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EE 101 - Assignment - 4

This document contains 18 problems related to operational amplifier (OP AMP) circuits for an electrical engineering course. The problems cover topics like inverting and non-inverting amplifiers, filters, integrators, multipliers, oscillators, and precision diode circuits. They involve calculating gains, impedances, cutoff frequencies, and oscillation frequencies for various OP AMP configurations. The goal is to design circuits to meet specific criteria and analyze how changing circuit elements affects the output.

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Harsh Chandak
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views

EE 101 - Assignment - 4

This document contains 18 problems related to operational amplifier (OP AMP) circuits for an electrical engineering course. The problems cover topics like inverting and non-inverting amplifiers, filters, integrators, multipliers, oscillators, and precision diode circuits. They involve calculating gains, impedances, cutoff frequencies, and oscillation frequencies for various OP AMP configurations. The goal is to design circuits to meet specific criteria and analyze how changing circuit elements affects the output.

Uploaded by

Harsh Chandak
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EE 101: Introduction to Electrical and Electronic Circuits

Assignment # 3 OP AMP Circuits


Note: Assume OP AMPS are ideal unless mentioned otherwise, and saturate at 10 V.
1. For the inverting amplifier shown in Fig. 1, assume that the OP AMP is ideal. Find the gain vo/vi,
the input resistance Ri and the output resistance Ro.
2. Repeat Problem 1 if the OP AMP is ideal, except that its open-loop gain is Avo (instead of ).
Confirm that your equation reduces to the usual equation in the limiting case.
3. Find the input resistance (seen by the source voltage) of the standard inverting amplifier and
standard non-inverting amplifier if OP AMP open-loop gain is Avo and its input (differential)
resistance is Rid.
4. Design a non-inverting amplifier of gain + 200 and an input resistance of 2 K.
5. Design an OP AMP circuit with very high input impedance and gain 1000.
6. Design a simple low-pass filter with a cut-off frequency of 10 kHz and a low frequency gain of
magnitude 10.
7. Design a simple high-pass filter with a cut-off frequency of 100 Hz, and a high frequency gain of
10. Will this circuit work well at 10 MHz?
8. Design a notch filter which rejects all frequencies between 20 Hz and 200 Hz, and passes all
other frequencies. This is a useful circuit to eliminate troublesome 50 Hz pick-up and its
dominant second harmonic.
9. Find the gain, input resistance and output resistance of a buffer circuit if the OP AMP in nonideal (open loop gain Avo, input resistance is Rid, output resistance Ro). Show that the complex
equations which result reduce to the expected values if the OP AMP can be considered ideal.
10. Repeat Problem 4 if there is an offset voltage of 2 mV.
11. The integrator shown in Fig. 2 has an input voltage applied to it which is vi = 5 sin t V, where
= 2f, and f = 1 kHz. Find the output voltage. Repeat if there is an offset voltage of 2 mV.
12. Draw a circuit to perform the function vo = + 10(v1v2)/v32.
13. Make a multiplier circuit vo = (v1v2)/10. Note that this is a standard multiplier equation, because
if the inputs v1 and v2 have a peak value of 10 V, then the output voltage is also 10 V. Show
how this multiplier can be easily converted into a squarer circuit. Design an OP AMP circuit with
the squarer circuit as the feedback element, and show that this can be used as a square root
circuit.
14. Show that the circuit shown in Fig. 3 acts like a precision diode, that is, a diode with almost
zero cut-in voltage. Explain how it can be used to detect a very small amplitude AM radio wave.
15. For the circuit shown in Fig. 4, find vo in terms of v1 and v2.

16. For the circuit shown in Fig. 5, find the frequency of oscillation, and the amplitude of the
waveform across the capacitor.
17. For the circuit shown in Fig. 6, find the frequency of oscillation. Plot the waveform at points A
and B. Repeat if the points C and D are not at ground but at variable voltages VC and VD. What
does varying these voltages accomplish?
18. Modify the circuit of Fig. 6 to make a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO), in which the frequency
of a square/triangle wave varies linearly with an input voltage vi. (Hint: Use a multiplier circuit
somehow inserted between the two OP AMPS of Fig.6.)

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