Hello,
Has a push-pull regulator pleased features to power a masterclock clock ?
I know it always has a good PSRR, what has it more than some inntegated reg TS7A, ADM75xxxx/LT3042/etc.
Thanks
Has a push-pull regulator pleased features to power a masterclock clock ?
I know it always has a good PSRR, what has it more than some inntegated reg TS7A, ADM75xxxx/LT3042/etc.
Thanks
Think of it as a plain ordinary audio amplifier whose frequency response goes all the way down to DC (zero Hertz). The amplifier's input is a reference voltage, derived from a Zener diode or an LM329 or a string of LEDs. The input is multiplied by the closed loop gain of the amplifier, and then presented at the output. If for example the reference voltage is 6.90V {LM329} and if the closed loop gain is 6.745dB (2.174x), then the output is 6.90 * 2.174 = 15.00 volts DC.
Just like 90% of all other audio amplifiers, this one has a push pull output stage. Other designers have made working push pull amplifiers that function extremely well, and I expect that you can too! Give it a try and have some DIY fun.
Just like 90% of all other audio amplifiers, this one has a push pull output stage. Other designers have made working push pull amplifiers that function extremely well, and I expect that you can too! Give it a try and have some DIY fun.
Last edited:
I call them "tandem regulators", and properly implemented, they can have outstanding performances:
They can also be used as amplifiers:
Tandem regulators
Series and shunt regulators can be associated in order to improve some performances. They are generally known as two-quadrant regulators, and the main goal is usually the improvement of dynamic performances: a classical series regulator, having to deliver an output anywhere between 0 and Imax demands difficult tradeoffs regarding the compensation.
It has to remain stable and well-behaved, despite the huge variation of the ballast's transconductance induced by the current change, and it has to deal with many types of loads, including purely capacitive ones.
To...
Series and shunt regulators can be associated in order to improve some performances. They are generally known as two-quadrant regulators, and the main goal is usually the improvement of dynamic performances: a classical series regulator, having to deliver an output anywhere between 0 and Imax demands difficult tradeoffs regarding the compensation.
It has to remain stable and well-behaved, despite the huge variation of the ballast's transconductance induced by the current change, and it has to deal with many types of loads, including purely capacitive ones.
To...
They can also be used as amplifiers:
Tandem regulators are a special class of two-quadrant regulators, in which the series and shunt members do not simply work side-by-side, but cooperate in an active, synergetic manner to sublimate the performances.
I have given details about the principles here (many other topologies are possible, but for the amplifier I will concentrate on a particular one):
These circuits not only work superbly as normal regulators, but thanks to their stiff, accurate output and their source/sink ability, they also do wonders in virtual ground generation
This begs the question...
I have given details about the principles here (many other topologies are possible, but for the amplifier I will concentrate on a particular one):
These circuits not only work superbly as normal regulators, but thanks to their stiff, accurate output and their source/sink ability, they also do wonders in virtual ground generation
This begs the question...
It has no diff-pair input, no DC-servo (yet its DC offset is negligible), no complementary output, no adjustments (yet its quiescent current is stable and deterministic), it uses ordinary vertical enhancement NMOS having a normal threshold voltage, yet it is free from the output swing limitations normally associated with such devices. The topology is half non-switching, half class AB and inverting.
In short: an oddity.
It is based on the Tandem topology, which has been evoked here...
In short: an oddity.
It is based on the Tandem topology, which has been evoked here...
I am very interested in a virtual ground because I design an octo microphone preamplifier where I only use positive regulators.
A positive 32 volt regulator with virtual ground to make -16 0 +16 and a 48 volt for 0 +48.
The preamp is fully differential so draws very little on the virtual ground which is simply made of a 1/2 NE5532.
Both regulators are positive, same topology based on TL431.
A positive 32 volt regulator with virtual ground to make -16 0 +16 and a 48 volt for 0 +48.
The preamp is fully differential so draws very little on the virtual ground which is simply made of a 1/2 NE5532.
Both regulators are positive, same topology based on TL431.