Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 DESCRIPTION PIN CONFIGURATION The NE5230 is a very low voltage operational amplifier that can perform with a voltage supply as low as 1.8V or as high as 15V. In addition, split or single supplies can be used, and the output will swing to ground when applying the latter. There is a bias adjusting pin which controls the supply current required by the device and thereby controls its power consumption. If the part is operated at ±0.9V supply voltages, the current required is only 110µA when the current control pin is left open. Even with this low power consumption, the device obtains a typical unity gain bandwidth of 180kHz. When the bias adjusting pin is connected to the negative supply, the unity gain bandwidth is typically 600kHz while the supply current is increased to 600µA. In this mode, the part will supply full power output beyond the audio range. N, D, FE Packages NC 1 8 NC 7 VCC 6 OUTPUT 5 BIAS ADJ. –IN 2 +IN 3 VEE 4 – + APPLICATIONS The NE5230 also has a unique input stage that allows the common-mode input range to go above the positive and below the negative supply voltages by 250mV. This provides for the largest possible input voltages for low voltage applications. The part is also internally-compensated to reduce external component count. • Portable precision instruments • Remote transducer amplifier • Portable audio equipment • Rail-to-rail comparators • Half-wave rectification without diodes • Remote temperature transducer with 4 to 20mA output The NE5230 has a low input bias current of typically ±40nA, and a large open-loop gain of 125dB. These two specifications are beneficial when using the device in transducer applications. The large open-loop gain gives very accurate signal processing because of the large “excess” loop gain in a closed-loop system. transmission The output stage is a class AB type that can swing to within 100mV of the supply voltages for the largest dynamic range that is needed in many applications. The NE5230 is ideal for portable audio equipment and remote transducers because of its low power consumption, unity gain bandwidth, and 30nV/√Hz noise specification. FEATURES • Works down to 1.8V supply voltages • Adjustable supply current • Low noise • Common-mode includes both rails • VOUT within 100mV of both rails ORDERING INFORMATION DESCRIPTION TEMPERATURE RANGE ORDER CODE DWG # 8-Pin Plastic Small Outline (SO) Package 0 to +70°C NE5230D 0174C 8-Pin Plastic Dual In-Line Package (DIP) 0 to +70°C NE5230N 0404B 8-Pin Plastic Small Outline (SO) Package -40°C to +85°C SA5230D 0174C 8-Pin Ceramic Dual In-Line Package (CERDIP) -40°C to +85°C SA5230FE 0580A 8-Pin Plastic Dual In-Line Package (DIP) -40°C to +85°C SA5230N 0404B August 31, 1994 133 853-0942 13721 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS SYMBOL PARAMETER RATING UNIT VCC Single supply voltage 18 V VS Dual supply voltage ±9 V VIN voltage1 ±9 (18) V ±VS V V Input Differential input voltage1 VCM Common-mode voltage (positive) VCC+0.5 VCM Common-mode voltage (negative) VEE-0.5 V PD Power dissipation2 500 mW TJ Operating junction temperature2 150 °C 80Output short-circuit duration to either power supply pin2, 3 Indefinite s TSTG Storage temperature -65 to 150 °C TSOLD Lead soldering temperature (10sec max) 300 °C NOTES: 1. Can exceed the supply voltages when VS ≤ ±7.5V (15V). 2. The maximum operating junction temperature is 150°C. At elevated temperatures, devices must be derated according to the package thermal resistance and device mounting conditions. Derate above 25°C at the following rates: FE package at 6.7mW/°C N package at 9.5mW/°C D package at 6.25mW/°C 3. Momentary shorts to either supply are permitted in accordance to transient thermal impedance limitations determined by the package and device mounting conditions. RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS PARAMETER Single supply voltage RATING UNIT 1.8 to 15 V ±0.9 to ±7.5 V Common-mode voltage (positive) VCC+0.25 V Common-mode voltage (negative) VEE-0.25 V NE grade 0 to 70 °C SA grade -40 to 85 °C Dual supply voltage Temperature August 31, 1994 134 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 DC AND AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS Unless otherwise specified, ±0.9V ≤ VS ≤ +7.5V or equivalent single supply, RL=10kΩ, full input common-mode range, over full operating temperature range. SYMBOL PARAMETER VOS Offset voltage VOS Drift IOS NE/SA5230 TEST CONDITIONS BIAS TA=25°C TA=25°C TA=25°C Low 3 TA=25°C Offset current Min Typ Max Any 0.4 3 Any 3 4 Any 2 5 High 3 50 High Low IOS Drift TA=25°C IB TA=25°C Bias current 0.5 1.4 Low 0.3 1.4 High 