SBOA580 November 2023 INA1620 , OPA1602 , OPA1604 , OPA1611 , OPA1612 , OPA1612-Q1 , OPA1622 , OPA1632 , OPA1655 , OPA1656 , OPA209 , OPA210 , OPA211 , OPA211-EP , OPA2209 , OPA2210 , OPA2211-EP , OPA2211-HT , OPA2211A
Figure 3-1 shows a test circuit used to measure THD + N of the non-inverting buffer
amplifier configuration. The input signal Vin to the amplifier is
provided by the generator output. The input offset voltage Vos and the
input voltage noise Vn are series error sources internal to the op amp.
Vos and Vn are always referred to the non-inverting
terminal and are amplified by the noise gain of the amplifier configuration. When
referring to
THD + N measurements, noise gain is
sometimes called distortion gain or THD + N gain, and is not equal to the signal
gain.
Superposition is used to derive separate equations for the signal gain and the distortion gain. Assuming the input offset voltage Vos = 0 V, the noise voltage Vn = 0 V, and the current iRA = 0 A the amplifier configuration shown in Figure 3-1 can be observed as a buffer as shown in Figure 3-3. Therefore the signal gain is and the output voltage is equal to the input voltage, as described by Equation 4. The concept of a virtual short is assumed when removing resistor RA. The voltage potential across resistor RA on the inverting and non-inverting terminals are equal when applying the concept of a virtual short and therefore iRA = 0 A and RA is viewed as an open.
Assuming the input signal to the amplifier Vin = 0 V, the amplifier can be observed as a standard non-inverting amplifier with voltages Vos + Vn applied at the non-inverting terminal as shown in Figure 3-4. Therefore Vos + Vn appear on the output amplified by the familiar non-inverting gain equation of one plus the ratio of resistor RF to resistor RA. Equation 5 describes the THD + N gain.
The signal observed at the output of the test circuit shown in Figure 3-1 is the amplified combination of Vin, Vn and Vos. Combining Equation 4 with Equation 5 results in Equation 6, the final gain equation of the test circuit shown in Figure 3-1.
A typical non-inverting buffer application circuit does not include the additional resistor RA. Resistor RA was added to the test circuit to provide additional gain for the purpose of overcoming the signal analyzer measurement limitation. Table 3-2 assigns values to resistors RF and RA resulting in gain values for both the test circuit and application circuit . With the assigned resistor values in Table 3-2 the THD + N gain is with the additional RA resistor. In the typical non-inverting buffer circuit RA = , or in other words doesn't exist and the THD + N gain is . Therefore RA added an additional or approximately 40 dB of distortion gain.
Condition | Signal Gain | THD + N Gain | RF | RA |
---|---|---|---|---|
Signal and THD + N Gain with RA | 10 kΩ | 100 Ω | ||
Signal and THD + N Gain without RA | 10 kΩ |
Figure 3-5 shows the measured THD + N ratio of the OPA1656 in units of decibels. 40 dB is subtracted from the test circuit measurement and represents the actual op amp THD + N for a non-inverting buffer circuit. The measurement bandwidth of the distortion analyzer is 80 kHz for the measurements made in this application note.
Amplifier data sheets often represent the THD + N ratio in terms of percentage. Equation 7 is used to convert the measured THD + N ratio from dB to percentage.
Figure 3-6 shows the THD + N (%) Ratio vs Output Amplitude (VRMS) for the non-inverting buffer configuration. Two independent measurements were made for 1 kHz and 20 kHz frequencies as the output amplitude was swept from 0.1 VRMS to 10 VRMS.