Dual Wideband, High Output Current Operational Amplifier with Current Limit

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OPA2674 SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 Dual Wideband, High Output Current Operational Amplifier with Current Limit FEATURES WIDEBAND +12V OPERATION: 22MHz (G = +4) UNITY-GAIN STABLE: 25MHz (G = +1) HIGH OUTPUT CURRENT: 5mA OUTPUT VOLTAGE SWING: 1V PP HIGH SLEW RATE: 2V/µs LOW SUPPLY CURRENT: 18mA FLEXIBLE POWER CONTROL: SO-14 Only OUTPUT CURRENT LIMIT (±8mA) APPLICATIONS POWER LINE MODEM xdsl LINE DRIVERS CABLE MODEM DRIVERS MATCHED I/Q CHANNEL AMPLIFIERS BROADBAND VIDEO LINE DRIVERS ARB LINE DRIVERS HIGH CAP LOAD DRIVER OPA2674 RELATED PRODUCTS SINGLES DUALS TRIPLES NOTES OPA691 OPA2691 OPA691 Single +12V Capable THS642 ±15V Capable OPA2677 Single +12V Capable DESCRIPTION The OPA2674 provides the high output current and low distortion required in emerging xdsl and Power Line Modem driver applications. Operating on a single +12V supply, the OPA2674 consumes a low 9mA/ch quiescent current to deliver a very high 5mA output current. This output current supports even the most demanding ADSL CPE requirements with > 8mA minimum output current (+25 C minimum value) with low harmonic distortion. Differential driver applications deliver < 85dBc distortion at the peak upstream power levels of full rate ADSL. The high 2MHz bandwidth also supports the most demanding VDSL line driver requirements. Power control features are included in the SO-14 package version to allow system power to be minimized. Two logic control lines allow four quiescent power settings. These include full power, power cutback for short loops, idle state for no signal transmission but line match maintenance, and shutdown for power off with a high impedance output. Specified on ±6V supplies (to support +12V operation), the OPA2674 will also support a single +5V or dual ±5V supply. Video applications will benefit from a very high output current to drive up to 1 parallel video loads (15Ω) with <.1%/.1 dg/dp nonlinearity. +12V 2Ω 1/2 OPA2674 24Ω 17.4Ω 1:1.7 AFE Output 2V PP +6.V 2kΩ 1µF 82.5Ω 2kΩ 24Ω 17.7V PP 17.4Ω 15V PP Twisted Pair 1Ω 2Ω 1/2 OPA2674 Single Supply CPE Upstream Driver Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. www.ti.com Copyright 2 28, Texas Instruments Incorporated

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 www.ti.com PACKAGE/ORDERING INFORMATION (1) PRODUCT PACKAGE LEAD PACKAGE DESIGNATOR SPECIFIED TEMPERATURE RANGE PACKAGE MARKING ORDERING NUMBER TRANSPORT MEDIA, QUANTITY OPA2674 SO-8 D 4 C to +85 C OPA2674ID OPA2674ID Rails, 1 OPA2674IDR Tape and Reel, 25 OPA2674 SO-14 D 4 C to +85 C OPA2674I-14D OPA2674I-14D Rails, 58 OPA2674I-14DR Tape and Reel, 25 (1) For the most current package and ordering information, see the Package Option Addendum at the end of this document, or see the TI web site at www.ti.com. ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS (1) Power Supply................................... ±6.5VDC Internal Power Dissipation.............. See Thermal Analysis Differential Input Voltage............................. ±1.2V Input Common-Mode Voltage Range.................... ±VS Storage Temperature Range: D, -14D........... 65 C to +125 C Lead Temperature (soldering, 1s)..................... + C Junction Temperature (TJ)........................... +15 C ESD Rating Human Body Model (HBM)(2)...................... 2V Charge Device Model (CDM)...................... 1V Machine Model (MM).............................. 1V (1) Stresses above these ratings may cause permanent damage. Exposure to absolute maximum conditions for extended periods may degrade device reliability. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those specified is not supported. This integrated circuit can be damaged by ESD. Texas Instruments recommends that all integrated circuits be handled with appropriate precautions. Failure to observe proper handling and installation procedures can cause damage. ESD damage can range from subtle performance degradation to complete device failure. Precision integrated circuits may be more susceptible to damage because very small parametric changes could cause the device not to meet its published specifications. (2) Pins 2 and 6 on SO-8 package, and pins 1 and 7 on SO-14 package > 5V HBM. PIN CONFIGURATIONS TOP VIEW SO 8 TOP VIEW SO 14 OPA2674I 14D In A 1 14 Out A OPA2674ID +In A 2 1 NC Out A 1 8 +V S A 12 NC In A +In A 2 7 6 Out B In B V S 4 Power Control 11 +V S V S 4 5 +In B A1 5 1 NC +In B 6 9 NC In B 7 8 Out B NC = No Connection 2

