Buffer de potencia rápido de 150 mA
- PDF, 387 Kb, Archivo publicado: marzo 1, 1986
 A variety of high performance V/F circuits is presented. Included are a 1Hz to 100MHz design, a quartz-stabilized type and a 0.0007% linear unit. Other circuits feature 1.5V operation, sine wave output an nonlinear transfer functions. A separate section examines the trade-offs and advantages of various approaches to V/F conversion.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 14
 March 1986
 Designs for High Performance Voltage-to-Frequency
 Converters
 Jim Williams
 Monolithic, modular and hybrid technologies have been
 used to implement voltage-to-frequency converters. A
 number of types are commercially available and overall
 performance is adequate to meet many requirements. In
 many cases, however, very high performance or special
 characteristics are required and available units will not work.
 In these instances V→F circuits specifically optimized for
 the desired parameters(s) are required. This application
 note presents examples of circuits which offer substantially improved performance over commercially available
 V→Fs. Various approaches (see Box Section, “V→F
 Design Techniques”) permit improvements in speed, dynamic range, stability and linearity. Other circuits feature
 low voltage operation, sine wave output and deliberate
 nonlinear transfer functions.
 Ultra-High Speed 1Hz to 100MHz V→F Converter
 Figure 1’s circuit uses a variety of circuit methods to
 achieve wider dynamic range and higher speed than any
 commercial V→F. Rocketing along at 100MHz full-scale
 (10% overrange to 110MHz is provided), it leaves all other …
 
- PDF, 421 Kb, Archivo publicado: agosto 1, 1985
 This note describes some of the unique IC design techniques incorporated into a fast, monolithic power buffer, the LT1010. Also, some application ideas are described such as capacitive load driving, boosting fast op amp output current and power supply circuits.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 16
 August 1985
 Unique IC Buffer Enhances Op Amp Designs,
 Tames Fast Amplifiers
 Robert J. Widlar
 Abstract: A unity gain IC power buffer that uses NPN
 output transistors while avoiding the usual problems of
 quasi-complementary designs is described. Free of parasitic oscillations and stable with large capacitive loads, the
 buffer has a 20MHz bandwidth, a 100V/Ојs slew and can
 drive В±10V into a 75О© load. Standby current is 5mA. A
 number of applications using the buffer are detailed, and
 it is shown that a buffer has many uses beyond driving
 a heavy load.
 Introduction
 An output buffer can do much more than increase the
 output swing of an op amp. It can also eliminate ringing
 with large capacitive loads. Fast buffers can improve the
 performance of high speed followers, integrators and
 sample/hold circuits, while at the same time making them
 much easier to work with.
 Interest in buffers has been low because a reasonably
 priced, high performance, general purpose part has not
 been available. Ideally, a buffer should be fast, have no …
 
- PDF, 2.5 Mb, Archivo publicado: marzo 1, 1986
 This note presents output state circuits which provide power gain for monolithic amplifiers. The circuits feature voltage gain, current gain, or both. Eleven designs are shown, and performance is summarized. A generalized method for frequency compensation appears in a separate section.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 18
 March 1986
 Power Gain Stages for Monolithic Amplifiers
 Jim Williams
 Most monolithic amplifiers cannot supply more than a few
 hundred milliwatts of output power. Standard IC processing
 techniques set device supply levels at 36V, limiting available output swing. Additionally, supplying currents beyond
 tens of milliamperes requires large output transistors and
 causes undesirable IC power dissipation.
 Many applications, however, require greater output power
 than most monolithic amplifiers will deliver. When voltage
 or current gain (or both) is needed, a separate output
 stage is necessary. The power gain stage, sometimes
 called a “booster”, is usually placed within the monolithic
 amplifier’s feedback loop, preserving the IC’s low drift and
 stable gain characteristics. 150mA Output Stage
 Figure 1a shows the LTВ®1010 monolithic 150mA current
 booster placed within the feedback loop of a fast FET
 amplifier. At lower frequencies, the buffer is within the
 feedback loop so that its offset voltage and gain errors
 are negligible. At higher frequencies, feedback is through
 Cf, so that phase shift from the load capacitance acting
 against the buffer output resistance does not cause loop …
 
