Accedi

In integrated circuit technology, a capacitance multiplier is often utilized to produce a larger capacitance value when a small physical capacitance falls short. This is achieved by a circuit that multiplies capacitance values by a factor of up to 1000, such that a 10-pF capacitor can replicate the performance of a 100-nF capacitor.

The circuit illustrated in Figure 1 below incorporates two op-amps, with the first operating as a voltage follower and the second acting as an inverting amplifier.

Figure1

Figure 1: Capacitance Multiplier

The voltage follower functions to isolate the capacitance created by the circuit from the loading incurred by the inverting amplifier. Since no current enters the op amp's input terminals, the feedback capacitor carries the input current.

By applying Kirchhoff's Current Law (KCL), a relation between input and output voltage with respect to resistances can be established, which can be further substituted into the current expression. Rearranging the expressions aids in determining the input impedance. By selecting appropriate resistance values, an effective capacitance can be generated between the input terminal and ground that is a multiple of the physical capacitance.

To prevent op-amps from saturating, the effective capacitance must be limited by the inverted output voltage. As the capacitance multiplication increases, the maximum allowable input voltage must decrease. Capacitance multiplier circuits such as this one provide an efficient solution for generating larger capacitances without increasing the physical capacitance.

Tags
Capacitance MultiplierIntegrated CircuitOp ampsVoltage FollowerInverting AmplifierKirchhoff s Current LawInput ImpedanceEffective CapacitanceCapacitance MultiplicationCircuit Design

Dal capitolo 6:

article

Now Playing

6.16 : Design Example: Capacitance Multiplier Circuit

AC Circuit Analysis

578 Visualizzazioni

article

6.1 : Sinusoidal Sources

AC Circuit Analysis

335 Visualizzazioni

article

6.2 : Graphical and Analytic Representation of Sinusoids

AC Circuit Analysis

332 Visualizzazioni

article

6.3 : Phasors

AC Circuit Analysis

407 Visualizzazioni

article

6.4 : Phasor Arithmetics

AC Circuit Analysis

183 Visualizzazioni

article

6.5 : Phasor Relationships for Circuit Elements

AC Circuit Analysis

401 Visualizzazioni

article

6.6 : Kirchoff's Laws using Phasors

AC Circuit Analysis

317 Visualizzazioni

article

6.7 : Impedances and Admittance

AC Circuit Analysis

488 Visualizzazioni

article

6.8 : Impedance Combination

AC Circuit Analysis

256 Visualizzazioni

article

6.9 : Node Analysis for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

236 Visualizzazioni

article

6.10 : Mesh Analysis for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

294 Visualizzazioni

article

6.11 : Source Transformation for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

418 Visualizzazioni

article

6.12 : Thévenin Equivalent Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

131 Visualizzazioni

article

6.13 : Norton Equivalent Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

271 Visualizzazioni

article

6.14 : Superposition Theorem for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

517 Visualizzazioni

See More

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati