NSC AN-242 Applying a new precision op amp Datasheet

National Semiconductor
Application Note 242
April 1980
Robert J. Widlar
Apartado Postal 541
Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco
Mexico
Bob Pease and Mineo Yamatake
National Semiconductor Corporation
Santa Clara, California
U.S.A.
Abstract: A new bipolar op amp design has advanced the
state of the art by reducing offset voltage and bias current
errors. Its characteristics are described here, indicating an
ultimate input resolution of 10 mV and 1 pA under laboratory
conditions. Practical circuits for making voltmeters, ammeters, differential instrumentation amplifiers and a variety of
other designs that can benefit from the improved performance are covered in detail. Methods of coupling the new
device to existing fast amplifiers to take advantage of the
best characteristics of both, even in follower applications,
are explored.
introduction
A low cost, mass-produced op amp with electrometer-type
input currents combined with low offset voltage and drift is
now available. Designated the LM11, this IC can minimize
production problems by providing accuracy without adjustments, even in high-impedance circuitry. On the other hand,
if pushed to its full potential, what has been impossible in
the past becomes entirely practical.
Significantly, the LM11 is not restricted to commercial and
industrial use. Devices can be completely specified over a
b 55§ C to a 125§ C range. Preliminary data indicates that
reliability is the same as standard ICs qualified for military
and space applications.
The essential details of the design along with an introduction to the peculiarities of high-impedance circuits have
been presented elsewhere.* This will be expanded here.
Practical circuitry that reduces effective bias current for
those applications where performance cannot be made dependent on offset current are described. In addition, circuits
combining the DC characteristics of the new part with the
AC performance of existing fast amplifiers will be shown.
This will be capped with a number of practical designs to
provide some perspective into what might be done.
dc errors
Barring the use of chopper or reset stabilization, the best
offset voltage, drift and long-term stability are obtained using bipolar transistors for the op amp input stage. This has
been done with the LM11. On-wafer trimming further improves performance. Typically, a 100 mV offset with
1 mV/§ C drift results.
Transistors with typical current gains of 5000 have been
used in the manufacture of the LM11. The input stage employs a Darlington connection that has been modified so
that offset voltage and drift are not degraded. The typical
input currents, plotted in Figure 1, demonstrate the value of
the approach.
TL/H/7479 – 1
Figure 1. Below 100§ C, bias current varies almost linearly with temperature. This means that simple
circuitry can be used for compensation. Offset
current is unusually low.
The offset current of this op amp is so low that it cannot be
measured on existing production test equipment. Therefore,
it probably cannot be specified tighter than 10 pA. For critical applications, the user should have little difficulty in selecting to a tighter limit.
The bias current of the LM11 equals that of monolithic FET
amplifier at 25§ C. Unlike FETs, it does not double every
10§ C. In fact, the drift over a b55§ C to a 125§ C temperature
range is about the same as that of a FET op amp during
normal warm up.
Other characteristics are summarized in Table I. It can be
seen that the common-mode rejection, supply-voltage rejection and voltage gain are high enough to take full advantage of the low offset voltage. The unspectacular 0.3V/ms
slew rate is balanced by the 300 mA current drain.
AN-242
*R. J. Widlar, ‘‘Working with High Impedance Op Amps’’, National Semiconductor AN-241.
C1995 National Semiconductor Corporation
TL/H/7479
Applying a New Precision Op Amp
Applying a New
Precision Op Amp
RRD-B30M115/Printed in U. S. A.
all circuits. Examples are integrators, sample and holds, logarithmic converters and signal-conditioning amplifiers. And
even though the LM11 bias current is low, there will be
those applications where it needs to be lower.
Table I. Typical characteristics of the
LM11 for Tj e 25§ C and VS e g 15V. Operation is
specified down to VS e g 2.5V.
