If the op-amp is operating other than ICMR the design may end up poor gain and bad CMRR & PSRR.
This is the range of the input when diff pair, active current mirror load and current soure should be in deep saturation. Going the inputs other than this range will result the devices going to liner to cutoff.
Gain:
If the devices are in liner the Gain will go down and the Gain is proportional to gm and in liner region, gm is much less than in the saturation region.
PSRR:
The power supply rejection ratio will deteriorate. Now the diff pair will see a resistive element (devices being in saturation) towards Vcc and Gnd. If it be in saturation, the noise will see huge impedance (of the order of mega ohms) because in saturation region o/p impedance is high. Once it is coming to linear region the devices will be resistive element of few kilo ohms and very much prone of getting injected any noise which is measure of PSRR.
CMRR:
For high CMRR the tail NMOS has to be close to ideal and see a high impedance from that node to GND. If it is not so, the current in current source will more likely be changing and deteriorate the CMRR.
Apart from it BW, voltage offset will also be adveresely affected.
-Bharat
chviswanadh wrote on Oct 11th, 2006, 4:06am:Hello,
I couldnt understand the effect of ICMR on operational amplifiers performance.
I can understand that opamp input should lie in the ICMR range for proper operation but what happens if the input is out of ICMR
whether the gain is 0 or the output is clipped or there is an distortion in output.
Please give some inputs on this
Thanks
chviswanadh