40 150 Low 20 High Drift VS=±0.9V IS VS=±7.5V 2 4 Low 2 4 TA=25°C Low 110 160 TA=25°C High 600 750 Low 250 Common-mode input range CMRR Common-mode rejection ratio PSRR IL AVOL VS=±7.5V Power supply rejection ratio Load current Low 320 TA=25°C High 1.1 Low August 31, 1994 Any V- V+ RS=10kΩ, VCM=±7.5V, TA=25°C Any 85 RS=10kΩ, VCM=±7.5V Any 80 TA=25°C High 90 105 TA=25°C Low 85 95 High 75 95 Low 80 VS=±7.5V Any 4 10 sink VS=±7.5V Any 5 15 source VS=±7.5V Any 1 5 sink VS=±7.5V Any 2 6 source VS=±0.9V, TA=25°C High 4 6 5 VS=±0.9V, TA=25°C High VS=±7.5V, TA=25°C High sink VS=±7.5V, TA=25°C High VS=±7.5V nA/°C µA µA V dB dB mA 7 16 32 RL=10kΩ, TA=25°C High 120 2000 RL=10kΩ, TA=25°C Low 60 750 High 100 Low 50 135 nA 1.7 V+ +0.25 source Large-signal open-loop gain 1.6 600 V - -0.25 sink nA/°C 550 Any source nA 800 TA=25°C VOS≤6mV, TA=25°C µV/°C 150 High High VCM 60 200 High Supply current mV 60 High Low IB 30 100 UNIT V/mV V/mV Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 DC AND AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (Continued) SYMBOL PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS VS=±0.9V VOUT Output voltage swing VS=±7.5V Slew rate BW Inverting unity gain bandwidth θM Phase margin tS Settling time VINN Input noise THD Total Harmonic Distortion August 31, 1994 NE/SA5230 Min Typ TA=25°C +SW Any 750 800 TA=25°C -SW Any 750 800 +SW Any 700 -SW Any 700 TA=25°C +SW Any 7.30 7.35 TA=25°C -SW Any -7.32 -7.35 +SW Any 7.25 7.30 Any -7.30 -7.35 -SW SR BIAS TA=25°C High 0.25 TA=25°C Low 0.09 CL=100pF, TA=25°C High 0.6 CL=100pF, TA=25°C Low 0.25 CL=100pF, TA=25°C Any 70 CL=100pF, 0.1% High 2 CL=100pF, 0.1% Low 5 RS=0Ω, f=1kHz High 30 RS=0Ω, f=1kHz Low 60 VS=±7.5V AV=1, VIN=500mV, f=1kHz High 0.003 VS=±0.9V AV=1, VIN=500mV, f=1kHz High 0.002 136 Max UNIT mV V V/µs MHz Deg. µs nV/√Hz % Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 for the range where both pairs were operating. Secondly, fast changes in the common-mode voltage would abruptly saturate and restore the emitter current sources, causing transient distortion. These problems were overcome by assuring that only the input transistor pair which is able to function properly is active. The NPN pair is normally activated by the current source IB1 through Q5 and the current mirror Q6 and Q7, assuming the PNP pair is non-conducting. When the common-mode input voltage passes below the reference voltage, VB1=0.8V at the base of Q5, the emitter current is gradually steered toward the PNP pair, away from the NPN pair. The transfer of the emitter currents between the complementary input pairs occurs in a voltage range of about 120mV around the reference voltage VB1. In this way the sum of the emitter currents for each of the NPN and PNP transistor pairs is kept constant; this ensures that the transconductance of the parallel combination will be constant, since the transconductance of bipolar transistors is proportional to their emitter currents. THEORY OF OPERATION Input Stage Operational amplifiers which are able to function at minimum supply voltages should have input and output stage swings capable of reaching both supply voltages within a few millivolts in order to achieve ease of quiescent biasing and to have maximum input/output signal handling capability. The input stage of the NE5230 has a common-mode voltage range that not only includes the entire supply voltage range, but also allows either supply to be exceeded by 250mV without increasing the input offset voltage by more than 6mV. This is unequalled by any other operational amplifier today. In order to accomplish the feat of rail-to-rail input common-mode range, two emitter-coupled differential pairs are placed in parallel so that the common-mode voltage of one can reach the positive supply rail and the other can reach the negative supply rail. The simplified schematic of Figure 1 shows how the complementary emitter-coupler transistors are configured to form the basic input stage cell. Common-mode input signal voltages in the range from 0.8V above VEE to VCC are handled completely by the NPN pair, Q3 and Q4, while common-mode input signal voltages in the range of VEE to 0.8V above VEE are processed only by the PNP pair, Q1 and Q2. The intermediate range of input voltages requires that both the NPN and PNP pairs are operating. The collector currents of the input transistors are summed by the current combiner circuit composed of transistors Q8 through Q11 into one output current. Transistor Q8 is connected as a diode to ensure that the outputs of Q2 and Q4 are properly subtracted from those of Q1 and Q3. An essential requirement of this kind of input stage is to