection. Protective diodes in circuit (b) are required for high-current/high-voltage applications. where Vref = 1.25 V, and Iadj is the current flowing into the adj. terminal (typically 50 mA). R1 is typically 120  or 240  H. Chan; Mohawk College

139 Switching Regulators Instead of operating the pass transistor in a linear manner, switching regulators use a transistor switch to improve the power efficiency. A basic block diagram is shown below: Switching transistor LC filter Load Reference voltage Pulse width modulator Error sensing H. Chan; Mohawk College

140 Comparing Switching to Linear Regulators
Advantages: 70-90% efficiency (about double that of linear ones) can make output voltage > input voltage, if desired can invert the input voltage can result in considerable weight and size reductions Disadvantages: More complex circuitry Potential EMI problems unless good shielding, low-loss ferrite cores and chokes are used H. Chan; Mohawk College

141 Switch-Mode Operation
The duty cycle of the series transistor (power switch) determines the average dc output of the regulator. A circuit to control the duty cycle is shown in the schematic below: H. Chan; Mohawk College

142 Notes On Switch-Mode Operation
The error amplifier compares a sample of the regulator Vo to an internal Vref. The difference or error voltage is amplified and applied to a modulator where it is compared to a triangle wave. The result is an output pulse whose width is proportional to the error voltage. Darlington transistors and TMOS FETs with fT of at least 4 MHz are often used. TMOS FETs are more efficient. A fast-recovery rectifier, or a Schottky barrier diode (sometimes referred to as a catch diode) is used to direct current into the inductor. For proper switch-mode operation, current must always be present in the inductor. H. Chan; Mohawk College

143 Step-Down or Buck Converter
When the transistor is turned ON, VL is initially high but falls exponentially while IL increases to charge C. When the transistor turns OFF, VL reverses in polarity to maintain the direction of current flow. IL decreases but its path is now through the forward-biased diode, D. Duty cycle is adjusted according to the level of Vo. H. Chan; Mohawk College

144 V & I Waveforms for Buck Regulator
PWM output VL IL Vo Normal Low Vo High Vo H. Chan; Mohawk College

145 Step-Up, Flyback, or Boost Regulator
Assuming steady-state conditions, when the transistor is turned ON, L reacts against Vin. D is reverse-biased and C supplies the load current. When the transistor is OFF, VL reverses polarity causing current to flow through D and charges C. Note that Vout > Vin because VL adds on to Vin. H. Chan; Mohawk College

146 Voltage-Inverting or Buck-Boost Regulator
Vo can be either step-up or step-down and its polarity is opposite to input. During ON period, Vin is across L, and D is reverse-biased. During OFF period, VL reverses polarity causing current to flow through C and D. H. Chan; Mohawk College

147 Thank you for viewing my lecture notes.
Your feedback is very important! Please send your comments to the author H. Chan; Mohawk College


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