Electronic – Current return path when using an AC coupled transimpedance amplifier

operational-amplifier

Is a current return path a good (or reasonable) design practice with an AC-coupled transimpedance amplifier?

Horowitz & Hill states that "you must provide a return to ground for the (very small) input current" and an article at analog.com on common design errors highlights this as a common design error.

It is not clear to me if a current return path is also required with an ac-coupled transimpedance amplifier. When I look at Horowitz & Hill, the ac-coupled transimpedance amplifier section of the circuit shown in Figure 8.87 does not have a current return path after the blocking capacitor. It could have been omitted for clarity because the figure shows the ac-coupled as an optional configuration.

FWIW, I am not designing a circuit. I am trying to understand some unusual behavior in some equipment and my working theory is that the blocking capacitor is building up a charge over time (as indicated in the analog.com article).

I have included a circuit diagram (revised to show the recommended resistor from the lower plate of C1 to ground).

[Revised TIA Circuit[2]

Best Answer

Every op amp has a differential amplifier at his input.

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And every transistor needs a "base" current to flow to work as the amplifier.

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And this is why any op amp needs the DC path for his bias current (the inputs cannot be left floating).

In your example, the non-inverting input is connected to GND.

And the return path for inverting input current is "closed inside" the opamp.

The current will flow from the opamp input via feedback resistor into the opamp output node and to the GND via op amp output transistor.

This diagram tries to show the situation

enter image description here