Parameter
Conditions
Value
Input Offset Voltage
100 mV
Input Offset Current
500 fA
Input Bias Current
25 pA
Input Noise Voltage 0.01 Hz s f s 10 Hz
8 mVpp
Input Noise Current 0.01 Hz s f s 10 Hz
1 pApp
Long Term Stability Tj e 25§ C
10 mV
Offset Voltage Drift b55§ C s Tj s 125§ C
1 mV/§ C
Offset Current Drift b55§ C s Tj s 125§ C
20 fA/§ C
b 55§ C s Tj s 125§ C
Bias Current Drift
500 fA/§ C
Voltage Gain
VOUT e g 12V,
1,200V/mV
IOUT e g 0.5 mA
VOUT e g 12V,
300V/mV
IOUT e g 2 mA
b 12.5V s VCM s 14V
Common-Mode
130 dB
Rejection
g 2.5V s VS s g 20V
Supply-Voltage
118 dB
Rejection
Slew Rate
0.3V/ms
Supply Current
300 mA
Referring back to Figure 1, it can be seen that the bias
current drift is essentially linear over a b50§ C to a 100§ C
range. This is a deliberate consequence of the input stage
design. Because of it, relatively simple circuitry can be used
to develop a compensating current.
TL/H/7479 – 2
Figure 2. The LM11 operates from MX source resistances with little DC error. With equal source resistances, accuracy is essentially limited by
low frequency current noise.
Bias current compensation is not new, but making it effective with even limited temperature excursions has been a
problem. An early circuit suggested for bipolar ICs is shown
in Figure 3a . The compensating current is determined by the
diode voltage. This does not vary as rapidly with temperature as bias current nor does it match the usual non-linearities.
With the improved circuit in Figure 3b, the temperature coefficient can be increased by using a transistor and including
R2. The drop across R2 is nearly constant with temperature.
The voltage delivered to the potentiometer has a 2.2 mV/§ C
drift while its magnitude is determined by R2. Thus, as long
as the bias current varies linearly with temperature, a value
for R2 can be found to effect compensation.
As might be expected, the low bias currents were obtained
with some sacrifice in noise. But the low frequency noise
voltage is still a bit less than a FET amplifier and probably
more predictable. The latter is important because this noise
cannot be tested in production. Long term measurements
have not indicated any drift in excess of the noise. This is
not the case for FETs.
It is worthwhile noting that the drift of offset voltage and
current is low enough that DC accuracy is noise limited in
room-temperature applications.
bias current compensation
The LM11 can operate from MX source resistances with
little increase in the equivalent offset voltage, as can be
seen in Figure 2. This is impressive considering the low initial offset voltage. The situation is much improved if the design can be configured so that the op amp sees equal resistance on the two inputs. However, this cannot be done with
TL/H/7479–3
TL/H/7479 – 4
b. improved version
a. original circuit
Figure 3. Bias-current compensation. With the improved version, the temperature coefficient of the compensating
current can be varied with R2. It is effective only if bias current has linear, negative temperature coefficient.
2
Little comment need be made on these results, except that
the method is sufficiently predictable that another factor of
five reduction in worst case bias current could be made by
altering R2 based on the results of a single temperature run.
In production, altering resistors based on temperature testing is to be avoided if at all possible. Therefore, the results
that can be obtained with simple nulling at room temperature and a fixed value for R2 are of interest. Figure 4 gives
this data for a range of parts with different initial bias currents. This was obtained from pre-production and initial-production runs. The bias current variations were the result of
both hFE variations and changes in internal operating currents and represent the worst as well as best obtained.
They are therefore considered a realistic estimate of what
would be encountered among various production lots.
One disadvantage of the new circuit is that it is more sensitive to supply variations than the old. This is no problem if
the supplies are regulated to 1%. But with worst regulation it
suffers because, with R2, the transistor no longer functions
as a regulator and because much tighter compensation is
obtained.
The circuit in Figure 5 uses pre-regulation to solve this problem. The added reference diode has a low breakdown so
that the minimum operating voltage of the op amp is unrestricted. Because of the low breakdown, the drop across R3
can no longer be considered constant. But it will vary linearly with temperature, so this is of no consequence. The fact
that this reference can be used for other functions should
not be overlooked because a regulated voltage is frequently
required in designs using op amps.
In Figure 5, a divider is used so that the resistor feeding the
compensating current to the op amp can be reduced. There
will be an error current developed for any offset voltage
change across R6. This should not be a problem with the
LM11 because of its low offset voltage. But for tight compensation, mismatch in the temperature characteristics of
R4 and R5 must be considered.
