bharat wrote on Oct 24th, 2009, 9:51am:1) while breaking the loop (stb analysis) at X1, X2 and X3 the DC loop gain should be same, but I am seeing the difference of 5-7 dB.
This suggests that stb analysis is not perfect and it is hard to mimic the ckt with zero source impedance and infinite load impedance of AC source. (not sure though)
2) If the ckt is stable at X3 doesn't ensure that ckt. would be stable at X2 and X1 too.
Hi Bharat,
Concerning your first question,: the stb is accurate as long as the hypothesis for applying such analysis are fullfilled. -> in order for the stb analysis to be valid your ckt should be able to be analyzed as a single feedback system This is valid only when:
a) all
local feedback loops inside the main loop are individually stable
b) all the invovled loops have a common break point
Your circuit has to fulfill at least one of these two requirements in order to be analyzed as a single loop system (and therefore use stb analysis).
This idea goes along with the lines Frank pointed out in 1) in his post.
As for Frank's second bullet, he is referring to a heavy feedforward component which - in usual feedback theory - is not considered. This might affect the overall stability of your system too.
One more comment: it is usually
difficult to mimic the ckt behavior with a zero source and infinite load impendace AC source that breaks the loop, since usually stability is set by the
voltage and current feedback loop. Usually with your AC voltage source you only analyise the stability of your voltage feedback loop.
As buddypoor pointed out, the approximation is valid only when the loading effects are negligible, but this method is error-prone. so it is always recommended NOT to break the loop, but rather include your probe inside the loop. Actually the stb analysis is supposed to be more accurate since it consider
both loops: voltage and current.
Sorry for the long post
Best
Tosei