minimize the changes in input offset voltage between that of the NPN and PNP transistor pair which occurs when the input common-mode voltage crosses the internal reference voltage, VB1. Careful circuit layout with a cross-coupled quad for each input pair has yielded a typical input offset voltage of less than 0.3mV and a change in the input offset voltage of less than 0.1mV. Output Stage Processing output voltage swings that nominally reach to less than 100mV of either supply voltage can only be achieved by a pair of complementary common-emitter connected transistors. Normally, such a configuration causes complex feed-forward signal paths that develop by combining biasing and driving which can be found in previous low supply voltage designs. The unique output stage of the NE5230 separates the functions of driving and biasing, as shown in the simplified schematic of Figure 2, and has the advantage of a shorter signal path which leads to increasing the effective bandwidth. The input stage was designed to overcome two important problems for rail-to-rail capability. As the common-mode voltage moves from the range where only the NPN pair was operating to where both of the input pairs were operating, the effective transconductance would change by a factor of two. Frequency compensation for the ranges where one input pair was operating would, of course, not be optimal August 31, 1994 137 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 VCC R11 R10 + V VIN– Q3 Q2 Q1 Q4 VIN+ + Vb1 Q6 IOUT Q9 Q8 Q5 V Q11 Q10 Ib1 Vb2 Q7 R8 R9 VEE Figure 1. Input Stage three stages provide a very large gain, but the op amp now has three natural dominant poles — one at the output of each common-emitter stage. Frequency compensation is implemented with a simple scheme of nested, pole-splitting Miller integrators. The Miller capacitors CM1A and CM1B are the first part of the nested structure, and provide compensation for the output and intermediate stages. A second pair of Miller integrators provide pole-splitting compensation for the pole from the input stage and the pole resulting from the compensated combination of poles from the intermediate and output stages. The result is a stable, internally-compensated op amp with a phase margin of 70 degrees. This output stage consists of two parts: the Darlington output transistors and the class AB control regulator. The output transistor Q3 connected with the Darlington transistors Q4 and Q5 can source up to 10mA to an output load. The output of NPN Darlington connected transistors Q1 and Q2 together are able to sink an output current of 10mA. Accurate and efficient class AB control is necessary to insure that none of the output transistors are ever completely cut off. This is accomplished by the differential amplifier (formed by Q8 and Q9) which controls the biasing of the output transistors. The differential amplifier compares the summed voltages across two diodes, D1 and D2, at the base of Q8 with the summed voltages across the base-emitter diodes of the output transistors Q1 and Q3. The base-emitter voltage of Q3 is converted into a current by Q6 and R6 and reconverted into a voltage across the base-emitter diode of Q7 and R7. The summed voltage across the base-emitter diodes of the output transistors Q3 and Q1 is proportional to the logarithm of the product of the push and pull currents IOP and ION, respectively. The combined voltages across diodes D1 and D2 are proportional to the logarithm of the square of the reference current IB1. When the diode characteristics and temperatures of the pairs Q1, D1 and Q3, Q2 are equal, the relation IOP×ION=IB1×IB1 is satisfied. THERMAL CONSIDERATIONS When using the NE5230, the internal power dissipation capabilities of each package should be considered. Philips Semiconductors does not recommend operation at die temperatures above 110°C in the SO package because of its inherently smaller package mass. Die temperatures of 150°C can be tolerated in all the other packages. With this in mind, the following equation can be used to estimate the die temperature: TJ = TA + (PD × θJA) Separating the functions of biasing and driving prevents the driving signals from becoming delayed by the biasing circuit. The output Darlington transistors are directly accessible for in-phase driving signals on the bases of Q5 and Q2. This is very important for simple high-frequency compensation. The output transistors can be high-frequency compensated by Miller capacitors CM1A and CM1B connected from the collectors to the bases of the output Darlington transistors. T A AmbientTemperature T J Die Temperature P D Power Dissipation (I CC x V CC) JA Packagethermalresistance 