Operational Amplifier
Operational Amplifier
Contents
[hide]
• 1 Circuit notation
• 2 Operation
○ 2.1 Ideal and real op-amps
• 3 History
○ 3.1 1941: First (vacuum tube) op-amp
○ 3.2 1947: First op-amp with an explicit non-inverting input
○ 3.3 1949: First chopper-stabilized op-amp
○ 3.4 1961: First discrete IC op-amps
○ 3.5 1962: First op-amps in potted modules
○ 3.6 1963: First monolithic IC op-amp
○ 3.7 1966: First varactor bridge op-amps
○ 3.8 1968: Release of the μA741
○ 3.9 1970: First high-speed, low-input current FET design
○ 3.10 1972: Single sided supply op-amps being produced
○ 3.11 Recent trends
• 4 Classification
• 5 Applications
○ 5.1 Use in electronics system design
○ 5.2 Basic single stage amplifiers
5.2.1 Non-inverting amplifier
5.2.2 Inverting amplifier
○ 5.3 Positive feedback configurations
○ 5.4 Positive voltage level detector
○ 5.5 Negative voltage level detector
○ 5.6 Sine to square wave converter
○ 5.7 Other applications
• 6 Limitations of real op-amps
○ 6.1 DC imperfections
○ 6.2 AC imperfections
○ 6.3 Non-linear imperfections
○ 6.4 Power considerations
• 7 Internal circuitry of 741 type op-amp
○ 7.1 Input stage
7.1.1 Constant-current stabilization system
7.1.2 Differential amplifier
○ 7.2 Class A gain stage
○ 7.3 Output bias circuitry
○ 7.4 Output stage
• 8 See also
• 9 Notes
• 10 References
• 11 Further reading
• 12 External links
• : non-inverting input
• : inverting input
• : output
The power supply pins ( and ) can be labeled in different ways (See IC power supply
pins). Despite different labeling, the function remains the same — to provide additional power
for amplification of the signal. Often these pins are left out of the diagram for clarity, and the
power configuration is described or assumed from the circuit.
[edit] Operation
The amplifier's differential inputs consist of a input and a input, and ideally the op-amp
amplifies only the difference in voltage between the two, which is called the differential input
voltage. The output voltage of the op-amp is given by the equation,
where is the voltage at the non-inverting terminal, is the voltage at the inverting terminal
and AOL is the open-loop gain of the amplifier. (The term "open-loop" refers to the absence of a
feedback loop from the output to the input).
Typically the op-amp's very large gain is controlled by negative feedback, which largely determines the
magnitude of its output ("closed-loop") voltage gain in amplifier applications, or the transfer function required
(in analog computers). Without negative feedback, and perhaps with positive feedback for regeneration, an op-
amp acts as a comparator. High input impedance at the input terminals and low output impedance at the output
terminal(s) are important typical characteristics.
With no negative feedback, the op-amp acts as a comparator. The inverting input is held at ground (0 V) by the
resistor, so if the Vin applied to the non-inverting input is positive, the output will be maximum positive, and if
Vin is negative, the output will be maximum negative. Since there is no feedback from the output to either
input, this is an open loop circuit. The circuit's gain is just the GOL of the op-amp.
Adding negative feedback via the voltage divider Rf,Rg reduces the gain. Equilibrium will be established when
Vout is just sufficient to reach around and "pull" the inverting input to the same voltage as Vin. As a simple
example, if Vin = 1 V and Rf = Rg, Vout will be 2 V, the amount required to keep V– at 1 V. Because of the
feedback provided by Rf,Rg this is a closed loop circuit. Its over-all gain Vout / Vin is called the closed-loop gain
ACL. Because the feedback is negative, in this case ACL is less than the AOL of the op-amp.
The magnitude of AOL is typically very large—10,000 or more for integrated circuit op-amps—
and therefore even a quite small difference between and drives the amplifier output nearly
to the supply voltage. This is called saturation of the amplifier. The magnitude of AOL is not well
controlled by the manufacturing process, and so it is impractical to use an operational amplifier
as a stand-alone differential amplifier. If predictable operation is desired, negative feedback is
used, by applying a portion of the output voltage to the inverting input. The closed loop feedback
greatly reduces the gain of the amplifier. If negative feedback is used, the circuit's overall gain
and other parameters become determined more by the feedback network than by the op-amp
itself. If the feedback network is made of components with relatively constant, stable values, the
unpredictability and inconstancy of the op-amp's parameters do not seriously affect the circuit's
performance.
