8.2.1.2.2.1 Optimizing the Transimpedance Circuit
To achieve the best performance, components must be selected according to the following guidelines:
- For lowest noise, select R(F) to create the total required gain. Using a lower value for R(F) and adding gain after the transimpedance amplifier generally produces poorer noise performance. The noise produced by R(F) increases with the square-root of R(F), whereas the signal increases linearly. Therefore, signal-to-noise ratio improves when all the required gain is placed in the transimpedance stage.
- Minimize photodiode capacitance and stray capacitance at the summing junction (inverting input). This capacitance causes the voltage noise of the op amp to amplify (increasing amplification at high frequency). Using a low-noise voltage source to reverse-bias a photodiode reduce the capacitance. Smaller photodiodes have lower capacitance. Use optics to concentrate light on a small photodiode.
- Noise increases with increased bandwidth. Limit the circuit bandwidth to only the required bandwidth. Use a capacitor across the R(F) to limit bandwidth, even if a capacitor not required for stability.
- Circuit board leakage degrades the performance of an otherwise well-designed amplifier. Clean the circuit board carefully. A circuit board guard trace that encircles the summing junction and is driven at the same voltage helps control leakage.