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  2. Buffer amplifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffer_amplifier

    In electronics, a buffer amplifier is a unity gain amplifier that copies a signal from one circuit to another while transforming its electrical impedance to provide a more ideal source (with a lower output impedance for a voltage buffer or a higher output impedance for a current buffer).

  3. Digital buffer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_buffer

    A digital buffer (or a logic buffer) is an electronic circuit element used to copy a digital input signal and isolate it from any output load.For the typical case of using voltages as logic signals, a logic buffer's input impedance is high, so it draws little current from the input circuit, to avoid disturbing its signal.

  4. Common collector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_collector

    The common collector amplifier's low output impedance allows a source with a large output impedance to drive a small load impedance without changing its voltage. Thus this circuit finds applications as a voltage buffer. In other words, the circuit has current gain (which depends largely on the h FE of the transistor) instead of voltage gain. A ...

  5. Common drain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_drain

    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 ...

  6. Common base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_base

    For R S values in the vicinity of r E the amplifier is transitional between voltage amplifier and current buffer. For R S ≫ r E the driver representation as a Thévenin source should be replaced by representation with a Norton source. The common base circuit stops behaving like a voltage amplifier and behaves like a current follower, as ...

  7. Instrumentation amplifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrumentation_amplifier

    Although the instrumentation amplifier is usually shown schematically identical to a standard operational amplifier (op-amp), the electronic instrumentation amplifier is almost always internally composed of 3 op-amps. These are arranged so that there is one op-amp to buffer each input (+, −), and one to produce the desired output with ...