[Ideas For Design]
Simulated Grounded Inductor Needs No External Capacitors
Abhirup Lahiri
ED Online ID #20894
April 9, 2009
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
Reprints
Inductors designed with active elements are very desirable
to designers today because conventional spiral inductors are
too big, too heavy, and too costly, and they require tuning. During
the last few decades, various grounded inductors have been
created using different high-performance active building blocks,
such as operational amplifiers and operational transconductance
amplifiers. But op amps suffer from a finite gain-bandwidth product
(GBP) and GBP interdependence, so they can’t be used at
high frequencies.
One alternative, a current-feedback operational amplifier
(CFOA), is very popular because it overcomes the drawbacks of
op amps. The design described here uses a commercially available
CFOA, the AD844AN by Analog Devices, in a new synthetic,
grounded lossy inductor. The inductor doesn’t use any external
capacitors. Instead, internal capacitance appearing at the compensating
pin of the CFOA is used, so the circuit could be classified as
an active-R circuit.
A CFOA is an active building block and an ideal CFOA is characterized
by the equations (see the figure):
IY = 0
VY = VX
IZ = IX
VW = VX
Although the two CFOAs and the two resistors in the figure
create a grounded inductor, this idea could be extended to create a
floating inductor by using back-to-back connections.
Since no external resistor is present at terminal Z of CFOA1, the
parasitic resistance must be considered for accurate analysis of the
circuit. If the parasitic resistance and capacitance at terminal Z of
the first CFOA are RO1 and CO1, and the parasitic resistance and
capacitance at terminal Z of the second CFOA are RO2 and CO2,
the input admittance is:
YIN = RO1/(R1 × R2 + S × CO1 × R1 × R2 × CO1) + (1 + S × CO2
× RO2)/RO2
where S refers to the Laplace transform.
Note that RO is generally on the order of megohms and CO is
generally in picofarads. With this in mind and assuming that R1
× R2 << RO1 and the frequency range for this design can’t exceed
the megahertz range, the input impedance of the circuit is approximately:
ZIN = s × LEQ
where LEQ = C × R1 × R2.
The circuit was designed with R1 = R2 = 500 O (5% resistor
value discrete). Using the AD844 datasheet and the experimental
setups it provides, C = CO1 = 4.5 pF and RO1 = RO2 = 3 MO.
Very low values of inductances were synthesized with tolerable differences
between the theoretical and synthesized values. Typical
values were of the order of micohenries. Such small inductor values
are particularly suitable for RF designs.
The design presented here is simple, and the structure is well
known. In addition, the readily available commercial CFOA ICs
make the circuit very feasible and easy to implement.
References:
K. Pal, “Floating inductance and FDNR using positive polarity
current conveyors,” Active and Passive Electronic Components, Vol.
27, pp. 81-83, 2004.
Online datasheet of AD844: http://www.selectronic.fr/includes_selectronic/pdf/Analog_Device/AD844AN.pdf.
Raj Senani and V.K. Singh, “Novel Single-Resistance Controlled-
Oscillator Configuration using Current Feedback Amplifiers,”
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems-I: Fundamental Theory
and Applications, Vol. 43, No. 8, pp. 698-700,1996.
|