The design idea presented here is a gain-trimmable wideband FET amplifier with very good speed, high input impedance, and excellent dc stability under all conditions.
Transistors Q1 and Q2 constitute a simple, high-speed FET input buffer. Q1 functions as a source-follower, with the Q2 current-source load setting the drain-source channel current. Q3 and Q4 form a simple discrete gain stage, while Q5 and Q6 form the output stage.
The OP-77 op amp contributes dc feedback to stabilize the circuit. This is accomplished by comparing the filtered circuit output to a similarly filtered version of the input signal. The amplified difference between these signals then is used to set the bias of Q2, and hence Q1’s channel current. This forces Q1’s VGS to whatever voltage is required to match the circuit’s input and output potentials. The RC network in the OP-77’s output prevents it from seeing any high-speed edges coupled through Q2’s collector-base junction.
The voltage gain of this amplifier is equal to the RA/RB ratio. The RB adjustment allows the gain to be precisely set to the desired value—usually between 1 and 10 (RB = 1k and RB = 100 Ω, respectively):
i can't understand how to use the fet as small singal amplification.
Anonymous -March 19, 2007
Your Comments:
Enter the text from the image below
Please refresh the page if you have trouble reading this text.
Search Electronic Design
Email Newsletter
Sponsored By:
Electronic Design UPDATE provides readers with late-breaking news, opinions from industry experts, and timely technology stories. It's a unique opportunity to get your product message in front of engineers, engineering managers, and corporate managers while they're reading about critical information online.