This is regarding op amp bypassing. I have seen people putting a 0.1uf film/ceramic cap across the positive and negative power supply pins, instead of one cap to the ground for each of the pins. Why? And are there any advantages/disadvantages doing the former instead of the latter (besides saving a bit of money and slightly easier implementation)? Also, is there any point doing both🙂?
http://www.designers-guide.org/Design/bypassing.pdf
This link could give you a little more detailed info about where and how caps are being placed and the desired effect on the circuit in mind.
This link could give you a little more detailed info about where and how caps are being placed and the desired effect on the circuit in mind.
Hi,
some opamps have one cap from V+ to V- and a second cap from Ground to one Vsupply. The data is usually in the datasheet.
It depends very much on how the internal connections are run inside the IC.
some opamps have one cap from V+ to V- and a second cap from Ground to one Vsupply. The data is usually in the datasheet.
It depends very much on how the internal connections are run inside the IC.
AndrewT said:Hi,
some opamps have one cap from V+ to V- and a second cap from Ground to one Vsupply. The data is usually in the datasheet.
It depends very much on how the internal connections are run inside the IC.
Thanks. I thought that it's another kind of general approach.
Which opamps have a direct path from positive to negative supply, so that they'll require a bypass directly rail-to-rail?
If I understand your question correctly then I'd suggest that all opamps have this direct path since none have a ground with the 8pins normally available.
Hm, I didnt word this correctly at all. Of course, most opamps don't even have a ground pin.
I mean that in the usual Class AB amplification, current flows go from one rail to ground, at a time, which is the path you'd want to bypass, thus having bypass caps from each rail to ground, to assist you with short high-current demand. In such an application, how does a bypass between the rails help, I'm not sure I'm getting it right?
I mean that in the usual Class AB amplification, current flows go from one rail to ground, at a time, which is the path you'd want to bypass, thus having bypass caps from each rail to ground, to assist you with short high-current demand. In such an application, how does a bypass between the rails help, I'm not sure I'm getting it right?
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