When driving an H-bridge or a similar circuit, you usually must ensure that two or more transistors are not on at the same time. Eliminating multiple transistors from turning on reduces power consumption and lowers EMI (electromagnetic ...
The circuits in Figures 1 and 2 shows a PWM (pulse-width-modulated) ramp generator that you can use in low-cost switch-mode dc/dc power supplies. Its supply voltage can range from 5 to 35 V dc, and you can set the output-ramp amplitude of 0.3 to 1 ...
First and second amplifiers and range switch The schematic is shown in Figure 3. Figure 3. First and second amplifiers and range switch. The switching is arranged so that there are no unused resistors attached to the signal circuit; they are ...
Design a wideband analog multimeter to measure AC voltages and currents from 20 Hz to 1 MHz with a selectable sensitivity from 1 mV to 100 V, while the ammeter has a selectable current sensitivity of 10 mA to 10 A. It may be surprising to offer a ...
The circuit in Figure 1 allows standard TTL logic levels to safely drive a high-power dc load. The circuit provides for both signal and ground isolation as well as a solid-state circuit breaker. Figure 1. An overcurrent condition in this isolated ...
AC signals can emanate from many sources, and many of these sources are incompatible with the most popular interface voltages, such as TTL. A temptation always exists to capacitively couple the ac signals because capacitive coupling strips off the ...
Pulse width modulation (PWM) is a simple and inexpensive (therefore popular!) way to implement moderate performance (e.g., 8 bit resolution low speed) digital to analog conversion, but improvising cheap DACs isn’t the only thing PWM can do. ...
This Design Idea describes a simple way to form a reliable astable or monostable multivibrator from a set/reset latch. You may find it useful because it lets you minimize the number of standard digital ICs your design requires when absolute ...
Circuit designs abound for linear triangle/sawtooth generators, and many are based on the iconic LMC555 CMOS analog timer. But relatively few are voltage controlled, making them tricky to program with a DAC, and most have unbuffered outputs that ...
The sample and hold circuit (Figure 3) is considerably more complex than the oscillator. This is unfortunate but unavoidable. It's the S/H that gives this design its speed (fast settling time) and very low distortion, and it's very unlikely ...