270 oCW for SO 8 in PC board mounting See the packaging section for information regarding other methods of mounting. θJA=100°C/W for the plastic DIP; θJA=110°C/W for the ceramic DIP. A general-purpose op amp of this type must have enough open-loop gain for applications when the output is driving a low resistance load. The NE5230 accomplishes this by inserting an intermediate common-emitter stage between the input and output stages. The August 31, 1994 (1) Where 138 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 VCC R6 Ib1 Ib2 Ib3 Q3 Q6 Q5 Vb5 IOP Q4 CM1B VOUT CM1A Q2 Vb2 Q8 ION Q9 R7 D1 Ib4 Q7 Q1 Ib5 D2 VEE Figure 2. Output Stage addition, a small varying voltage on the bias current control pin could be used for such exotic things as changing the gain-bandwidth for voltage controlled low pass filters or amplitude modulation. Furthermore, control over the slew rate and the rise time of the amplifier can be obtained in the same manner. This control over the slew rate also changes the settling time and overshoot in pulse response applications. The settling time to 0.1% changes from 5µs at low bias to 2µs at high bias. The supply current control can also be utilized for wave-shaping applications such as for pulse or triangular waveforms. The gain-bandwidth can be varied from between 250kHz at low bias to 600kHz at high bias current. The slew rate range is 0.08V/µs at low bias and 0.25V/µs at high bias. The maximum supply voltage for the part is 15V and the typical supply current is 1.1mA (1.6mA max). For operation at supply voltages other than the maximum, see the data sheet for ICC versus VCC curves. The supply current is somewhat proportional to temperature and varies no more than 100µA between 25°C and either temperature extreme. Operation at higher junction temperatures than that recommended is possible but will result in lower MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures). This should be considered before operating beyond recommended die temperature because of the overall reliability degradation. The full output power bandwidth range for VCC equals 2V, is above 40kHz for the maximum bias current setting and greater than 10kHz at the minimum bias current setting. DESIGN TECHNIQUES AND APPLICATIONS The NE5230 is a very user-friendly amplifier for an engineer to design into any type of system. The supply current adjust pin (Pin 5) can be left open or tied through a pot or fixed resistor to the most negative supply (i.e., ground for single supply or to the negative supply for split supplies). The minimum supply current is achieved by leaving this pin open. In this state it will also decrease the bandwidth and slew rate. When tied directly to the most negative supply, the device has full bandwidth, slew rate and ICC. The programming of the current-control pin depends on the trade-offs which can be made in the designer’s application. The graph in Figure 3 will help by showing bandwidth versus ICC. As can be seen, the supply current can be varied anywhere over the range of 100µA to 600µA for a supply voltage of 1.8V. An external resistor can be inserted between the current control pin and the most negative supply. The resistor can be selected between 1Ω to 100kΩ to provide any required supply current over the indicated range. In August 31, 1994 If extremely low signal distortion (<0.05%) is required at low supply voltages, exclude the common-mode crossover point (VB1) from the common-mode signal range. This can be accomplished by proper bias selection or by using an inverting amplifier configuration. Most single supply designs necessitate that the inputs to the op amp be biased between VCC and ground. This is to assure that the input signal swing is within the working common-mode range of the amplifier. This leads to another helpful and unique property of the NE5230 that other CMOS and bipolar low voltage parts cannot achieve. It is the simple fact that the input common-mode voltage can go beyond either the positive or negative supply voltages. This benefit is made very clear in a non-inverting voltage-follower configuration. This is shown in Figure 4 where the input sine wave allows 139 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 POWER SUPPLY CURRENT µ( A) V+ 800 700 600 V+ + 500 400 300 – 200 V– V– 100 100 200 300 400 500 600700 UNITY GAIN BANDWIDTH (kHz) V+ a. Unity Gain Bandwidth vs Power Supply Current for VCC = ±0.9V 1.4 VCC = 15V I CC CURRENT (mA) 1.2 NE5230 TA = 25°C VCC = 12V VCC = 9V 1.0 VCC = 6V 0.8 VCC = 3V 0.6 V– VCC = 2V 0.4 V+ VCC = 1.8V 0.2 0.0 100 101 102 103 104 OTHER PARTS 105 RADJ (Ω) b. ICC Current vs Bias Current Adjusting Resistor