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V Boldface limits are tested at +25 C. At T A = +25 C, A 1 = A = 1 (full power: for SO-14 only), G = +4, R F = 42Ω, and R L = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. See Figure 1 for AC performance only. TYP OPA2674ID, OPA2674I-14D PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS +25 C +25 C (1) +7 C (2) C to MIN/MAX OVER TEMPERATURE 4 C to +85 C (2) AC Performance (see Figure 1) Small-Signal Bandwidth (V O =.5V PP ) G = +1, R F = 511Ω 25 MHz typ C G = +2, R F = 475Ω 225 17 165 16 MHz min B G = +4, R F = 42Ω 22 17 165 16 MHz min B G = +8, R F = 25Ω 26 2 195 19 MHz min B Peaking at a Gain of +1 G = +1, R F = 511Ω.2 db typ C Bandwidth for.1db Gain Flatness G = +4, V O =.5V PP 1 4 5 MHz min B Large-Signal Bandwidth G = +4, V O = 5V PP 22 16 155 15 MHz typ C Slew Rate G = +4, 5V step 2 15 145 14 V/µs min B Rise Time and Fall Time G = +4, V O = 2V step 1.6 ns typ C Harmonic Distortion G = +4, f = 5MHz, V O = 2V PP 2nd-Harmonic R L = 1Ω 72 68 67 66 dbc max B R L 5Ω 82 8 79 78 dbc max B rd-harmonic R L = 1Ω 81 79 78 77 dbc max B R L 5Ω 9 91 9 89 dbc max B Input Voltage Noise f > 1MHz 2 2.6 2.9.1 nv/ Hz max B Noninverting Input Current Noise f > 1MHz 16 2 21 22 pa/ Hz max B Inverting Input Current Noise f > 1MHz 24 29 1 pa/ Hz max B NTSC Differential Gain NTSC, G = +2, R L = 15Ω. % typ C NTSC, G = +2, R L = 7.5Ω.5 % typ C NTCS Differential Phase NTSC, G = +2, R L = 15Ω.1 deg typ C NTSC, G = +2, R L = 7.5Ω.4 deg typ C Channel-to-Channel Crosstalk f = 5MHz, Input-Referred 92 db typ C DC Performance (4) Open-Loop Transimpedance Gain V O = V, R L = 1Ω 15 8 76 75 kω min A Input Offset Voltage V CM = V ±1 ±4.5 ±5 ±5. mv max A Offset Voltage Drift V CM = V ±4 ±1 ±1 ±12 µv/ C max B Noninverting Input Bias Current V CM = V ±1 ± ±2 ±5 µa max A Noninverting Input Bias Current Drift V CM = V ±5 ±5 ±5 ±75 na/ C max B Inverting Input Bias Current V CM = V ±1 ±5 ±4 ±45 µa max A Inverting Input Bias Current Drift V CM = V ±1 ±1 ±1 ±15 na/ C max B Input (4) Common-Mode Input Range (CMIR) (5) ±4.5 ±4.1 ±4. ±4. V min A Common-Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR) V CM = V, Input-Referred 55 51 5 5 db min A Noninverting Input Impedance 25 2 kω pf typ C Minimum Inverting Input Resistance Open-Loop 22 12 Ω min B Maximum Inverting Input Resistance Open-Loop 22 5 Ω max B Output (4) Output Voltage Swing No Load ±5.1 ±4.9 ±4.8 ±4.7 V min A R L = 1Ω ±5. ±4.8 ±4.7 ±4.5 V min A R L = 25Ω ±4.8 V typ C Current Output V O = ±5 ±8 ±5 ±2 ma min A Short-Circuit Current V O = ±8 ma typ C Closed-Loop Output Impedance G = +4, f 1kHz.1 Ω typ C Output (4) (SO-14 Only) Current Output at Full Power A1 = 1, A = 1, V O = ±5 ±8 ±5 ±2 ma min A Current Output at Power Cutback A1 = 1, A =, V O = ±45 ±5 ±2 ± ma min A Current Output at Idle Power A1 =, A = 1, V O = ±1 ±6 ±55 ±5 ma min A UNITS MIN/ MAX TEST LEVEL () (1) Junction temperature = ambient for +25 C specifications. (2) Junction temperature = ambient at low temperature limit; junction temperature = ambient +2 C at high temperature limit for over temperature specifications. () Test levels: (A) 1% tested at +25 C. Over temperature limits by characterization and simulation. (B) Limits set by characterization and simulation. (C) Typical value only for information. (4) Current is considered positive out of node. VCM is the input common-mode voltage. (5) Tested < db below minimum CMRR specification at ± CMIR limits.

