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In electronics, a common-gate amplifier is one of three basic single-stage field-effect transistor (FET) amplifier topologies, typically used as a current buffer or voltage amplifier. In this circuit, the source terminal of the transistor serves as the input, the drain is the output, and the gate is connected to some DC biasing voltage (i.e. an ...
A voltage buffer amplifier is used to transform a voltage signal with high output impedance from a first circuit into an identical voltage with low impedance for a second circuit. The interposed buffer amplifier prevents the second circuit from loading the first circuit unacceptably and interfering with its desired operation, since without the ...
The circuit signal is provided by an AC Norton source (current I S, Norton resistance R S) at the input, and the circuit has a resistor load R L at the output. As mentioned earlier, this amplifier is bilateral as a consequence of the output resistance r O , which connects the output to the input.
Figure 3 shows a MOSFET common-source amplifier with an active load. Figure 4 shows the corresponding small-signal circuit when a load resistor R L is added at the output node and a Thévenin driver of applied voltage V A and series resistance R A is added at the input node. The limitation on bandwidth in this circuit stems from the coupling of ...
The operating point of the circuit in this configuration (labelled Q) is generally designed to be in the active region, approximately in the middle of the load line's active region for amplifier applications. Adjusting the base current so that the circuit is at this operating point with no signal applied is called biasing the transistor ...
Transimpedance amplifier with a reverse-biased photodiode. In the circuit shown in figure 1 the photodiode (shown as a current source) is connected between ground and the inverting input of the op-amp. The other input of the op-amp is also connected to ground. This provides a low-impedance load for the photodiode, which keeps the photodiode ...
In this example, the frequency ω 3dB such that ω 3dB C M R A = 1 marks the end of the low-frequency response region and sets the bandwidth or cutoff frequency of the amplifier. The effect of C M upon the amplifier bandwidth is greatly reduced for low impedance drivers (C M R A is small if R A is small).
In electronics, a common-drain amplifier, also known as a source follower, is one of three basic single-stage field-effect transistor (FET) amplifier topologies, typically used as a voltage buffer. In this circuit (NMOS) the gate terminal of the transistor serves as the signal input, the source is the output, and the drain is common to both ...