for Several Supply Voltages V– Figure 3. an undistorted output sine wave which will swing less than 100mV of either supply voltage. Many competitive parts will show severe clipping caused by input common-mode limitations. The NE5230 in this configuration offers more freedom for quiescent biasing of the inputs close to the positive supply rail where similar op amps would not allow signal processing. Figure 4. In a Non-Inverting Voltage-Follower Configuration, the NE5230 will Give Full Rail-to-Rail Swing. Other Low Voltage Amplifiers will not Because they are Limited by their Input Common-Mode Range and Output Swing Capability. There are not as many considerations when designing with the NE5230 as with other devices. Since the NE5230 is internally-compensated and has a unity gain-bandwidth of 600kHz, board layout is not so stringent as for very high frequency devices such as the NE5205. The output capability of the NE5230 allows it to drive relatively high capacitive loads and small resistive loads. The power supply pins should be decoupled with a low-pass RC network as close to the supply pins as possible to eliminate 60Hz and other external power line noise, although the power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) for the part is very high. The pinout for the NE5230 is the same as the standard single op amp pinout with the exception of the bias current adjusting pin. August 31, 1994 REMOTE TRANSDUCER WITH CURRENT TRANSMISSION There are many ways to transmit information along two wires, but current transmission is the most beneficial when the sensing of remote signals is the aim. It is further enhanced in the form of 4 to 20mA information which is used in many control-type systems. This method of transmission provides immunity from line voltage drops, large load resistance variations, and voltage noise pickup. The zero reference of 4mA not only can show if there is a break in the line when no current is flowing, but also can power the transducer at the 140 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 remote location. Usually the transducer itself is not equipped to provide for the current transmission. The unique features of the NE5230 can provide high output current capability coupled with low power consumption. It can be remotely connected to the transducer to create a current loop with minimal external components. The circuit for this is shown in Figure 5. Here, the part is configured as a voltage-to-current, or transconductance amplifier. This is a novel circuit that takes advantage of the NE5230’s large open-loop gain. In AC applications, the load current will decrease as the open-loop gain rolls off in magnitude. The low offset voltage and current sinking capabilities of the NE5230 must also be considered in this application. 6 2 T R A N S D U C E R + REMOTE POWER – SUPPLY 5 – 4 VEE RL VIN RC NOTES: 1. IOUT = VIN/RC 2. RL MAX ≈ V REMOTE 1.8V V INMAX I OUT For RC = 1Ω I OUT 4mA V IN 4mV 20mA 20mV a. The NE5230 as a Remote Transducer Transconductance Amp With 4-20mA Current Transmission Output Capability (2) + RC VIN – VCC 3 + + 7 VCC – 6 NE5230 2 (3) – 5 4 VEE + IOUT Where VCC min is the worst-case power supply voltage (approximately 1.8V) that will still keep the part operational. As an example, when using a 15V remote power supply, a current sensing resistor of 1Ω, and an input voltage (VIN) of 20mV, the output current (IL) is 20mA. Furthermore, a load resistance of zero to approximately 650Ω can be inserted in the loop without any change in current when the bias current-control pin is tied to the negative supply pin. The voltage drop across the load and line resistance will not affect the NE5230 because it will operate down to 1.8V. With a 15V remote supply, the voltage available at the amplifier is still enough to power it with the maximum 20mA output into the 650Ω load. RL b. The Same Type of Circuit as Figure 5a, but for Sourcing Current to the Load Figure 5. The voltage range on the input can be changed for transducers that produce a large output by simply increasing the current sense resistor to get the corresponding 4 to 20mA output current. If a very long line is used which causes high line resistance, a current repeater could be inserted into the line. The same configuration of Figure 5 can be used with exception of a resistor across the input and line ground to convert the current back to voltage. Again, the current sensing resistor will set up the transconductance and the part will receive power from the line. What this means is that several instruments, such as a chart recorder, a meter, or a controller, as well as a long cable, can be connected