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"Chapter 1 - The Op Amp's Place in the World" - HTL Wien 10

"Chapter 1 - The Op Amp's Place in the World" - HTL Wien 10

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Summary<br />

4.4 Summary<br />

4-22<br />

S<strong>in</strong>gle-supply op amp design is more complicated than split-supply op amp design, but<br />

with a logical design approach excellent results are achieved. S<strong>in</strong>gle-supply design used<br />

to be considered technically limit<strong>in</strong>g because older op amps had limited capability. <strong>The</strong><br />

new op amps, such as <strong>the</strong> TLC247X, TLC07X, and TLC08X have excellent s<strong>in</strong>gle-supply<br />

parameters; thus when used <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> correct applications <strong>the</strong>se op amps yield rail-to-rail<br />

performance equal to <strong>the</strong>ir split-supply counterparts.<br />

S<strong>in</strong>gle-supply op amp design usually <strong>in</strong>volves some form of bias<strong>in</strong>g, and this requires<br />

more thought, so s<strong>in</strong>gle-supply op amp design needs discipl<strong>in</strong>e and a procedure. <strong>The</strong> recommended<br />

design procedure for s<strong>in</strong>gle-supply op amp design is:<br />

Substitute <strong>the</strong> specification data <strong>in</strong>to simultaneous equations to obta<strong>in</strong> m and b (<strong>the</strong><br />

slope and <strong>in</strong>tercept of a straight l<strong>in</strong>e).<br />

Let m and b determ<strong>in</strong>e <strong>the</strong> form of <strong>the</strong> circuit.<br />

Choose <strong>the</strong> circuit configuration that fits <strong>the</strong> form.<br />

Us<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> circuit equations for <strong>the</strong> circuit configuration selected, calculate <strong>the</strong><br />

resistor values.<br />

Build <strong>the</strong> circuit, take data, and verify performance.<br />

Test <strong>the</strong> circuit for nonstandard operat<strong>in</strong>g conditions (circuit power off while <strong>in</strong>terface<br />

power is on, over/under range <strong>in</strong>puts, etc.).<br />

Add protection components as required.<br />

Retest.<br />

When this procedure is followed, good results follow. As s<strong>in</strong>gle-supply circuit designers<br />

expand <strong>the</strong>ir horizon, new challenges require new solutions. Remember, <strong>the</strong> only equation<br />

a l<strong>in</strong>ear op amp can produce is <strong>the</strong> equation of a straight l<strong>in</strong>e. That equation only has<br />

four forms. <strong>The</strong> new challenges may consist of multiple <strong>in</strong>puts, common-mode voltage<br />

rejection, or someth<strong>in</strong>g different, but this method can be expanded to meet <strong>the</strong>se challenges.

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