Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Q1 With the aid of a suitable diagram, explain briefly what are meant by the following terms; a) open-loop gain; b) Loop gain c) closed-loop gain TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution a) Ve Vs The open-loop gain is the gain of the operational amplifier without feedback. Referring to the figure, the open-loop gain is A and is expressed as; + Vf Vo A Ve A b Vo TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) b) Ve Vs The loop gain is the + amplification (or attenuation) experienced by the signal as it travels from the input to the operational amplifier to the output of the feedback network. From the figure, the loop gain is Ab and is expressed as; Vf Ab Vf Ve A b Vo TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) Ve Vs c) + Vf A Vo b The closed-loop gain is the amplification of the input signal by the amplifier with feedback. From the figure, the closed-loop gain is Af and is expressed as; Vo Af Vs TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Q2 With the aid of suitable figures, describe the term Barkhausen criterion as applied to sinusoidal oscillators TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution Ve Vs In the figure, it can be shown that the closedloop gain, Af, is given by the expression; Vo A Af Vs 1 bA + Vf A b Vo TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) Ve Vs When the magnitude of the loop gain is unity and the phase is zero i.e. when; bA 10 + Vf A b the system will produce an output for zero input. Vo TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) Ve Vs + Vf A b Barkhausen criterion states that in order to start and sustain an oscillation, the loop gain must be unity and the phase shift through the loop must be 0 Vo TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Q3 The following figure shows a Wien-Bridge oscillator employing an ideal operational amplifier A. Derive an expression for the frequency of oscillation o in terms of R and C. R1 R2 vO A . + C C R R TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution 1 1 sC Zp R 1 sCR R Zp C R Zp sCR 1 R1 v1 v2 R2 A . + R C R vO Zs TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) R1 v1 v2 Zp C R2 A . + R C R vO Zs 1 Zs R sC sCR 1 sC TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) R1 v2 b vo Zp Z p Zs Zp C v1 v2 R2 A . + R C R vO Zs TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) b Zp Z p Zs R / sCR 1 R / sCR 1 sCR 1 / sC 1 1 sCR 3 sCR TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) R2 A 1 R1 R1 Zp C v1 v2 R2 A . + R C R vO Zs TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) 1 b and sCR 3 1 / sCR R2 A 1 R1 The loop gain; R2 1 1 bA sCR 3 1 / sCR R1 TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) Substituting for s; R2 1 1 bA jCR 3 1 / jCR R1 Since bA must be real at the oscillation frequency o, it follows that; 1 jo CR 0 jo CR TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) or; 1 o RC TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Q4 For the relaxation oscillator shown in the figure, sketch and label the waveforms of vC and vR2 and indicate in your sketch, the relevant mathematical equations describing various sections of the waveform. TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution (cont’d) TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Q5 Design a phase shift oscillator in the following figure, to obtain a sinusoidal wave of 3 kHz. Use C = 22 nF and R1 = 50 k. TUTORIAL QUESTIONS – OSCILLATOR Solution From the expression; we obtain; 6 o RC 6 R oC Substituting values; 6 R 5.9 kΩ 3 -9 2π 3 10 22 10 Q1 A single-pole low-pass filter as shown in Fig.5-1 has a RC network with the resistance R of 2 kΩ and the capacitance C of 0.04μF. If the resistances of resistor R1 and R2 are 20 and 4 Ω respectively, determine: i) cutoff frequency, fC ii) pass band voltage gain or the gain of non-inverting amplifier, Acl iii) expression of output voltage, Vo a Figure 5-1. Sol1 (a) The cutoff frequency for a single-pole low-pass filter is 1 1 fc 2RC 2(3.14)( 2 x103 )( 4 x10 8 F ) 1.99 x10 Hz 2kHz 3 (b) The pass band voltage gain or the gain of non-inverting amplifier is calculated as follows: Acl ( NI ) R1 20 1 1 6 R2 4 Sol1_Cont’d Applying the voltage divider rule, the input voltage, which is the voltage across the capacitor C, is determined as follows: jX C va vin vin R jX C R XC XC Multiplying the numerator and the denominator by j and substituting for XC results in the following: XC 1 va vin vin R X C jR 1 j XC 1 1 vin vin 1 jRC 1 j 2fRC Sol1_Cont’d At the cutoff frequency fc, the magnitude of the capacitive reactance XC equals the resistance of the resistor R. 1 R or 2f c C 1 2RC fc Substituting for 2πRC in Eq. results in the following equation for va: va vin 1 f 1 j fc Where f is the operating frequency and fc is the cutoff frequency. Sol1_Cont’d The output vo is the amplified version of vi. vo va Acl ( NI ) Acl ( NI ) vin f 1 j fc where Acl(NI) is the pass-band voltage gain or the gain of the noninverting amplifier. Q2 Determine the critical frequency, pass-band voltage gain, and damping factor for the second-order low-pass active filter in Fig. 5-2 with the following circuit components: RA = 5 kΩ, RB = 8 kΩ, CA = 0.02 μF, CB = 0.05 μF, R1 = 10 kΩ, R2 = 20 kΩ Figure 5-2. Sol2 The critical frequency for the second-order low-pass active filter is 1 fc 2 RA RB C ACB 1 3 3 8 8 2(3.14) (5 x10 )(8 x10 )( 2 x10 )(5 x10 ) 796.18Hz Sol2_Cont’d The pass-band voltage gain set by the values of R1 and R2 is Acl ( NI ) R1 10 1 1 1.5 R2 20 Q3 Design a multiple-feedback band-pass filter with the maximum gain, Ao = 8, quality factor, Q = 25 and center frequency, fo =10 kHz. Assume that C1 = C2 = 0.01µF. Draw the circuit design of the active band-pass Sol3 Q 25 R1 4.97k 2f oCAo 2 (10k )(0.01 )(8) Q 25 R2 79.58k f o C (10k )(0.01 ) Q 25 R3 32 2 2 2f o C (2Q Ao ) 2 (10k )(0.01 )( 2(25 ) 8) Sol3_Con’t The drawing of the circuit diagram : C1 R2 R1 C2 V in V out R3 Q4 Determine the center frequency, fc, quality factor, Q and bandwidth, BW for the band-pass output of the state-variable filter in following figure. Given that R1 = R2 = R3 = 25 kΩ, R4 = R7 =2.5 kΩ, R5 = 150 kΩ, R6 = 2.0 kΩ, C1 = C2 = 0.003µF Sol4_Con’t i) Center frequency, fc 1 1 1 fc 21.22kHz 2R4 C1 2R7 C 2 2 (2.5k )(0.03 ) ii) Quality factor, Q 1 150k 1 R5 Q 1 1 25.67 3 R6 3 2.0k Sol4_Con’t iii) Bandwidth, BW The critical frequency, fo of the integrators usually made equal to the critical frequency, fc fo fc f o 21.22k BW 826.65Hz Q 25.67