in series on the loop and still obtain accurate readings if the total resistance does not exceed 650Ω. Furthermore, any variation of resistance in this range will not change the output current. Any voltage output type transducer can be used, but one that does not need external DC voltage or current excitation to limit the maximum possible load resistance is preferable. Even this problem can be surmounted if the supply power needed by the transducer is compatible with the NE5230. The power goes up the line to the transducer and amplifier while the transducer signal is sent back via the current output of the NE5230 transconductance configuration. August 31, 1994 V NE5230 and proportional to the input voltage for a set RC. Also, the current is constant no matter what load resistance is used while within the operating bandwidth range of the op amp. When the NE5230’s supply voltage falls past a certain point, the current cannot remain constant. This is the “voltage compliance” and is very good for this application because of the near rail output voltage. The equation that determines the voltage compliance as well as the largest possible load resistor for the NE5230 is as follows: RL max=[Vremote supply)-VCC min- VIN max]/IL IOUT 7 + The NE5230 circuit shown in Figure 5 is a pseudo transistor configuration. The inverting input is equivalent to the “base,” the point where VEE and the non-inverting input meet is the “emitter,” and the connection after the output diode meets the VCC pin is the collector. The output diode is essential to keep the output from saturating in this configuration. From here it can be seen that the base and emitter form a voltage-follower and the voltage present at RC must equal the input voltage present at the inverting input. Also, the emitter and collector form a current-follower and the current flowing through RC is equivalent to the current through RL and the amplifier. This sets up the current loop. Therefore, the following equation can be formulated for the working current transmission line. The load current is: IL=VIN/RC VCC 3 TEMPERATURE TRANSDUCER A variation on the previous circuit makes use of the supply current control pin. The voltage present at this pin is proportional to absolute temperature (PTAT) because it is produced by the amplifier bias current through an internal resistor divider in a PTAT cell. If the control pin is connected to the input pin, the NE5230 itself can be used as a temperature transducer. If the center tap of a resistive pot 141 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 It can be seen in these configurations that the op amp cannot respond to one-half of the incoming waveform. It cannot respond because the waveform forces the amplifier to swing the output beyond either ground or the positive supply rail, depending on the biasing, and, also, the output cannot disengage during this half cycle. During the other half cycle, however, the amplifier achieves a half-wave that can have a peak equal to the total supply voltage. The photographs in Figure 8 show the effect of the different biasing schemes, as well as the wide bandwidth (it works over the full audio range), that the NE5230 can achieve in this configuration. is connected to the control pin with one side to ground and the other to the inverting input, the voltage can be changed to give different temperature versus output current conditions (see Figure 6). For additional control, the output current is still proportional to the input voltage differential divided by the current sense resistor. When using the NE5230 as a temperature transducer, the thermal considerations in the previous section must be kept in mind. HALF-WAVE RECTIFIER WITH RAIL-TO-GROUND OUTPUT SWING By adding another NE5230 in an inverting summer configuration at the output of the half-wave rectifier, a full-wave can be realized. The values for the input and feedback resistors must be chosen so that each peak will have equal amplitudes. A table for calculating values is included in Figure 9. The summing network combines the input signal at the half-wave and adds it to double the half-wave’s output, resulting in the full-wave. The output waveform can be referenced to the supply or ground, depending on the half-wave configuration. Again, no diodes are needed to achieve the rectification. Since the NE5230 input common-mode range includes both positive and negative supply rails and the output can also swing to either supply, achieving half-wave rectifier functions in either direction becomes a simple task. All that is needed are two external resistors; there is no need for diodes or matched resistors. Moreover, it