SBOS513F August 2010 – December 2016 OPA2320 , OPA320
PRODUCTION DATA.
NOTE
Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality.
The OPA320 family offers outstanding DC and AC performance. These devices operate up to a 5.5-V power supply and offer ultra-low input bias current and 20-MHz bandwidth. These features make the OPA320 family a robust operational amplifier for both battery-powered and industrial applications.
Wide gain bandwidth, low-input bias current, low input voltage, and current noise make the OPA320 an ideal wideband photodiode transimpedance amplifier. Low-voltage noise is important because photodiode capacitance causes the effective noise gain of the circuit to increase at high frequency.
The key elements to a transimpedance design, as shown in Figure 40, are the expected diode capacitance (CD), which should include the parasitic input common mode and differential-mode input capacitance (4 pF + 5 pF for the OPA320); the desired transimpedance gain (RF); and the gain-bandwidth (GBW) for the OPA320 (20 MHz). With these three variables set, the feedback capacitor value (CF) can be set to control the frequency response. CF includes the stray capacitance of RF, which is 0.2 pF for a typical surface-mount resistor.
To achieve a maximally-flat, second-order Butterworth frequency response, the feedback pole should be set as shown in Equation 2.
Bandwidth is calculated by Equation 3.
For even higher transimpedance bandwidth, consider the high-speed CMOS OPA380 (90-MHz GBW), OPA354 (100-MHz GBW), OPA300 (180-MHz GBW), OPA355 (200-MHz GBW), or OPA656/57 (400-MHz GBW).
For single-supply applications, the +IN input can be biased with a positive dc voltage to allow the output to reach true zero when the photodiode is not exposed to any light, and respond without the added delay that results from coming out of the negative rail; this configuration is shown in Figure 41. This bias voltage also appears across the photodiode, providing a reverse bias for faster operation.
For additional information, see the Application Bulletin Compensate Transimpedance Amplifiers Intuitively (SBOA055), available for download at www.ti.com.
To achieve the best performance, components should be selected according to the following guidelines:
For additional information, refer to the Application Bulletins Noise Analysis of FET Transimpedance Amplifiers (SBOA060), and Noise Analysis for High-Speed Op Amps (SBOA066), available for download at www.ti.com.
Many sensors have high source impedances that may range up to 10 MΩ, or even higher. The output signal of sensors often must be amplified or otherwise conditioned by means of an amplifier. The input bias current of this amplifier can load the sensor output and cause a voltage drop across the source resistance, as shown in Figure 42, where (VIN+ = VS – IBIAS × RS). The last term, IBIAS × RS, shows the voltage drop across RS. To prevent errors introduced to the system as a result of this voltage, an op amp with very low input bias current must be used with high impedance sensors. This low current keeps the error contribution by IBIAS × RS less than the input voltage noise of the amplifier, so that it does not become the dominant noise factor. The OPA320 series of op amps feature very low input bias current (typically 200 fA), and are therefore ideal choices for such applications.
The OPA320 series op amps are well-suited for driving sampling analog-to-digital converters (ADC's) with sampling speeds up to 1 MSPS. The zero-crossover distortion input stage topology allows the OPA320 to drive ADC's without degradation of differential linearity and THD.
The OPA320 can be used to buffer the ADC switched input capacitance and resulting charge injection while providing signal gain. Figure 44 shows the OPA320 configured to drive the ADS8326.
The OPA320 is well-suited for active filter applications that require a wide bandwidth, fast slew rate, low-noise, single-supply operational amplifier. Figure 45 shows a 500-kHz, second-order, low-pass filter using the multiple-feedback (MFB) topology. The components have been selected to provide a maximally-flat Butterworth response. Beyond the cutoff frequency, roll-off is –40 dB/dec. The Butterworth response is ideal for applications requiring predictable gain characteristics, such as the anti-aliasing filter used in front of an ADC.
One point to observe when considering the MFB filter is that the output is inverted, relative to the input. If this inversion is not required, or not desired, a noninverting output can be achieved through one of these options:
MFB and Sallen-Key, low-pass and high-pass filter synthesis is quickly accomplished using TI’s FilterPro™ program. This software is available as a free download at www.ti.com.
The infinite-gain multiple-feedback circuit for a low-pass network function is shown in. Use Equation 4 to calculate the voltage transfer function.
This circuit produces a signal inversion. For this circuit, the gain at DC and the lowpass cutoff frequency are calculated by Equation 5.
Software tools are readily available to simplify filter design. WEBENCH® Filter Designer is a simple, powerful, and easy-to-use active filter design program. The WEBENCH® Filter Designer lets you create optimized filter designs using a selection of TI operational amplifiers and passive components from TI's vendor partners.
Available as a web-based tool from the WEBENCH Design Center, WEBENCH Filter Designer allows you to design, optimize, and simulate complete multistage active filter solutions within minutes.