TL/H/7479 – 5
Figure 4. Compensated bias current for five representative units with a range of initial bias currents.
The circuit in Figure 3b was used with balancing at 25§ C. High drift devices could be improved further by altering R2.
TL/H/7479 – 6
Figure 5. Bias current compensation for use with unregulated supplies.
Reference voltage is available for other circuitry.
3
er has limited value. However, the bootstrapped input stage
of the LM11 reduces this to about 2 pA for a g 20V common-mode swing, giving a 2 c 1013X common-mode input
resistance.
Bias current compensation is more difficult for non-inverting
amplifiers because the common-mode voltage varies. With
a voltage follower, everything can be bootstrapped to the
output and powered by a regulated current source, as
shown in Figure 6. The LM334 is a temperature sensor. It
regulates against voltage changes and its output varies linearly with temperature, so it fits the bill.
Although the LM334 can accommodate voltage changes
fast enough to work with the LM11, it is not fast enough for
the high-speed circuits to be described. But compensation
can still be obtained by using the zener diode pre-regulator
bootstrapped to the output and powered by either a resistor
or FET current source. The LM385 fits well here because
both the breakdown voltage and minimum operating current
are low.
With ordinary op amps, the collector base voltage of the
input transistors varies with the common-mode voltage. A
50% change in bias current over the common-mode range
is not unusual, so compensating the bias current of a follow-
fast amplifiers
A precision DC amplifier, although slow, can be used to stabilize the offset voltage of a less precise fast amplifier. As
shown in Figure 7, the slow amplifier senses the voltage
across the input terminals and supplies a correction signal
to the balance terminals of the fast amplifier. The LM11 is
particularly interesting in this respect as it does not degrade
the input bias current of the composite even when the fast
amplifier has a FET input.
Surprisingly, with the LM11, this will work for both inverting
and non-inverting connections because its common-mode
slew recovery is a lot faster than that of the main loop. This
was accomplished, even with circuitry running under
100 nA, by proper clamping and by bootstrapping of internal
stray capacitances.
TL/H/7479 – 8
TL/H/7479–7
Figure 6. This circuit shows how bias current compensation can be used on a voltage follower.
Figure 7. A slow amplifier can be used to null the offset
of a fast amplifier.
4
Measurements indicate that the slew rate of the fast amplifier is unimpaired, as is the settling time to 1 mV for a 20V
output excursion. If the composite amplifier is overdriven so
that the output saturates, there will be an added recovery
delay because the coupling capacitor to the fast amplifier
takes on a charge with the summing node off ground.
Therefore, C1 should be made as small as possible. But
going below the values given may introduce gain error.
If the bias current of the fast amplifier meets circuit requirements, it can be direct-coupled to the input. In this case,
offset voltage is improved, not bias current. But overload
recovery can be reduced. The AC coupling to the fast-amplifier input might best be eliminated for limited-temperaturerange operation.
This connection also increases the open-loop gain beyond
that of the LM11, particularly since two-pole compensation
can be effected to reduce AC gain error at moderate frequencies. The DC gains measured showed something in
excess of 140 dB.
An optimized circuit for the inverting amplifier connection is
shown in Figure 8. The LM11 is DC coupled to the input and
drives the balance terminals of the fast amplifier. The fast
amplifier is AC coupled to the input and drives the output.
This isolates FET leakage from the input circuitry.
As can be seen, the method of coupling into the balance
terminals will vary depending on the internal configuration of
the fast amplifier. If the quiescent voltage on the balance
terminals is beyond the output swing of the LM11, a differential coupling must be used, as in Figure 8a. A lead capacitor, C2, reduces the AC swing required at the LM11 output.
The clamp diode, D1, insures that the LM11 does not overdrive the fast amplifier in slew.
If the quiescent voltage on the balance terminals is such
that the LM11 can drive directly, the circuit in Figure 8b can
be used. A clamp diode from the other balance terminal to
internal circuitry of the LM11 keeps the output from swinging too far from the null value, and a resistor may be required in series with its output to insure stability.
TL/H/7479 – 9
TL/H/7479 – 10
b. with fast hybrid
a. with standard BI-FET
Figure 8. These inverters have bias current and offset voltage of LM11 along with speed of the FET op amps. Open
loop gain is about 140 dB and settling time to 1 mV about 8 ms. Excess overload-recovery delay can be
eliminated by directly coupling the FET amplifier to summing node.