If no negative feedback is used, the op-amp functions as a switch or comparator.
Positive feedback may be used to introduce hysteresis or oscillation.
[edit] Ideal and real op-amps
the output are limited by the supply voltages and ). The power supply sources are
called rails.
• Infinite bandwidth (i.e., the frequency magnitude response is considered to be flat
everywhere with zero phase shift).
• Infinite input impedance (so, in the diagram, , and zero current flows from
to ).
• Zero input current (i.e., there is assumed to be no leakage or bias current into the device).
• Zero input offset voltage (i.e., when the input terminals are shorted so that , the
output is a virtual ground or vout = 0).
• Infinite slew rate (i.e., the rate of change of the output voltage is unbounded) and power
bandwidth (full output voltage and current available at all frequencies).
• Zero output impedance (i.e., Rout = 0, so that output voltage does not vary with output
current).
• Zero noise.
• Infinite Common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR).
• Infinite Power supply rejection ratio for both power supply rails.
These ideals can be summarized by the two "golden rules":
I. The output attempts to do whatever is necessary to make the voltage difference
between the inputs zero.
II. The inputs draw no current.[3]:177
The first rule only applies in the usual case where the op-amp is used in a closed-loop design
(negative feedback, where there is a signal path of some sort feeding back from the output to the
inverting input). These rules are commonly used as a good first approximation for analyzing or
designing op-amp circuits.[3]:177
In practice, none of these ideals can be perfectly realized, and various shortcomings and
compromises have to be accepted. Depending on the parameters of interest, a real op-amp may
be modeled to take account of some of the non-infinite or non-zero parameters using equivalent
resistors and capacitors in the op-amp model. The designer can then include the effects of these
undesirable, but real, effects into the overall performance of the final circuit. Some parameters
may turn out to have negligible effect on the final design while others represent actual limitations
of the final performance, that must be evaluated.
[edit] History
However, in this circuit V– is a function of Vout because of the negative feedback through the R1R2
network. R1 and R2 form a voltage divider, and as V– is a high-impedance input, it does not load it
appreciably. Consequently:
where
.
[edit] Inverting amplifier
An op-amp connected in the inverting amplifier configuration
In an inverting amplifier, the output voltage changes in an opposite direction to the input
voltage.
As with the non-inverting amplifier, we start with the gain equation of the op-amp:
This time, V– is a function of both Vout and Vin due to the voltage divider formed by Rf and Rin.
Again, the op-amp input does not apply an appreciable load, so:
Substituting this into the gain equation and solving for Vout:
.
A resistor is often inserted between the non-inverting input and ground (so both inputs "see"
similar resistances), reducing the input offset voltage due to different voltage drops due to bias
current, and may reduce distortion in some op-amps.
A DC-blocking capacitor may be inserted in series with the input resistor when a frequency
response down to DC is not needed and any DC voltage on the input is unwanted. That is, the
capacitive component of the input impedance inserts a DC zero and a low-frequency pole that
gives the circuit a bandpass or high-pass characteristic.
The potentials at the operational amplifier inputs remain virtually constant (near ground) in the
inverting configuration. The constant operating potential typically results in distortion levels that
are lower than those attainable with the non-inverting topology.
[edit] Positive feedback configurations
Another typical configuration of op-amps is with positive feedback, which takes a fraction of the
output signal back to the non-inverting input. An important application of it is the comparator
with hysteresis, the Schmitt trigger.
[edit] Positive voltage level detector
A positive reference voltage Vref is applied to one of the op-amp's inputs. This means that the op-
amp is set up as a comparator to detect a positive voltage. If the voltage to be sensed, Ei, is
applied to op amp's (+) input, the result is a noninverting positive-level detector. When Ei is
above Vref, VO equals +Vsat. When Ei is below Vref, VO equals -Vsat.
If Ei, is applied to the inverting input, the circuit is an inverting positive-level detector: When Ei
is above Vref, VO equals -Vsat.
[edit] Negative voltage level detector
A negative voltage detector is a circuit that detects when input signal Ei crosses the negative
voltage -Vref. When Ei is above -Vref, VO equals +Vsat. When Eiis below -Vref, VO equals
-Vsat.When Ei is above -Vref, VO equals -Vsat, and when Eiis below -Vref, VO equals +Vsat.