- PDF, 330 Kb, Archivo publicado: jul 1, 1986
 Applications often require an amplifier that has extremely high performance in several areas. For example, high speed and DC precision are often needed. If a single device cannot simultaneously achieve the desired characteristics, a composite amplifier made up of two (or more) devices can be configured to do the job. AN21 shows examples of composite approaches in designs combining speed, precision, low noise and high power.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 21
 July 1986
 Composite Amplifiers
 Jim Williams
 Amplifier design, regardless of the technology utilized, is
 a study in compromise. Device limitations make it difficult
 for a particular amplifier to achieve optimal speed, drift,
 bias current, noise and power output specifications. As
 such, various amplifier families emphasizing one or more
 of these areas have evolved. Some amplifiers are very good
 attempts at doing everything well, but the best achievable
 performance п¬Ѓgures are limited to dedicated designs. designed with little attention to DC biasing considerations
 if a separate stabilizing stage is employed.
 Figure 1 shows a composite made up of an LTВ®1012 low drift
 device and an LT1022 high speed amplifier. The overall circuit is a unity-gain inverter, with the summing node located
 at the junction of three 10k resistors. The LT1012 monitors
 this summing node, compares it to ground and drives the
 LT1022’s positive input, completing a DC stabilizing loop
 around the LT1022. The 10k-300pF time constant at the
 LT1012 limits its response to low frequency signals. The
 LT1022 handles high frequency inputs while the LT1012
 stabilizes the DC operating point. The 4.7k-220О© divider
 at the LT1022 prevents excessive input overdrive during …
 
- PDF, 1.5 Mb, Archivo publicado: feb 2, 1989
 Subtitled "Some Affable Analogs for Digital Devotees," discusses a number of analog circuits useful in predominantly digital systems. VPP generators for flash memories receive extensive treatment. Other examples include a current loop transmitter, dropout detectors, power management circuits, and clocks.
 
- PDF, 1.0 Mb, Archivo publicado: sept 23, 1984
 The LT1010 150mA power buffer is described in a number of useful applications such as boosted op amp, a feed-forward, wideband DC stabilized buffer, a video line driver amplifier, a fast sample-hold with hold step compensation, an overload protected motor speed controller, and a piezoelectric fan servo.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 4
 September 1984
 Applications for a New Power Buffer
 Jim Williams
 A frequent requirement in systems involves driving
 analog signals into non-linear or reactive loads. Cables,
 transformers, actuators, motors and sample-hold circuits
 are examples where the ability to drive difficult loads is
 required. Although several power buffer amplifiers are
 available, none have been optimized for driving difficult
 loads. The LTВ®1010 can isolate and drive almost any
 reactive load. It also offers current limiting and thermal
 overload protection which protect the device against output
 fault conditions. The combination of good speed, output
 protection, and reactive load driving capability (see box
 section, “The LT1010 at a Glance”) make the device useful
 in a variety of practical situations. Buffered Output Line Driver
 Figure 1 shows the LT1010 placed within the feedback
 loop of an operational amplifier. At lower frequencies, the
 buffer is within the feedback loop and its offset voltage and
 gain error are negligible. At higher frequencies, feedback
 is through CF so that phase shift from load capacitance
 acting against the buffer’s output resistance does not …
 
- PDF, 3.8 Mb, Archivo publicado: jun 1, 1990
 Subtitled "Marrying Gain and Balance," this note covers signal conditioning circuits for various types of bridges. Included are transducer bridges, AC bridges, Wien bridge oscillators, Schottky bridges, and others. Special attention is given to amplifier selection criteria. Appended sections cover strain gauge transducers, understanding distortion measurements, and historical perspectives on bridge readout mechanisms and Wein bridge oscillators.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 43
 June 1990
 Bridge Circuits
 Marrying Gain and Balance
 Jim Williams
 Bridge circuits are among the most elemental and powerful
 electrical tools. They are found in measurement, switching, oscillator and transducer circuits. Additionally, bridge
 techniques are broadband, serving from DC to bandwidths
 well into the GHz range. The electrical analog of the mechanical beam balance, they are also the progenitor of all
 electrical differential techniques. and stability of the basic configuration. In particular, transducer manufacturers are quite adept at adapting the bridge
 to their needs (see Appendix A, “Strain Gauge Bridges”).
 Careful matching of the transducer’s mechanical characteristics to the bridge’s electrical response can provide a
 trimmed, calibrated output. Similarly, circuit designers
 have altered performance by adding active elements (e.g.,
 amplifiers) to the bridge, excitation source or both. Resistance Bridges
 Figure 1 shows a basic resistor bridge. The circuit is
 usually credited to Charles Wheatstone, although S. H.
 Christie, who demonstrated it in 1833, almost certainly
 preceded him.1 If all resistor values are equal (or the two
 sides ratios are equal) the differential voltage is zero. The
 excitation voltage does not alter this, as it affects both
 sides equally. When the bridge is operating off null, the
 excitation’s magnitude sets output sensitivity. The bridge …
 