5
A voltage-follower connection is given in Figure 9. The coupling circuitry is similar, except that R5 was added to eliminate glitches in slew. Overload involves driving the fast amplifier outside its common-mode range and should be avoided by limiting the input. Thus, AC coupling the fast amplifier
is less a problem. But the repetition frequency of the input
signal must also be limited to 10 kHz for g 10V swing. Higher frequencies produce a DC error, believed to result from
rectification of the input signal by the voltage sensitive input
capacitance of the FET amplifier used. A fast bipolar amplifer like the LM118 should work out better in this respect. To
avoid confusion, it should be emphasized that this problem
is related to repetition frequency rather than rise time.
input terminals. However, when the inputs are shorted, the
output state is indeterminate because of offset voltage.
Adding degeneration as shown in Figure 11 takes care of
this problem. Here, R2 is the feedback resistor for the most
sensitive range, while R1 is chosen to get the meter deflection out of the noise with a shorted input. Adding the range
resistor, as shown, does not affect the degeneration, so that
there is minimal drop across the input for full-scale on all
ranges.
TL/H/7479 – 12
Figure 10. This 100X amplifier has small and large signal
bandwidth of 1 MHz. The LM11 greatly reduces offset voltage, bias current and gain error.
Eliminating long recovery delay for greater
than 100% overload requires direct coupling
of A2 to input.
TL/H/7479–11
Figure 9. Follower has 10 ms settling to 1 mV, but signal
repetition frequency should not exceed 10
kHz if the FET amplifier is AC coupled to input.
The circuit does not behave well if commonmode range is exceeded.
A precision DC amplifier with a 100 MHz gain-bandwidth
product is shown in Figure 10. It has reasonable recovery
( E 7 ms) from a 100% overload; but beyond that, AC coupling to the fast amplifier causes problems. Alone, the gain
error and thermal feedback of the LH0032 are about 20 mV,
input referred, for g 10V output swing. Adding the LM11 reduces this to microvolts.
TL/H/7479 – 13
picoammeter
Ideally, an ammeter should read zero with no input current
and have no voltage drop across its inputs even with fullscale deflection. Neither should spurious indications nor inaccuracy result from connecting it to a low impedance.
Meeting all these requirements calls for a DC amplifier, and
one in which both bias current and offset voltage are controlled.
The summing amplifier connection is best for measuring
current, because it minimizes the voltage drop across the
Figure 11. An ammeter that has constant voltage drop
across its input at full-scale, no matter what
the range. It can have a reasonably-behaved
output even with shorted inputs, yet a maximum drop of ten times the op amp noise voltage.
6
The complete meter circuit in Figure 12 uses a different
scheme. A floating supply is available so that the power
ground and the signal ground can be separated with R12. At
full-scale, the meter current plus the measured current flow
through this resistor, establishing the degeneration. This
method has the advantage of allowing even-value range resistors on the lower ranges but increases degeneration as
the measured current approaches the meter current.
Bias-current compensation is used to increase the meter
sensitivity so there are two zeroing adjustments; current balancing, that is best done on the most sensitive range where
it is needed, and voltage balancing that should be done with
the inputs shorted on a range below 100 mA, where the
degeneration is minimal.
With separate grounds, error could be made dependent on
offset current. This would eliminate bias-current compensation at the expense of more complicated range switching.
The op amp input has internal, back-to-back diodes across
it, so R6 is added to limit current with overloads. This type of
protection does not affect operation and is recommended
whenever more than 10 mA is available to the inputs. The
output buffers are added so that input overloads cannot
drag down the op amp output on the least-sensitive range,
giving a false meter indication. These would not be required
if the maximum input current did not approach the output
current limit of the op amp.
TL/H/7479 – 14
Figure 12. Current meter ranges from 100 pA to 3 mA, full-scale. Voltage across input is 100 mV at lower ranges rising
to 3 mV at 3 mA. Buffers on op amp are to remove ambiguity with high-current overload. Output can also
drive DVM or DPM.
