Free Print Subscription Printer-friendly version Email to a Friend

High-speed clamp functions as pulse-forming circuit

( 01 Apr 2008 )
Marián Štofka, Slovak University of Technology, Bratislava, Slovakia

Amplifiers with positive feedback are the bases of signal-grade pulse-forming circuits. This setup ensures a triggerlike operation in which the input signal crosses the input-threshold level; in most cases, the input signal is a voltage signal. The most well-known of these triggers is the Schmitt trigger, which, by the way, will this year celebrate its 70th birthday. British scientist OH Schmitt in 1938 originated the Schmitt trigger in the form of a two-stage amplifier with current feedback. The two active devices were vacuum tubes.

The operation of a Schmitt trigger has the advantage of fast, almost-constant transition times of the output regardless of the slope of the input signal. One consequence of this type of operation is the hysteresis in the I/O characteristic. In other words, the threshold shifts to a higher value before the positive-output transition, and it shifts to a lower value after switching to the positive-output level. You can set the amount of hysteresis—from zero to latch-up—for Schmitt-trigger circuits comprising discrete parts. Schmitt circuits find wide use in logic ICs, in which the hysteresis is rather high and fixed.

As an alternative, you can use a circuit—a fast-response voltage limiter, or clamper—as a pulse-forming circuit. The input-voltage range is narrower than that of Schmitt-trigger circuits, because, at low input voltages, the voltage limitation becomes inactive, and the circuit operates as a linear amplifier. On the other hand, because of its nonhysteretic behavior, the decision threshold of the input voltage is precise and equal for both directions of output-level transitions. Figure 1 shows one example of such as circuit. The voltage limiter in Figure 1 is an inverting amplifier with a highly nonlinear negative feedback. For output voltages ranging from –0.3 to +0.6V, the feedback impedance is high because each of the diodes is nonconducting. The forward-voltage drop of the selected Schottky-barrier diodes determines these voltage limits (Reference 1). The voltage gain of the inverting amplifier is thus almost that of the op amp’s open-loop gain.

Whenever the output voltage exceeds these limits, diode D1, D2, or D3—depending on the polarity of the output voltage—starts to conduct. The differential gain of the amplifier then drops to the value of –RI/2RD and –RI/RD, respectively, where RD is the equivalent-series resistance of a single diode. The action clamps the output voltage to approximately 0.8V and to –0.4V even for large input voltages. The figure uses an Analog Devices (www.analog.com) AD8045 VHSIC (very-high-speed integrated-circuit) op amp because its slew rate exceeds the value of 1V/nsec (Reference 2).

Figure 1’s circuit has an asymmetrical-limiting configuration to compare the single feedback diode with two series-connected diodes having a transverse resistor, RT1, between their midpoints and ground. The clamping circuitry comprising D1, D2, and RT1 offers higher off-isolation between the output and the input of the op amp than that of the single diode, D3. When D3 is on, you can observe small, weakly damped oscillations at approximately 200 MHz in the output waveform. Oscillations manifest themselves less at the beginning of turn-on of the D1 and D2 diodes.



References
· “Surface Mount RF Schottky Barrier Diodes,” Avago Technologies., www.avagotech.com/.
· "AD8045 3 nV/ Ultralow Distortion Voltage Feedback High Speed Amplifier," Analog Devices, 2004, www.analog.com/en/prod/0.,ad0845.00.html.



Captions

Figure 1 This clamping circuit uses diodes to achieve nonlinear feedback. The circuit employs a single diode in one feedback path and two diodes in the other. The dual-diode configuration offers cleaner switching.


Click here for Illustrations:


Figure 1


 
Free Print Subscription Printer-friendly version Email to a Friend
Article Rating 
Average Rate: No rating yet
 
Poor Quite Good Good Very Good Excellent
 
 
Related Content 
 
WEBCASTS
 
KNOWLEDGE CENTER
Fairchild Semiconductor :
 
 
Highest Rated  
Feedback Loop  
ADS BY GOOGLE 
 
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Press Release 
 
TECHNOLOGY NEWS
 
RESOURCE CENTER
 
 
PRODUCT NEWS
 
FEATURED SPONSORS


 
 
 
DESIGN CENTERS
 
ADVERTISEMENT
     
Reference Designs 
   
     
 
 
 
 
 
RSS
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

POLL
How do you expect your company to perform this year?
Worse than last year
Same as last year
Better than last year
View results
 
Outlook and Trends 2008


     
     
Power Technology E-newsletter 
Dual-input, Single-output Power Supply Selector Switch Reduces System Size while Improving Integrity EDNA, February 08
Analog Devices completes sale of CPU voltage and PC thermal monitoring business to ON SemiconductorEDNA, January 08
Fairchild’s Green FPS Power Switches Increase Efficiency, Reduce EMI in Power Supply Designs EDNA, December 07
 
Test and Measurement E-newsletter 
Agilent Technologies and Anite Announce Strategic Partnership to Deliver 3GPP LTE Test Solutions for Wireless R&D EDNA, November 07
WiMAX Technology Leaders Aeroflex and Sequans Partner to Speed Product Development and Deployment of WiMAX Test EDNA, October 07
Tektronix’ IMS Solution Proves Successful in Industry Forum Tests EDNA, September 07
 
     
     
 
KNOWLEDGE CENTER
 
Fairchild Semiconductor :
 
Texas Instruments: DaVinci™ Technology
 
Texas Instruments: Safe Bet Series
 
INDUSTRY LINKS
 
Photonics Association (Singapore)
Singapore Industrial Automation Association (SIAA)
Taiwan Semiconductor Industry Association (TSIA)
 
 
OUR SPONSORS
 









Texas Instruments: New Technical Video360 Podcast Demonstrates Advantages of DaVinci™ Techonology

 

 
 
ADS BY GOOGLE