- PDF, 1.2 Mb, Archivo publicado: jun 5, 1991
 A variety of measurement and control circuits are included in this application note. Eighteen circuits, including ultra low noise amplifiers, current sources, transducer signal conditioners, oscillators, data converters and power supplies are presented. The circuits emphasize precision specifications with relatively simple configurations.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 45
 June 1991
 Measurement and Control Circuit Collection
 Diapers and Designs on the Night Shift
 Jim Williams
 Introduction
 During my wife’s pregnancy I wondered what it would
 really be like when the baby was finally born. Before that
 time, there just wasn’t much mothering and fathering to
 do. As a consolation, we busied ourselves watching the
 baby’s heartbeat (Figure 1) on a thrown-together fetal heart
 monitor (see References). feedings. As such, the circuits are annotated with the
 number of feedings required for their completion; e.g., a
 “3-bottle circuit” took three feedings. The circuit’s degree
 of difficulty, and Michael’s degree of cooperation, combined
 to determine the bottle rating, which is duly recorded in
 each figure.
 Low Noise and Drift Chopped Bipolar Amplifier
 Figure 2’s circuit combines the low noise of an LT®1028
 with a chopper based carrier modulation scheme to achieve
 an extraordinarily low noise, low drift DC amplifier. DC
 drift and noise performance exceed any currently available
 monolithic amplifier. Offset is inside 1ОјV, with drift less …
 
- PDF, 5.3 Mb, Archivo publicado: agosto 1, 1991
 This application note, subtitled "A Designer's Companion for Wideband Circuitry," is intended as a reference source for designing with fast amplifiers. Approximately 150 pages and 300 figures cover frequently encountered problems and their possible causes. Circuits include a wide range of amplifiers, filters, oscillators, data converters and signal conditioners. Eleven appended sections discuss related topics including oscilloscopes, probe selection, measurement and equipment considerations, and breadboarding techniques.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 47
 August 1991
 High Speed Amplifier Techniques
 A Designer’s Companion for Wideband Circuitry
 Jim Williams PREFACE
 This publication represents the largest LTC commitment
 to an application note to date. No other application note
 absorbed as much effort, took so long or cost so much.
 This level of activity is justified by our belief that high speed
 monolithic amplifiers greatly interest users.
 Historically, monolithic amplifiers have represented packets of inexpensive, precise and controllable gain. They
 have partially freed engineers from the constraints and
 frustrations of device level design. Monolithic operational
 amplifiers have been the key to practical implementation
 of high level analog functions. As good as they are, one
 missing element in these devices has been speed.
 Devices presently coming to market are addressing monolithic amplifiers’ lack of speed. They bring with them the
 ease of use and inherent flexibility of op amps. When Philbrick Researches introduced the first mass produced
 op amp in the 1950’s (K2-W) they knew it would be used.
 What they couldn’t possibly know was just how widely,
 and how many different types of applications there were.
 As good a deal as the K2-W was (I paid $24.00 for mine or rather, my father did), monolithic devices are far better.
 The combination of ease of use, economy, precision and …
 
- PDF, 882 Kb, Archivo publicado: mayo 1, 1998
 AN72 is an extensive discussion of the causes and cures of problems in very high speed comparator circuits. A separate applications section uses the 7ns LT1394 in V-to-F converters, crystal oscillators, clock skew generators, triggers, sampling configurations and a nanosecond pulse stretcher. Appendices cover related topics.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 72
 May 1998
 A Seven-Nanosecond Comparator
 for Single Supply Operation
 Guidance for Putting Civilized Speed to Work
 Jim Williams INTRODUCTION
 In 1985 Linear Technology Corporation introduced the
 LT В®1016 Comparator. This device was the first readily
 usable, high speed TTL comparator. Previous ICs were
 either too slow or unstable, preventing widespread
 acceptance. The LT1016 was, and is, a highly successful
 product.
 Recent technology trends have emphasized low power,
 single supply operation. The LT1016, although capable of
 such operation, does not include ground in its input range.
 As such, it must be biased into its operating common
 mode range for practical single supply use. A new device,
 the LT1394, maintains the speed and application civility of
 its predecessor while including ground in its input operating range. Additionally, the new comparator is faster and
 pulls significantly lower operating current than the LT1016.
 This publication borrows shamelessly from earlier LTC
 efforts, while introducing new material.1 It approximates,
 affixes, appends, abridges, amends, abbreviates, abrogates, ameliorates and augments the previous work.2 …
 