7
millivoltmeter
An ideal voltmeter has requirements analogous to those discussed for the ammeter, and Figure 13 shows a circuit that
will satisfy them. In the most-sensitive position, the range
resistor is zero and the input resistance equals R1. As voltage measurement is desensitized by increasing the range
resistor, the input resistance is also increased, giving the
maximum input resistance consistent with zero stability with
the input open. Thus, at full-scale, the source will be loaded
by whatever multiple of the noise current is required to give
the desired open-input zero stability.
This technique is incorporated into the voltmeter circuit in
Figure 14 to give a 100 MX input resistance on the 1 mV
scale rising to 300 GX on the 3V scale. The separation of
power and signal grounds has been used here to simplify
bias-current compensation. Otherwise, a separate op amp
would be required to bootstrap the compensation to the input.
TL/H/7479 – 15
Figure 13. This voltmeter has constant full-scale loading independent of range. This can be only
ten times the noise current, yet the output
will be reasonably behaved for open input.
*1 c scale calibrate
² 3 c scale calibrate
² ² includes reversing switch
TL/H/7479 – 16
Figure 14. High input impedance millivoltmeter. Input current is proportional to input voltage, about 10 pA at full-scale.
Reference could be used to make direct reading linear ohmmeter.
8
The input resistor, R6, serves two functions. First, it protects
the op amp input in the event of overload. Second, it insures
that an overload will not give a false meter indication until it
exceeds a couple hundred volts.
current sources
The classical op amp circuit for voltage-to-current conversion is shown in Figure 15. It is presented here because the
output resistance is determined by both the matching and
the value of the feedback resistors. With the LM11, these
resistors can be raised while preserving DC stability.
While the circuit in Figure 15 can provide bipolar operation,
better performance can be obtained with fewer problems if
a unipolar output is acceptable. A complete, battery-powered current source suitable for laboratory use is given in
Figure 16 to illustrate this approach. The op amp regulates
the voltage across the range resistors at a level determined
by the voltage on the arm of the calibrated potentiometer,
R3. The voltage on the range resistors is established by the
current through Q2 and Q3, which is delivered to the output.
The reference diode, D1, determines basic accuracy. Q1 is
included to insure that the LM11 inputs are kept within the
common-mode range with diminishing battery voltage. A
light-emitting diode, D2, is used to indicate output saturation. However, this indication cannot be relied upon for output-current settings below about 20 nA unless the value of
R6 is increased. The reason is that very low currents can be
supplied to the range resistors through R6 without developing enough voltage drop to turn on the diode.
If the LED illuminates with the output open, there is sufficient battery voltage to operate the circuit. But a battery-test
switch is also provided. It is connected to the base of the op
a
amp output stage and forces the output toward V .
Since the reference is bootstrapped to the input, this circuit
is easily converted into a linear, direct-reading ohmmeter. A
resistor from the top of D1 to the input establishes the measurement current so that the voltage drop is proportional to
the resistance connected across the input.
R1 e R3; R2 e R4
IOUT e
R2 VIN
R1 R5
TL/H/7479 – 17
Figure 15. Output resistance of this voltage/current
converter depends both on high value feedback resistors and their matching.
*calibrate range
² select for ICBO s 100 pA
TL/H/7479 – 18
Figure 16. Precision current source has 10 nA to 10 mA ranges with output compliance of 30V to b5V. Output current
is fully adjustable on each range with a calibrated, ten-turn potentiometer. Error light indicates output
saturation.
9
Bias current compensation is not used because low-range
accuracy is limited by the leakage currents of Q2 and Q3.
As it is, these parts must be selected for low leakage. This
should not be difficult because the leakage specified is determined by test equipment rather than device characteristics. It should be noted in making substitutions that Q2 was
selected for low pinch-off voltage and that Q3 may have to
dissipate 300 mW on the high-current range. Heating Q3 on
the high range could increase leakage to where the circuit
will not function for a while when switched to the low range.
light meter
This logging circuit is adapted to a battery-powered light
meter in Figure 18. An LM10, combined op amp and reference, is used for the second amplifier and to provide the
regulated voltage for offsetting the logging circuit and powering the bias current compensation. Since a meter is the
output indicator, there is no need to optimize frequency
compensation. Low-cost single transistors are used for logging since the temperature range is limited. The meter is
protected from overloads by clamp diodes D2 and D3.
