Electronic – Phototransistor with virtual ground opamp design

operational-amplifierphototransistorvirtual-ground

I am setting up a high sensitivity light detection circuit and came across this thread just a bit ago:

Phototransistor transimpedance amplifier

Within it was a response with this image:
enter image description here

My question is this:
Should the phototransistor in the diagram above be connected to the true ground coming from the power supply or to the virtual ground?

Thank you and I know this may seem like a newbie question and perhaps similarly asked in other threads, but it doesnt seem to have been explaind in my opinion.

Best Answer

First of all the phototransistor seems to be drawn upside down, the emitter should be at the negative side.

In your circuit, the inverting input is held at the virtual ground potential by the feedback loop. In order for the output of the opamp to be made to go positive, current must be drawn from the circuit node to which the inverting input is connected. This will cause the inverting input to tend to go negative and the output voltage will rise, causing current to flow (to the left) through the feedback components thereby restoring the voltage at the inverting input terminal. In order for this to happen the phototransistor must be connected to a more negative potential than the virtual earth. The "true ground" would be a suitable point. If it were returned to the virtual ground, then there would be no potential difference across the transistor and the circuit would not work.