- PDF, 172 Kb, Archivo publicado: nov 1, 1999
 Just how do bandgaps and buried Zeners stack up against Weston cells? Did you know your circuit board may induce more drift in a reference than time and temperature? Learn the answers to these and other commonly asked reference questions ranging from burn-in recommendations to ΔVBE generation in this Application Note.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 82
 November 1999
 Understanding and Applying Voltage References 30
 2 4 20
 8 3
 10 –20
 16
 32 4
 –30 5 Today’s IC reference technology is divided along two
 lines: bandgap references, which balance the temperature coefficient of a forward-biased diode junction against
 that of a ∆VBE (see Appendix B); and buried Zeners (see
 Appendix A), which use subsurface breakdown to achieve
 outstanding long-term stability and low noise. With few
 exceptions, both reference types use additional on-chip
 circuitry to further minimize temperature drift and trim
 output voltage to an exact value. Bandgap references are
 generally used in systems of up to 12 bits; buried Zeners
 take over from there in higher accuracy systems.
 , LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. –1 5
 3
 2 64 6
 1 –40 As with other specialized electronic fields, the field of
 monolithic references has its own vocabulary. We’ve …
 
- PDF, 540 Kb, Archivo publicado: enero 1, 2001
 This publication details a true 1ppm D-to-A converter. Total DC error of this processor corrected DAC remains within 1ppm from 18-32°C, including reference drift. DAC error exclusive of reference drift is substantially better. Construction details and performance verification techniques are included, along with a complete software listing.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 86
 January 2001
 A Standards Lab Grade 20-Bit DAC with 0.1ppm/В°C Drift
 The Dedicated Art of Digitizing One Part Per Million
 Jim Williams
 J. Brubaker
 P. Copley
 J. Guerrero
 F. Oprescu INTRODUCTION
 Significant progress in high precision, instrumentation
 grade D-to-A conversion has recently occurred. Ten years
 ago 12-bit D-to-A converters (DACs) were considered
 premium devices. Today, 16-bit DACs are available and
 increasingly common in system design. These are true
 precision devices with less than 1LSB linearity error and
 1ppm/В°C drift.1 Nonetheless, there are DAC applications
 that require even higher performance. Automatic test
 equipment, instruments, calibration apparatus, laser trimmers, medical electronics and other applications often
 require DAC accuracy beyond 16 bits. 18-bit DACs have
 been produced in circuit assembly form, although they are
 expensive and require frequent calibration. 20 and even
 23+ (0.1ppm!) bit DACs are represented by manually
 switched Kelvin-Varley dividers. These devices, although …
 
- PDF, 625 Kb, Archivo publicado: agosto 5, 1986
 A discussion of circuit, layout and construction considerations for low level DC circuits includes error analysis of solder, wire and connector junctions. Applications include sub-microvolt instrumentation and isolation amplifiers, stabilized buffers and comparators and precision data converters.
 - Extracto del documento - Application Note 9
 August 1986
 Application Considerations and Circuits for a New
 Chopper-Stabilized Op Amp
 Jim Williams
 A great deal of progress has been made in op amp DC
 characteristics. Carefully executed designs currently available provide sub-microvolt VOS О”T drift, low bias currents
 and open-loop gains exceeding one million. Considerable
 design and processing advances were required to achieve
 these specifications. Because of this, it is interesting to
 note that amplifiers with even better DC specification
 were available in 1963 (Philbrick Researches Model
 SP656). Although these modular amplifiers were large
 and expensive (≈3" × 2" × 1.5" at $195.00 1963 dollars)
 by modern standards, their DC performance anticipated
 today’s best monolithic amplifiers while using relatively
 primitive components. This was accomplished by employing chopper-stabilization techniques (see Box “Choppers,
 Chopper-Stabilization and the LTC®1052”) instead of the
 more common DC-differential stage approach.
 The chopper-stabilized approach, developed by E. A.
 Goldberg in 1948, uses the amplifier’s input to amplitude
 modulate an AC carrier. This carrier, amplified and synchronously demodulated back to DC, furnishes the amplifier’s PARAMETER
 EOS – 25В°C …