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Vdd tied to ground in AC mode (Read 9293 times)
haykp
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Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Oct 21st, 2011, 12:12am
 
Dear Forum,

As you know while doing small-signal analyses (AC) we consider the VDD tied to ground.
Please help me understand why?

thanks,
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buddypoor
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #1 - Oct 21st, 2011, 12:35am
 
haykp wrote on Oct 21st, 2011, 12:12am:
Dear Forum,
As you know while doing small-signal analyses (AC) we consider the VDD tied to ground.
Please help me understand why?
thanks,


VDD is considered as an ideal voltage source having an internal source resistance of zero. Thus, ac-wise it is grounded.
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #2 - Oct 21st, 2011, 5:53am
 
What is the value of AC  signals present in a DC bias line?
Answer = Zero
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buddypoor
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #3 - Oct 21st, 2011, 6:18am
 
loose-electron wrote on Oct 21st, 2011, 5:53am:
What is the value of AC  signals present in a DC bias line?
Answer = Zero


What do you mean with "signal"?
I think the dc line can carry an ac current, can it not?  
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #4 - Oct 21st, 2011, 6:54am
 
haykp wrote on Oct 21st, 2011, 12:12am:
Dear Forum,

As you know while doing small-signal analyses (AC) we consider the VDD tied to ground.
Please help me understand why?

thanks,


You set vdd to ac ground when you are doing an ac analysis in which your ac input signal is some signal other than vdd.

Typically, an ac analysis is concerned with the ac response due to a single ac signal source.  That is, all ac signal sources are set to zero except for the one of interest.

If the ac response to the ac component of vdd is of interest, then vdd would not be tied to ground.  Instead, all other ac signal sources would be set to zero.  The ac response due to signal on a power supply such as vdd is generally referred to as PSRR for power supply rejection ratio or power supply ripple rejection.

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buddypoor
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #5 - Oct 21st, 2011, 6:58am
 
I am afraid, there is a misunderstanding.
For my opinion the content of the original question is:
Why is the source Vdd replaced by signal ground during ac analysis?
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haykp
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #6 - Oct 21st, 2011, 7:15am
 
Thanks all for the comments!

buddypoor many thanks for your more precise explanation.
But one question regarding yourcomment: if the internal source resistance is zero, does it mean we can tied it to ground?

Will you agree with following proof:
In ac mode there is cap between Vdd and Vss, hence we can assume that Vdd is tied to ground.
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #7 - Oct 21st, 2011, 7:34am
 
hello haykp,

Let me explain what is small signal to understand this bit clearly.

Small signal means how your ckt parameters are changing with applied signal(don't confuse with the ac or dc, it's just change in the bias forget about the frequency for now ). So for example take a transistor with 100uA bias current for .5v vgs, now if you change vgs by 1mv then your current changes by 10uA, so in small signal model we only represent changes (not fixed quantities), now if you draw small signal model vgs and ids would be 1mV and 10uA. Think about an ideal voltage source, no change in the voltage hence short ckt, if it has some internal resistance, instead of short ckt, add resister from that node to gnd and same applicable to current source.

NOW Coming to your last post, we generally keep big decap between supply and gnd to support large amounts of switching currents. This acts as ideal voltage source, so you can represent it by short ckt.

SORRY FOR THE BIG POST.

Thanks,
raj.
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raja.cedt
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #8 - Oct 21st, 2011, 7:38am
 
hey haykp,
forgot to tell you, please understand small signal model is not ac, where as small signal model will be used to do ac analysis.

Thanks,
raj.
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buddypoor
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #9 - Oct 21st, 2011, 9:05am
 
In addition to Raja's explanations:
In reality, the supply voltages are NOT ideal (with zero internal resistance) - and, therefore, we put a large capacitor across it (sometimes in parallel with a small one). This ensures a small and negligible internal ac resistance.
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #10 - Oct 21st, 2011, 6:50pm
 
buddypoor wrote on Oct 21st, 2011, 6:18am:
loose-electron wrote on Oct 21st, 2011, 5:53am:
What is the value of AC  signals present in a DC bias line?
Answer = Zero


What do you mean with "signal"?
I think the dc line can carry an ac current, can it not?  


Agreed, however now you are analyzing the power supply loads, which probably is not what you want in a signal processing analysis.
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haykp
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #11 - Oct 21st, 2011, 11:32pm
 
Dear raja.cedit and buddypoor,

Many thanks for your explanations.

Finally I understood he reason of replacing Vdd signal by ground in small signal analyses.

Raj, yes I was mixing small signal analyze with AC analyze but now, after your comments I wont Smiley)

Thanks again.
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #12 - Oct 22nd, 2011, 1:18am
 
haykp wrote on Oct 21st, 2011, 11:32pm:
Raj, yes I was mixing small signal analyze with AC analyze but now, after your comments I wont Smiley)


Hi Haykp, just for a correct understanding:
An ac analysis ALWAYS is a small-signal analysis. That means: All transfer characteristics are linearized around the chosen operating point (determined through bias conditions).
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haykp
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #13 - Oct 23rd, 2011, 10:34am
 
Thanks buddypoor,

As we are speaking about AC analyze, at this stage my assumption is that there is some difference between AC analyze and small-signal analyze.
Though I understand that AC analyze uses small-signal analyze for calculations, but it somehow different. So what is the difference between AC analyze and small-signal analyze?
( please sorry if I am mixing anything)
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Re: Vdd tied to ground in AC mode
Reply #14 - Oct 23rd, 2011, 7:33pm
 
AC analysis tends to mean looking at the frequency response of a system.
Small signal tends to mean looking at the signal processing characterisitics while ignoring DC bias issues.

That is not precise, but the term AC analysis comes from simulator origins, and small signal term comes from hand analysis methods.

thats the history of it...

They overlap and are somewhat similar.
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