[edit] Sine to square wave converter
The zero detector will convert the output of a sine-wave from a function generator into a
variable-frequency square wave. If Ei is a sine wave, triangular wave, or wave of any other shape
that is symmetrical around zero, the zero-crossing detector's output will be square.
Because of the wide slew-range and lack of positive feedback, the response of all the level
detectors described above will be relatively slow. Using a general-purpose op-amp, for example,
the frequency of Ei for the sine to square wave converter should probably be below 100 Hz.[citation
needed]
A component level diagram of the common 741 op-amp. Dotted lines outline: current mirrors
(red); differential amplifier (blue); class A gain stage (magenta); voltage level shifter (green);
output stage (cyan).
1. Differential amplifier – provides low noise amplification, high input impedance, usually a
differential output.
2. Voltage amplifier – provides high voltage gain, a single-pole frequency roll-off, usually
single-ended output.
3. Output amplifier – provides high current driving capability, low output impedance,
current limiting and short circuit protection circuitry.
[edit] Input stage
[edit] Constant-current stabilization system
The input stage DC conditions are stabilized by a high-gain negative feedback system whose
main parts are the two current mirrors on the left of the figure, outlined in red. The main purpose
of this negative feedback system—to supply the differential input stage with a stable constant
current—is realized as follows.
The current through the 39 kΩ resistor acts as a current reference for the other bias currents used
in the chip. The voltage across the resistor is equal to the voltage across the supply rails (
) minus two transistor diode drops (i.e., from Q11 and Q12), and so the current has
• Introduction to op-amp circuit stages, second order filters, single op-amp bandpass filters,
and a simple intercom
• Hyperphysics – descriptions of common applications
• Single supply op-amp circuit collection
• Op-amp circuit collection
• Opamps for everyone Downloadable book.
• MOS op amp design: A tutorial overview
• High Speed OpAmp Techniques very practical and readable - with photos and real
waveforms
• Op Amp Applications Downloadable book. Can also be bought
• Operational Amplifier Noise Prediction (All Op Amps) using spot noise
• Operational Amplifier Basics
• History of the Op-amp from vacuum tubes to about 2002. Lots of detail, with schematics.
IC part is somewhat ADI-centric.
• IC Op-Amps Through the Ages
• ECE 209: Operational amplifier basics – Brief document explaining zero error by naive
high-gain negative feedback. Gives single OpAmp example that generalizes typical
configurations.
• Loebe Julie historical OpAmp interview by Bob Pease
• www.PhilbrickArchive.org - A free repository of materials from George A Philbrick /
Researches - Operational Amplifier Pioneer
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_amplifier"
Categories: Electronic amplifiers | Linear integrated circuits
Hidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements
from January 2009 | Articles with unsourced statements from February 2011
Personal tools
• Log in / create account
Namespaces
• Article
• Discussion
Variants
Views
• Read
• Edit
• View history
Actions
Search
Top of Form
Special:Search
Bottom of Form
Navigation
• Main page
• Contents
• Featured content
• Current events
• Random article
• Donate to Wikipedia
Interaction
• Help
• About Wikipedia
• Community portal
• Recent changes
• Contact Wikipedia
Toolbox
• What links here
• Related changes
• Upload file
• Special pages
• Permanent link
• Cite this page
Print/export
• Create a book
• Download as PDF
• Printable version
Languages
• العربية
• Български
• Català
• Česky
• Dansk
• Deutsch
• Español
• Esperanto
• Euskara
• فارسی
• Français
• Galego
• 한국어
• िहनदी
• Hrvatski
• Bahasa Indonesia
• Italiano
• עברית
• Lietuvių
• Magyar
• മലയാളം
• Nederlands
• 日本語
• Norsk (bokmål)
• Norsk (nynorsk)
• Polski
• Português
• Русский
• Slovenčina
• Slovenščina
• Српски / Srpski
• Suomi
• Svenska
• தமிழ்
• Türkçe
• ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ
• Українська
• Tiếng Việt
• 中文
• This page was last modified on 30 March 2011 at 16:04.
• Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License;
additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for details.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit
organization.
• Contact us
• Privacy policy
• About Wikipedia
• Disclaimers