ECE 3235 Electronics II

Experiment # 3

Basic Application of OpAmp II

Note: you might want to bring a calculator to the lab

1. General Information

Figure 1 OpAmp 741 Pinout.

Figure1 shows the pin configuration for the famous 741 operational amplifier (OpAmp). Note that there is no ground pin. As shown in figure 2, you must define ground as the common connection between the positive and negative DC supplies, which will be ±15 V throughout this and following experiments. This ground node must always be your common ground for all instruments and elements in the circuit.



Figure 2 OpAmp 741 Pinout with Power Supply.

2.The integrator circuit

Figure3 Integrator Circuit.

Construct the circuit of Figure 3. This is an inverting integrator if the frequency of the input signal is “high enough.” To verify this, apply a 5-kHz 80mV (peak-to-peak) square wave to the input and observe the output.

1) The theoretically expected slopes of the triangular output are (Vm/R*C, where Vm is the peak value of the square-wave input. Are they?

2) What happens to the linearity of the output as the input frequency is decreased?

3) What is the function of R’ in this circuit?

Apply a low-frequency 10Hz 80mV (peak-to-peak) sinusoid to the input.

4) Measure the gain and phase shift at 10Hz. Are these values the same as those found for the inverting amplifier in Lab 2?

5) Additionally, measure accurately the –3 dB frequency fc and the phase there, as well as the gain and phase at 10fc and 20fc.

6) What is the high-frequency roll-off in dB/octave?

Finally, apply a 5-kHz triangular wave to the input.

7) Sketch on the same set of axes the input and output waveforms showing key amplitudes and times.

8) What is the ratio of the peak-to-peak values of Vout and Vin?

9) What would be the theoretical ratio of Vout and Vin? Compare that to the value in 8).

10) Remove the resistor R’, and apply a 50Hz, 500Hz, 5kHz and 50kHz sin wave input (80mv peak-to-peak), and sketch on the same axes the input and output waveforms. Any changes compared to the case without R’?

3. The differentiator circuit

Figure 4 Differentiator Circuit

Build the circuit of Figure 4. This is a differentiator circuit. Apply a 2V peak-to-peak sinusoid wave at f1 = 100 Hz, f2 = 1 kHz, and f3 = 10 kHz to the input and observe the output.

1) Measure the peak voltage at the output for each frequency.

2) Sketch the waveform for each frequency.

3) Find the frequency where the input and output are at the same level. What is their relative phase (phase shift) at this point?

4) Repeat the above measurements for the differentiator using a 2V p-p triangular wave at the same three frequencies.

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