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1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e, 2000 Introduction to Amplifiers

1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

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Page 1: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

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References:

A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004

A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e, 2000

Introduction to Amplifiers

Page 2: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

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The Electronic Amplifier

Page 3: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.16 Input waveform and corresponding output waveforms.

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Amplifier’s Waveforms

Page 4: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Fig. 1.13 An amplifier transfer characteristic that is linear except for output saturation. 4

Amplifier’s Transfer Function (TF): Ideal Case

Page 5: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Fig. 1.14 (a) An amplifier transfer characteristic that shows considerable nonlinearity. (b) To obtain linear operation the amplifier is biased as shown, and the signal amplitude is kept small.

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Amplifier’s TF: Non-ideal Case

Page 6: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.22 The power supply delivers power to the amplifier from several constant voltage sources.

Where does amplification come from ?

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Page 7: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.23 Illustration of power balance.

No free lunch !!!

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Page 8: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Amplifier models

Voltage amplifier Current amplifier Transconductance amplifier Transresistance amplifier

For a given amplifier, a particular model may be preferable.However, any of the four can be used to model the amplifier

Page 9: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.17 Model of an electronic amplifier, including input resistance Ri and output resistance Ro.

Voltage Amplifier Model

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Page 10: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.25 Current-amplifier model.

Current Amplifier Model

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Page 11: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.28 Transconductance-amplifier model.

Transconductance Amplifier Model

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Page 12: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.30 Transresistance-amplifier model.

Transresistance Amplifier Model

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Page 13: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.32 If we want to sense the open-circuit voltage of a source, the amplifier should have a high input resistance, as in (a). To sense short-circuit current, low input resistance is called for, as in (b).

Voltage and Current Sources.Practical Considerations: Rin

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Page 14: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.33 If the amplifier output impedance Ro is much less than the (lowest) load resistance, the load voltage is nearly independent of the number of switches closed.

Practical Considerations: Ro

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Page 15: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.34 To avoid reflections, the amplifier input resistance Ri should

equal the characteristic resistance Zo of the transmission line.

Effect of interconnections

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Page 16: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Keeping AC (signal) and DC (power supply) away from each other

vs

Rsloadamplifier

DC

Page 17: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.39 Gain versus frequency for a typical amplifier showing the upper and

lower half-power (3-dB) frequencies (fH and fL ) and the half-power bandwidth B.

A Typical Amplifier’s Frequency Response

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Page 18: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Decibel Notation

Power Gain Voltage Gain Current Gain

Page 19: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.19 Cascade connection of two amplifiers.

Multistage Amplifiers

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Page 20: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

How do we model a multiple stage amplifier?

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Page 21: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.37 Capacitive coupling prevents a dc input component from affecting the first stage, dc voltages in the first stage from reaching the second stage, and dc voltages in the second stage from reaching the load.

Coupling multistage amplifiers

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Page 22: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.38 Capacitance in parallel with the signal path and inductance in series with the signal path reduce gain in the high-frequency region.

Parasitic effects

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Page 23: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.36 Gain versus frequency.

Amplifier’s frequency response

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Page 24: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.40 Gain magnitude versus frequency for a typical bandpass amplifier.

A band pass amplifier

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Page 25: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.41 Input pulse and typical ac-coupled broadband amplifier output.

Effect of having a band limited frequency response

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Page 26: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.42 Rise time of the output pulse. (Note: No tilt is shown. When tilt is present, some judgement

is necessary to estimate the amplitude Vf).

Zooming-in the output pulse

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Page 27: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.43 Differential amplifier with input sources.

The Differential Amplifier

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Page 28: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Why do we need differential amplifiers ?

Page 29: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.47 Setup for measuring differential gain. Ad = vo/vid.

Differential Gain

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Page 30: 1 References: A. Sedra and K.C. Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, © Oxford University Press, 5/e, 2004 A.R. Hambley, Electronics, © Prentice Hall, 2/e,

Figure 1.46 Setup for measurement of common-mode gain.

Common-mode Gain

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