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Has AD8041S a Unitiy Gain stability

Category: Hardware
Product Number: AD8041S

Hello,

is the AD8041S stable with unity gain (G=1)?

We are using the AD8041S within a low pass filter second order and see an oscillating output with unity gain. With a gain G=5 there are no oscillating issues at the output.

Using the AD8041S as impedance converter shows no issues at the output.

What is the stable gain area for the AD8041S?

Best regards, Alessandro

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  • Hi JE,

    yes, I can provide a schematic with more details.

    The input voltage at positive input is 0V ... 0.5V

    The first picture shows the circuit which we have acutally implemented in hardware. We don't want the Gain of 5. But this was the only way to run the OP-AMP stable (without low pass filter, without C1 and C4) 

    This is not working on hardware and simulation

    The second picture shows the circuit which runs in simulation. There is implemented Gain 1 and the corner frequency of the low pass 2nd order is higher (R1 and R2 reduced to 1k instead of 10k).

    Working in Simulation

    But we are still wondering about stability of the OP-AMP. Can you give some information how to check the stability.

    Thanks, Best regards Alessandro

  • Hi  

    Using the Ltspice software, we can check the stability of the op-amp. See the link below for the tutorial video.

    LTspice: Stability of Op Amp Circuits

    However, I am still checking for some stability issues of your circuit. Stability issues of op amp are usually due to capacitive loads, for some are very large feedback resistors and other factors. Is the oscillation present on your hardware? Is it correct to assume that the test node that you've checked is on "R_PVSUB"? I am suspecting that there are parasitic capacitances on your PCB or hardware but it was not yet concluded.

    Also, the following link can be of help for compensating stability issues for op amps.

    Ask The Application Engineer—32: Practical Techniques to Avoid Instability Due to Capacitive Loading

    Hope this helps. 

    Regards,

    JE