Silicon photodiodes are more sensitive to infrared than visible light, so an appropriate filter must be used for photography. Alternately, gallium-arsenide-phosphide diodes with
suppressed IR response are becoming available.
logarithmic converter
A logarithmic amplifier that can operate over an eight-decade range is shown in Figure 17. Naturally, bias current
compensation must be used to pick up the low end of this
range. Leakage of the logging transistors is not a problem
as long as Q1A is operated at zero collector-base voltage.
In the worst case, this may require balancing the offset voltage of A1. Non-standard frequency compensation is used
on A1 to obtain fairly uniform response time, at least at the
high end of the range. The low end might be improved by
optimizing C1. Otherwise, the circuit is standard.
differential amplifiers
Many instrumentation applications require the measurements of low-level signals in the presence of considerable
ground noise. This can be accomplished with a differential
amplifier because it responds to the voltage between the
inputs and rejects signals between the inputs and ground.
330 ppm/§ C. Type Q209
available from Tel Labs, Inc.,
Manchester, N.H.
a. set R11 for VOUT e 0 at IIN e 100 nA
b. set R8 for VOUT e 3V at IIN e 100 mA
c. set R3 for VOUT e 4V at IIN e 10 pA
TL/H/7479 – 19
Figure 17. Unusual frequency compensation gives this logarithmic converter a 100 ms time constant from 1 mA down
to 100 nA, increasing from 200 ms to 200 ms from 10 nA to 10 pA. Optional bias current compensation can
give 10 pA resolution from b55§ C to a 100§ C. Scale factor is 1V/decade and temperature compensated.
10
³
V1 e 0 @ IIN e 100 nA
²
V1 e b 0.24V @ IIN e 10 pA
*
M1 e 0 @ IIN e 10 pA
** M1 e f.s. @ IIN e 1 mA
TL/H/7479 – 20
Figure 18. Light meter has eight-decade range. Bias current compensation can give input current resolution of better
than g 2 pA over 15§ C to 55§ C.
Figure 19 shows the classic op amp differential amplifier
connection. It is not widely used because the input resistance is much lower than alternate methods. But when the
input common-mode voltage exceeds the supply voltage for
the op amp, this cannot be avoided. At least with the LM11,
large feedback resistors can be used to reduce loading
without affecting DC accuracy. The impedances looking into
the two inputs are not always the same. The values given
equalize them for common-mode signals because they are
usually larger. With single-ended inputs, the input resistance
on the inverting input is R1, while that on the non-inverting
input is the sum of R2, R4 and R5.
Provision is made to trim the circuit for maximum DC and AC
common-mode rejection. This is advised because well
matched high-value resistors are hard to come by and because unbalanced stray capacitances can cause severe deterioration of AC rejection with such large values. Particular
attention should be paid to resistor tracking over temperature as this is more of a problem with high-value resistors. If
higher gain or gain trim is required, R6 and R7 can be added.
VS e g 15V
VCM(MAX) e
AV e
R3
R1
#
R1
VOUT(MAX)
R3
R6 a R7
R6
² trim for DC CMRR
J
³ trim for AC CMRR
TL/H/7479 – 21
Figure 19. This differential amplifier handles high input
voltages. Resistor mismatches and stray capacitances should be balanced out for best
common-mode rejection.
11
When slowly varying differential signals are of interest, the
response of A2 can be rolled off with C2 to reduce the sensitivity of the circuit to high frequency common-mode signals. If single-resistor gain setting is desired, R5 can be added. Otherwise, it is unnecessary.
A full-blown differential amplifier with extremely high input
impedance is shown in Figure 21. Gain is fixed at 1000, but
it can be varied with R10. Differential offset balancing is
provided on both input amplifiers by R18.
The AC common-mode rejection is dependent on how well
the frequency characteristics of A2 and A3 match. This is a
far better situation than encountered with the previous circuit. When AC rejection must be optimized, amplifier differences as well as the effects of unbalanced stray capacitances can be compensated for with a capacitor across R13
or R14, depending on which side is slower. Alternately, C1
can be added to control the differential bandwidth and make
AC common-mode rejection less dependent on amplifier
matching. The value shown gives approximately 100 Hz differential bandwidth, although it will vary with gain setting.
