Electrical – Best way to amplify 3.3V square wave at 1MHz to 10V square wave at 1MHz

analogoperational-amplifiersquaretransformertransmitter

I am trying to build a bus transmitter complying to 1553 standards. Its input is a 3.3V square wave at 1MHz (CMOS data) and it has to be amplified to 10V or higher at the same frequency. The load will be a center tapped isolation transformer whose primary side inductance is around 5mH.

My current implementation involves an LT1210 current feedback amplifier which is able to amplify square wave but the catch is high current drawn from the sources (500mA) which leads to high power consumption as the datasheet suggests.

Following is my setup:

enter image description here

Right now to the left of the 10 ohm resistor I get 8.5V peak to peak.

What I need to know is if I am on the right track here. Are there any other operational amplifiers available that could amplify large square wave signal and use less current at the same time, or are there any modifications that I could make on my circuit to draw less current and achieve same levels of voltage? (I clearly don't seem to need 500mA.)

P.S. This is a part of a project which is a 1553 bus transceiver analog front end. HI-1579 chip is very close to what I am intending to build.

Best Answer

I fear you have misunderstood how op amps work. You have overlooked the fact that zero times any gain remains zero. That is, the portion of the input waveform which has a zero value will produce a zero output.

As a result, the op amp (which has a nominal gain of 4) will attempt to produce an output from zero to 13.2 volts. Since Vdd is only 10 volts, the most you could possibly get is a 0 to 10 volt output, rather than a 0 to 13.2. However, this op amp is not what is called a rail-to-rail op amp. That is, its output will not reach Vdd or Vss. Instead, if you look at the data sheet for "VOUT", "Maximum Output Voltage Swing", you will see that with VDD/VSS of +/- 15 volts, the op amp is only guaranteed to put out +/- 10 volts. The output swing is not specified at +/- 10 volts, but something on the order of +/- 5 to 7 volts is probably a reasonable projection. In the event, you're getting 8.5 volts, so that's better than you deserve.

What you need to do is produce an offset, which will produce a 0 output with 1.65 volts in. At the same time, you'll need to increase the gain from its current value of 4 (1 + 845/247) to at least a gain of 6. You can try something like this:

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

Note that the new op amp must be able to output about +/- 10 mA at much greater than 1 MHz (why?) in order not to distort the waveform, and another LT1210 would seem like an excellent candidate.

Furthermore, the output will now swing from about + 8.5 to - 8.5 unless you increase VDD and VSS, for exactly the same reason it is now only swinging to +8.5. With this op amp and these power supplies, you simply cannot expect (or even hope for) a greater output swing.