SBOS223H December 2001 – October 2024 OPA690
PRODUCTION DATA
The OPA690 provides good distortion performance into a 100-Ω load on ±5-V supplies. Relative to alternative solutions, this device provides exceptional performance into lighter loads, while operating on a single 5-V supply. Increasing the load impedance improves distortion directly. Remember that the total load includes the feedback network; in the noninverting configuration (see Figure 7-1), this total load is sum of RF + RG, while in the inverting configuration the total load is just RF. Also, providing an additional supply-decoupling capacitor (0.1 µF) between the supply pins (for bipolar operation) improves the 2nd-order distortion.
In most op amps, increasing the output
voltage swing increases harmonic distortion directly. The new output stage used in
the OPA690 actually holds the difference between fundamental power and the 2nd- and
3rd-harmonic powers relatively constant with increasing output power until very
large output swings are required
(> 4
VPP). This feature also shows up in the 2-tone, 3rd-order
intermodulation spurious (IM3) response curves. The 3rd-order spurious levels are
moderately low at low output power levels. The output stage continues to hold the
distortion levels low even as the fundamental power reaches very high levels. Section 6.11 shows that the spurious intermodulation powers do not increase as predicted by a
traditional intercept model. As the fundamental power level increases, the dynamic
range does not decrease significantly. For two tones centered at 20 MHz, with 10
dBm/tone into a matched 50-Ω load (that is, 2 VPP for each tone at the
load, which requires 8 VPP for the overall two-tone envelope at the
output pin), Figure 6-50 shows 47-dBc difference between the test tone powers and the 3rd-order
intermodulation spurious powers. This performance improves further when operating at
lower frequencies.