by Gregory Mirsky, Continental Automotive Systems, Deer Park, Ill., How2Power Today, Jul 15 2019
Focus:
When an inexpensive differential amplifier is needed, designers often use the familiar
circuit and just choose resistor values to achieve equality of gains in both inverting
and non-inverting branches. They forget that the signal sources may have different
output impedances, which may completely destroy the differential amplifier’s
operation, causing an output offset and compromising the common-mode rejection ratio.
But given a value of the resistor on the amplifier’s inverting input and a
required gain, it’s possible to select the values of the remaining resistors
so that the input impedances will be made equal. This article derives the equations
for calculating those resistor values, while also accounting for their variability due
to initial tolerance, thermal coefficient of resistance and aging. A design example is
presented.
What you’ll learn:
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