Electronic – RC low-pass filters for op-amp power-in pins

decouplingdecoupling-capacitoroperational-amplifier

It has been a long-lived tradition of mine to put an RC low-pass between the power supply and each power-in pin of each op-amp, where R is typically 1 to 10 ohms, and C is either 0.1uF ceramic, or that in parallel with a, say, 10uF tantalum:

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

My thinking is: the decoupling capacitor is supposed to be a low-impedance path to GND for switching/high-speed signals that originate inside the op-amp, so that they do not propagate to the rest of the system; by placing a resistor in series I not only make the path to GND low-impedance, but the path to the rest of the system now has substantially higher impedance compared to just connecting directly.

Does this make sense in general? Or am I wasting my time, money, and PCB space in placing next-to-useless resistors?

Best Answer

I found an article that discussed using resistors in the power lines of op amps (top of page 47). They say that in troublesome cases, you can add inductors to the power lines along with the decoupling capacitors. Or for a cheaper solution you can use a series resistor in the 10‎Ω to 100‎Ω range to form a low-pass filter. The drawback is it will reduce the rail-to-rail voltage range (since there is voltage drop across the resistors).

My interpretation is that adding resistors can be done if necessary, but adding them by habit is probably more harmful than helpful.

Edit: article is "The PCB is a component of op amp design", Bruce Carter, in Analog Applications Journal - Texas Instruments, Aug 2000, p 42-47.