A separate amplifier is used to drive the shields of the input
cables. This reduces cable leakage currents and spurious
signals generated from cable flexing. It may also be required
to neutralize cable capacitance. Even short cables can attenuate low-frequency signals with high enough source resistance. Another balance potentiometer, R8, is included so
that resistor mismatches in the drive to the bootstrapping
amplifier can be neutralized. Adding the bootstrapping amplifier also provides a connection point, as shown, for biascurrent compensation if the ultimate in performance is required.
The simplest connection for making a high-input-impedance
differential amplifier using op amps is shown in Figure 20. Its
main disadvantage is that the common-mode signal on the
inverting input is delayed by the response of A1 before being delivered to A2 for cancellation. A selected capacitor
across R1 will compensate for this, but AC common-mode
rejection will deteriorate as the characteristics of A1 vary
with temperature.
f2 j 10 Hz
*gain set
² trim for DC CMRR
TL/H/7479–22
Figure 20. Two-op-amp instrumentation amplifier has
poor AC common-mode rejection. This can
be improved at the expense of differential
bandwidth with C2.
² ² current zero
³ voltage balance
*gain
² DC CMRR
**AC CMRR
TL/H/7479 – 23
Figure 21. High gain differential instrumentation amplifier includes input guarding, cable bootstrapping and bias current compensation. Differential bandwidth is reduced by C1 which also makes common-mode rejection less
dependent on matching of input amplifiers.
12
As can be seen in Figure 22, connecting the input amplifiers
as followers simplifies the circuit considerably. But single
resistor gain control is no longer available and maximum
bandwidth is less with all the gain developed by A3. Resistor
matching is more critical for a given common-mode rejection, but AC matching of the input amplifier is less a problem. Another method of trimming AC common-mode rejection is shown here.
integrator reset
When pursuing the ultimate in performance with the LM11, it
becomes evident that components other than the op amp
can limit performance. This can be the case when semiconductor switches are used. Their leakage easily exceeds the
bias current when elevated temperatures are involved.
The integrator with electrical reset in Figure 23 gives a solution to this problem. Two switches in series are used to
shunt the integrating capacitor. In the off state, one switch,
Q2, disconnects the output while the other, Q1, isolates the
leakage of the first. This leakage is absorbed by R3. Only
the op amp offset appears across the junctions of Q1, so its
leakage is reduced by two orders of magnitude.
A junction FET could be used for Q1 but not for Q2 because
there is no equivalent to the enhancement mode MOSFET.
The gate of a JFET must be reverse biased to turn it off and
leakage on its output cannot be avoided.
MOS switches with gate-protection diodes are preferred in
production situations as they are less sensitive to damage
from static charges in handling. If used, D1 and R2 should
be inlcuded to remove bias from the internal protection diode when the switch is off.
*polystyrene recommended
² required if protected-
gate switch is used
TL/H/7479 – 25
Figure 23. Reset is provided for this inegrator and
switch leakage is isolated from the summing
junction. Greater precision can be provided if
bias-current compensation is included.
R1 e R3; R2 e R4
AV e
R2
R1
² trim for DC CMRR
³ set for AC CMRR
TL/H/7479 – 24
Figure 22. For moderate-gain instrumentation amplifiers, input amplifiers can be connected as followers. This simplifies circuitry, but A3 must also have low drift.
13
peak detector
oven controller
The peak detector in Figure 24 expands upon this idea. Isolation is used on both the peak-detecting diode and the reset switch. This particular circuit is designed for a long hold
interval so acquisition is not quick. As might be expected
from an examination of the figure, frequency compensation
of an op amp peak detector is not exactly straightforward.
The LM11 is quite useful with slow servo systems because
impedance levels can be raised to where reasonable capacitor values can be used to effect loop stabilization without
affecting accuracty. An example of this is shown in Figure
25 . This is a true proportional controller for a crystal oven.
300 ms min single pulse
² required if Q1 has gate-
200 ms min repetitive pulse
protection diode
300 Hz max sine wave error k 5 mV
*polystyrene or Teflon
TL/H/7479 – 26
Figure 24. A peak detector designed for extended hold. Leakage currents of peak-detecting diodes and reset switch
are absorbed before reaching storage capacitor.
