Maker Pro
Maker Pro

Inverting op amp attenuator help

george2525

Jan 30, 2015
170
Joined
Jan 30, 2015
Messages
170
Hi

Im having trouble with the real version of the simulated inverting op amp below

I need to attenuate 0.1-3.1 volts input by 1/50

As shown the output for 0.1V input should be about 2mV

the simulated version is close enough

What I actually get is close to 3mV

if I increase the input to 0.2V the output is (0.2/50)+1mv = 5mV

But I need the output to double!


I have seen this exact ratio and op amp model used in other circuits to attenuate voltages of similar value and noone ever mentions an offset of any kind. the simulated version works well enough.

Ive seen things on op amp biasing and adding extra resistors etc but i dont know what to do.

I need the feedback resistor to be 1K or 2K and the input must be inverted and attenuated by around 1/50

I have tried the TL072 and LM324 op amps. I cant use anything that cannot run off +/-6V

im sure the TL072 is appropriate anyway

Any ideas about how I can get a nice attenuated output that is proportional to the input without any weird 1mV shift???

Thanks



attenuator2.PNG
 

Attachments

  • attenuator.PNG
    attenuator.PNG
    10.5 KB · Views: 140

OBW0549

Jul 5, 2016
157
Joined
Jul 5, 2016
Messages
157
Any ideas about how I can get a nice attenuated output that is proportional to the input without any weird 1mV shift???
Your problem is caused by the input offset voltage of the opamp. If you look on the data sheets, Vos for the LM324 can be as much as 7 millivolts, and for the TL072 it can be up to 10 millivolts. These will translate to a direct offset error in your output.

To fix the problem, use a better opamp, such as a LT1007 (25 μV), OP177 (25 μV), or a MAX44246 (5 μV). And there are plenty of other suitable parts besides those three.
 

george2525

Jan 30, 2015
170
Joined
Jan 30, 2015
Messages
170
Your problem is caused by the input offset voltage of the opamp. If you look on the data sheets, Vos for the LM324 can be as much as 7 millivolts, and for the TL072 it can be up to 10 millivolts. These will translate to a direct offset error in your output.

To fix the problem, use a better opamp, such as a LT1007 (25 μV), OP177 (25 μV), or a MAX44246 (5 μV). And there are plenty of other suitable parts besides those three.


Thanks but how do I find out the minimum supply voltages for the LT1007 and OP177?

The datasheets dont say anything!
 

AnalogKid

Jun 10, 2015
2,884
Joined
Jun 10, 2015
Messages
2,884
Yes they do. LT1007: Look at the power supply rejection ratio voltage range and three of the parameters plots.

ak
 
Top