can have either positive- or negative-going outputs, depending on the way the bias is arranged. This can be seen in Figure 7. Circuit (a) is biased to ground, while circuit (b) is biased to the positive supply. This rather unusual biasing does not cause any problems with the NE5230 because of the unique internal saturation detectors incorporated into the part to keep the PNP and NPN output transistors out of “hard” saturation. It is therefore relatively quick to recover from a saturated output condition. Furthermore, the device does not have parasitic current draw when the output is biased to either rail. This makes it possible to bias the NE5230 into “saturation” and obtain half-wave rectification with good recovery. The simplicity of biasing and the rail-to-ground half-sine wave swing are unique to this device. The circuit gain can be changed by the standard op amp gain equations for an inverting configuration. VCC 3 + IOUT 7 V 6 This circuit could be used in conjunction with the remote transducer to convert a received AC output signal into a DC level at the full-wave output for meters or chart recorders that need DC levels. CONCLUSION The NE5230 is a versatile op amp in its own right. The part was designed to give low voltage and low power operation without the limitations of previously available amplifiers that had a multitude of problems. The previous application examples are unique to this amplifier and save the user money by excluding various passive components that would have been needed if not for the NE5230’s special input and output stages. + REMOTE POWER – SUPPLY The NE5230 has a combination of novel specifications which allows the designer to implement it easily into existing low-supply voltage designs and to enhance their performance. It also offers the engineer the freedom to achieve greater amplifier system design goals. The low input referenced noise voltage eases the restrictions on designs where S/N ratios are important. The wide full-power bandwidth and output load handling capability allow it to fit into portable audio applications. The truly ample open-loop gain and low power consumption easily lend themselves to the requirements of remote transducer applications. The low, untrimmed typical offset voltage and low offset currents help to reduce errors in signal processing designs. The amplifier is well isolated from changes on the supply lines by its typical power supply rejection ratio of 105dB. NE5230 2 5 – 4 VEE 10 RL 200 RC NOTES: 1. IOUT = VIN/RC 2. RL MAX ≈ V REMOTE 1.8V V INMAX I OUT For RC = 1Ω I OUT 4mA V IN 4mV 20mA 20mV Figure 6. NE5230 Remote Temperature Transducer Utilizing 4-20mA Current Transmission. This Application Shows the use of the Accessibility of the PTAT Cell in the Device to Make the Part, Itself, a Transducer August 31, 1994 142 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 10 10 VIN VCC 2 7 – 6 3 VCC 5 + VOUT 4 O t a. Rail-to-Ground Output Swing Referenced to Ground VCC 3 7 + 6 10 2 – 4 VIN VOUT 5 VCC 10 VCC t b. Negative-Going Output Referenced to VCC Figure 7. Half-Wave Rectifier With Positive-Going Output Swings August 31, 1994 143 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 500mV/Div 200µS/Div Biased to Ground 500mV/Div 20µS/Div Biased to Ground 500mV/Div 20µS/Div Biased to Positive Rail Figure 8. Performance Waveforms for the Circuits in Figure 7. Good Response is Shown at 1 and 10kHz for Both Circuits Under Full Swing With a 2V Supply August 31, 1994 144 Philips Semiconductors Linear Products Product specification Low voltage operational amplifier NE/SA5230 500mV 500mV 520µs INPUT HALF-WAVE OUTPUT FULL-WAVE OUTPUT +VIN a 500mV b –VIN R3 3 VCC 7 + 6 A1 +VIN R4 2 – +VIN 7 5 R1 a R5 2 – 4 6 A2 b 5 3 –VIN R2 + VEE +VB a b +VB FULL-WAVE 4 VEE 0 2a –2VIN NOTES: HALF-WAVE R2 = 2 R1 R4 = R5 = R3 +VB will vary output reference. For single supply operation VEE can be grounded on A2. Figure 9. Adding an Inverting Summer to the Input and Output of the Half-Wave will Result in Full-Wave Operational Amplifiers - Characteristics and Applications, Robert G. Irvine, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632, 1981. REFERENCES Johan H. Huijsing, “Multi-stage Amplifier with Capacitive Nesting for Frequency Compensation,” U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 602.234, filed April 19, 1984. Transducer Interface Handbook - A Guide to Analog Signal Conditioning, Edited by Daniel H. Sheingold, Analog Devices, Inc., Norwood, MA 02062, 1981. Bob Blauschild, “Differential Amplifier with Rail-to-Rail Capability,” U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 525.181, filed August 23, 1983. August 31, 1994 145