*solid tantalum
TL/H/7479 – 27
² mylar
³ close thermal coupling between sensor and oven shell is recommended.
FIGURE 25. Proportional control crystal oven heater uses lead/lag compensation for fast settling. Time constant is
changed with R4 and compensating resistor R5. If Q2 is inside oven, a regulated supply is recommended
for 0.1§ C control.
14
this increases the ouput offset because the op amp offset
voltage is multiplied by the resistance boost.
Temperature sensing is done with a bridge, one leg of which
is formed by an IC temperature sensor, S1, and a reference
diode, D1. Frequency stabilization is done with C2 providing
a lag that is finally broken out by C1. If the control transistor,
Q2, is put inside the oven for maximum heating efficiency,
some level of regulation is suggested for the heater supply
when precise control is required. With Q2 in the oven, abrupt supply changes will alter heating, which must be compensated for by the loop. This takes time, causing a small
temperature transient.
Because the input bias current of the LM11 does not increase with temperature, it can be installed inside the oven
for best performance. In fact, when an oven is available in a
piece of equipment, it would be a good idea to put all critical
LM11s inside the oven if the temperature is less than 100§ C.
But when conventional resistor values are used, it is practical to include R5 to eliminate bias-current error. This gives
less output offset than if a single, large resistor were used.
C1 is included to reduce noise.
standard cell buffer
The accuracy and lifetime of a standard cell deteriorate with
loading. Further, with even a moderate load transient, recovery is measured in minutes, hours or even days. The
circuit in Figure 27 not only buffers the standard cell but also
disconnects it in the event of malfunction.
The fault threshold is determined by the gate turn-on voltage of Q1. As the voltage on the gate approaches the
threshold either because of low battery voltage or excessive
output loading, the MOS switch will begin to turn off. At the
turn off threshold, the output voltage can rise because of
amplifier bias current flowing through the increasing switch
resistance. Therefore, a LED indicator is included that extin-
ac amplifier
Figure 26 shows an op amp used as an AC amplifier. It is
unusual in that DC bootstrapping is used to obtain high input
resistance without requiring high-value resistors. In theory,
RIN e R1
#1
a
J
R2
;
R3
AV e
R2 a R3 a R4
R2 a R3
TL/H/7479 – 28
Figure 26. A high input impedance AC amplifier for a piezoelectric transducer. Input resistance of 880 MX and gain of
10 is obtained.
TL/H/7479 – 29
*cannot have gate protection diode; VTH l VOUT
Figure 27. Battery powered buffer amplifier for standard cell has negligible loading and disconnects cell for low
supply voltage or overload on output. Indicator diode extinguishes as disconnect circuitry is activated.
15
Applying a New Precision Op Amp
guishes as the fault condition is approached. The MOS
threshold should be higher than the buffer output so that he
disconnect and error indicator operates before the output
saturates.
conclusions
Although the LM11 does not provide the ultimate in performance in either offset voltage or bias current for nominal
room temperature applications, the combination offered is
truly noteworthy. With significant temperature excursions,
the results presented here are much more impressive. With
full-temperature-range operation, this device does represent
the state of the art when high-impedance circuitry is involved.
Combining this new amplifier with fast op amps to obtain the
best features of both is also interesting, particularly since
the composite works well in both the inverting and non-inverting modes. However, making high-impedance circuits
fast is no simple task. If higher temperatures are not involved, using the LM11 to reduce the offset voltage of a
FET op amp without significantly increasing bias current
may be all that is required.
An assortment of measurement and computational circuits
making use of the unique capabilities of this IC were presented. These circuits have been checked out and the results should be of some value to those working with high
impedances. These applications are by no means all-inclusive, but they do show that an amplifier with low input current can be used in a wide variety of circuits.
Although emphasis was on high-performance circuits requiring adjustments, the LM11 will see widest usage in less demanding applications where its low initial offset votlage and
bias current can eliminate adjustments.
acknowledgement
The authors would like to thank Dick Wong for his assistance in building and checking out the applications described
here.
*See Addendum that follows
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