Lesson 1Working out speed and steadiness: output speed from amp speed limit, phase safety checks, and fixing methodsWe figure out output speed from the amp's speed limit and feedback amount, then link phase safety to steadiness and quick response. Ways to fix for extra load on output or high power are shown with simple rules.
Relate GBW, feedback factor, and bandwidthInterpret Bode plots and phase margin targetsIdentify signs of marginal or unstable loopsDesign compensation for capacitive loadingCheck stability across process and temperatureLesson 2Picking real parts: checking amp data sheets (examples for sensor amps)This teaches how to read and pick amp data sheets for sensor work. You focus on noise, shift, input limits, power choices, and size, learning to quickly match parts to what your setup needs.
Identify sensor-grade amplifier familiesInterpret input offset and drift specificationsEvaluate noise, CMRR, and PSRR parametersCheck input and output voltage rangesAssess package, power, and cost constraintsLesson 3Test plan in SPICE for amp section: test signals (balanced wave, shared-mode, noise), frequency check, quick change, noise check, and shift/error measuresThis builds a clear SPICE test plan for the amp part, setting test signals, checks, and measures. You learn to confirm power, speed, noise, shift, and shared-mode action before board design.
Define simulation objectives and key metricsSet up differential and common-mode sourcesPlan AC, transient, and noise analysesMeasure gain, offset, and linearity in SPICEOrganize testbenches for reuse and reviewLesson 4Planning for input resistance: ways to get high balanced and shared input resistanceWe look at getting high input resistance for balanced and shared signals using amp inputs, buffer steps, and resistor picks, while watching current draw, leaks, and speed limits.
Define differential and common-mode impedanceUse buffer stages to isolate sensor loadingControl bias currents and leakage pathsGuarding and PCB techniques for high ZTrade-offs between impedance and bandwidthLesson 5Design notes list: writing sums, guesses, part codes, and safety checks for board handoffThis sets a strong notes package for amp and sensor front designs, noting sums, guesses, part picks, and safeties so board, layout, and test teams can build and check the circuit with trust.
List design assumptions and operating conditionsRecord key equations and intermediate calculationsDocument part numbers and critical parametersCapture margin analysis and derating choicesDefine required tests and acceptance criteriaLesson 6Amp main specs and pick steps: input noise level, bias current, input shift, speed limit, quick rate, shared rejection, power rejection, and power rangeWe go over key amp specs for small sensor links and make a steady pick process. Focus on noise level, bias current, speed limit, quick rate, shared rejection, power rejection, and power range for your needs.
Relate GBW and slew rate to signal bandwidthUnderstand input noise density and filtersBias current and source impedance interactionCMRR, PSRR, and supply rejection needsStep-by-step op-amp selection checklistLesson 7Resistor setups and power sums for balanced amps and measure amps: figuring power rules and load effectsWe figure power rules for usual balanced and measure amp setups, with resistor limits and loads. Focus on matching, shared rejection, and how sensor and converter loads change real power.
Gain equations for basic differential stagesThree-op-amp instrumentation amp gain designImpact of resistor matching on CMRR and gainLoading from sensor and ADC input impedanceSelecting resistor values and power ratingsLesson 8Setting amp goal specs: power, speed, input resistance, shift, drift, and noise allowanceThis shows how to turn big sensor needs into amp goals for power, speed, input resistance, shift, drift, and noise. You make a short specs table to guide setup and part picks.
Translate sensor and ADC requirementsDefine gain, bandwidth, and headroom limitsSet input impedance and loading constraintsAllocate offset and drift performance goalsCreate a formal amplifier spec tableLesson 9Getting balanced sensor signals: source resistance, shared-mode, and balanced-mode ideasThis explains balanced sensor ways, with source resistance, shared level, and balanced signal range. You learn how these change noise, load, and amp setup and reference picks.
Define differential and common-mode componentsCharacterize sensor source impedance vs frequencyDetermine allowable common-mode voltage rangeRelate sensor specs to amplifier input limitsPlan cabling, shielding, and reference routingLesson 10Setup pick for small balanced signals: measure amp, balanced amp, and diff stage with front buffer — swaps and usesThis compares measure amps, usual balanced amps, and buffered diff stages for small balanced signals. You learn swaps in shared rejection, noise, input range, cost, and layout work for each.
Review classic differential amplifier stageThree-op-amp instrumentation amplifier useBuffered difference stage with front-end gainCompare CMRR, noise, and input rangeGuidelines for topology selection by sensorLesson 11Shift and drift allowance: summing steady DC error from input shift, bias currents, resistor drifts, and heat effectsHere we make a number-based DC error allowance, mixing amp shift, bias currents, resistor mismatch, and heat drift. You learn to set error limits, sum worst and average totals, and link to sensor truth.
Define DC accuracy and allowable error budgetModel input offset and bias current effectsInclude resistor tolerance and mismatch termsAccount for temperature coefficients and driftCompare worst-case versus RSS error methodsLesson 12Noise causes in small signals: heat noise, amp input noise, and outside botherWe find and measure noise causes in small sensor signals, like resistor heat noise, amp input noise, and outside bother. Ways to model, allow, and cut total noise are shown.
Johnson noise of resistors and sensorsOp-amp voltage and current noise modelsInput-referred versus output noise conceptsEnvironmental and interference coupling pathsNoise budgeting and reduction strategiesLesson 13Expected test graphs and measures: power vs speed, phase, input noise, output noise graph, quick response to 1 kHz wave, and worst shift casesThis sets key graphs and measures from tests and bench work. You link power graphs, noise graphs, quick responses, and shift checks to first specs and error allowances for the design.
Gain and phase versus frequency Bode plotsInput-referred and output noise spectraTransient response to sine and step inputsOffset versus common-mode and temperatureCompare simulated and measured performance