Question 12.16: Effect of Short-Circuit Current Limit on an Amplifier Determ...
Effect of Short-Circuit Current Limit on an Amplifier
Determine the effect of the short-circuit limit, I_{\mathrm{SC}}, on the output of an inverting amplifier for a sinusoidal input voltage of known amplitude.
Learn more on how we answer questions.
Known Quantities: Short-circuit current limit, I_{\mathrm{Sc}}; amplitude of sinusoidal input voltage; amplifier closed-loop gain.
Find: Compute the maximum allowable load resistance value, R_{L \text { min }}, and sketch the theoretical and actual output voltage waveforms for resistances smaller than R_{L \text { min }}.
Schematics, Diagrams, Circuits, and Given Data: I_{\mathrm{SC}}=50 \mathrm{~mA} ; v_{S}(t)=0.05 \sin (\omega t) ; A_{V}=100.
Assumptions: Assume short-circuit-current-limited (otherwise ideal) op-amp.
Analysis: Given the closed-loop voltage gain of 100 , we compute the theoretical output voltage to be:
v_{\text {out }}(t)=-A_{V} v_{S}(t)=-5 \sin (\omega t)
To assess the effect of the short-circuit current limit, we calculate the peak value of the output voltage, since this is the condition that will require the maximum output current from the op-amp:
\begin{aligned}&v_{\text {out peak }}=5 \mathrm{~V} \\&I_{\mathrm{SC}}=50 \mathrm{~mA} \\&R_{L \text { min }}=\frac{v_{\text {out peak }}}{I_{\mathrm{SC}}}=\frac{5 \mathrm{~V}}{50 \mathrm{~mA}}=100 \Omega\end{aligned}
For any load resistance less than 100 \Omega, the required load current will be greater than I_{\mathrm{SC}}. For example, if we chose a 75-\Omega load resistor, we would find that
v_{\text {out peak }}=I_{\text {SC }} \times R_{L}=3.75 \mathrm{~V}
That is, the output voltage cannot reach the theoretically correct 5-\mathrm{V} peak, and would be “compressed” to reach a peak voltage of only 3.75 \mathrm{~V}. This effect is depicted in Figure 12.56.
Comments: The short-circuit current limit is listed in the device data sheets (see the data sheets in the accompanying CD-ROM, or in the device templates in the Electronics Workbench { }^{\mathrm{TM}} libraries, for examples). Typical values for a low-cost general-purpose amplifier (e.g., 741c) are in the tens of milliamperes.
