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supply & ground PSRR in opamps (Read 667 times)
rajeee1000
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supply & ground PSRR in opamps
Jul 02nd, 2007, 9:19pm
 
Hello members,

Does anyone know/have a good resource talking about supply and ground PSRR in various different architectures of the operational amplifiers extensively alongwith the concerned tradeoffs involved in the design.

Thanks in advance,

Regards
Rajesh
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Visjnoe
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Re: supply & ground PSRR in opamps
Reply #1 - Jul 3rd, 2007, 12:08am
 
Dear,

I don't know of any source where the PSRR topic is covered extensively. Perhaps the book by Laker and Sansen is the best reference: in the chapter on the Miller OTA it has a fairly extensive investigation of the PSRR
(both from VDD and VSS), supported by handcalculations.

Once you understand these, I think you can easily extend this method towards other amplifier topologies.

Regards

Peter
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vivkr
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Re: supply & ground PSRR in opamps
Reply #2 - Jul 10th, 2007, 3:56am
 
Hi Rajesh,

It would be quite hard to find a paper on this subject. There was a paper by Sansen and others in JSSC titled "CMRR and PSRR of ..." but I
don't have the exact link to it. Perhaps you can try searching on IEEE Xplore for JSSC papers by Sansen. It is a brief paper.

Some information may be found in the JSSC paper by B K Ahuja "An improved frequency compensation technique ...", Dec. 1983.

I assume you are talking of fully differential amps. Basically, you can improve PSRR by increasing the impedance between the supplies
and the output => more impedance => swing reduction or need for more gain. This is typically the standard tradeoff, and also holds well
for cascoding.

If a differential amplifier is designed in such a manner
that any excitation from the supply shows up as an identical disturbance on both halves of the differential path (magnitude and phase), then
you have a high PSRR. So, you need excellent matching.

Also, in single-ended amps, there are other effects at work. These suffer from inherent asymmetries that reduce PSRR. For instance, in
a current mirror, VGS is the same for both halves, but VDS not, and this will cause reduction in PSRR. In a 2-stage amp, you have poor PSRR
beyond the unity-gain bandwidth (see Ahuja paper).

Regards
Vivek
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