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 www.ti.com ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V (continued) Boldface limits are tested at +25 C. At T A = +25 C, A 1 = A = 1 (full power: for SO-14 only), G = +4, R F = 42Ω, and R L = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. See Figure 1 for AC performance only. Power Supply PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS TYP +25 C (1) OPA2674ID, OPA2674I-14D MIN/MAX OVER TEMPERATURE C to +7 C (2) 4 C to +85 C (2) Specified Operating Voltage ±6 V typ C Maximum Operating Voltage ±6. ±6. ±6. V max A Maximum Quiescent Current V S = ±6V, Both Channels 18 18.6 18.8 19.2 ma max A Minimum Quiescent Current V S = ±6V, Both Channels 18 17.4 16.5 16. ma min A Power-Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR) f = 1kHz, Input-Referred 56 51 49 48 db min A Power Supply (SO-14 Only) Maximum Logic A1, A, +V S = +6V 2.5 2. 1.8 1.5 V max A Minimum Logic 1 A1, A, +V S = +6V..6 4. 4.2 V min A Logic Input Current A1 = V, A = V, Each Line 6 9 1 15 µa max A Supply Current at Full Power A1 = 1, A = 1, Both Channels 18. 18.6 18.8 19.2 ma max A Supply Current at Power Cutback A1 = 1, A =, Both Channels 1. 14.2 14.4 14.8 ma max A Supply Current at Idle Power A1 =, A = 1, Both Channels 4. 4.8 5.1 5. ma max A Supply Current at Shutdown A1 =, A =, Both Channels 1. 1. 1.4 1.5 ma max A Output Impedance in Idle Power G = +4, f < 1MHz.1 Ω typ C Output Impedance in Shutdown 1 4 kω pf typ C Supply Current Step Time 1% to 9% Change 2 ns typ C Output Switching Glitch Inputs at GND ±2 mv typ C Shutdown Isolation G = +4, 1MHz, A1 =, A = 85 db typ C Thermal Characteristics Specification: ID, I-14D Thermal Resistance, JA ID SO-8 Junction-to-Ambient 125 C/W typ C I-14D SO-14 1 C/W typ C +25 C 4 to +85 UNITS C MIN/ MAX TEST LEVEL () (1) Junction temperature = ambient for +25 C specifications. (2) Junction temperature = ambient at low temperature limit; junction temperature = ambient +2 C at high temperature limit for over temperature specifications. () Test levels: (A) 1% tested at +25 C. Over temperature limits by characterization and simulation. (B) Limits set by characterization and simulation. (C) Typical value only for information. (4) Current is considered positive out of node. VCM is the input common-mode voltage. (5) Tested < db below minimum CMRR specification at ± CMIR limits. 4

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = +5V Boldface limits are tested at +25 C. At T A = +25 C, A 1 = 1, A = 1 (Full Power: for SO-14 only), G = +4, R F = 45Ω, and R L = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. See Figure for AC performance only. PARAMETER AC Performance (see Figure ) TEST CONDITIONS TYP +25 C +25 C (1) C to +7 C (2) OPA2674ID, OPA2674I-14D MIN/MAX OVER TEMPERATURE 4 C to +85 C (2) Small-Signal Bandwidth (V O =.5V PP ) G = +1, R F = 56Ω 22 MHz typ C G = +2, R F = 511Ω 175 14 1 12 MHz min B G = +4, R F = 45Ω 168 1 126 12 MHz min B G = +8, R F = 2Ω 175 14 1 125 MHz min B Peaking at a Gain of +1 G = +1, R F = 511Ω.6 db typ C Bandwidth for.1db Gain Flatness G = +4, V O =.5V PP 4 24 22 2 MHz min B Large-Signal Bandwidth G = +4, V O = 5V PP 19 14 15 1 MHz typ C Slew Rate G = +4, 2V Step 9 65 625 6 V/µs min B Rise Time and Fall Time G = +4, V O = 2V Step 2 ns typ C Harmonic Distortion G = +4, f = 5MHz, V O = 2V PP 2nd-Harmonic R L = 1Ω 65 6 62 61 dbc max B R L 5Ω 72 7 69 68 dbc max B rd-harmonic R L = 1Ω 72 7 69 68 dbc max B R L 5Ω 74 71 7 69 dbc max B Input Voltage Noise f > 1MHz 2 2.6 2.9.1 nv/ Hz max B Noninverting Input Current Noise f > 1MHz 16 2 21 22 pa/ Hz max B Inverting Input Current Noise f > 1MHz 24 29 1 pa/ Hz max B Channel-to-Channel Crosstalk f = 5MHz, Input-Referred 92 db typ C DC Performance (4) Open-Loop Transimpedance Gain V O = V, R L = 1Ω 11 72 7 68 kω min A Input Offset Voltage V CM = V ±.8 ±.5 ±4. ±4. mv max A Offset Voltage Drift V CM = V ±4 ±1 ±1 ±12 µv/ C max B Noninverting Input Bias Current V CM = V ±1 ± ±2 ±5 µa max A Noninverting Input Bias Current Drift V CM = V ±5 ±5 ±5 ±75 na/ C max B Inverting Input Bias Current V CM = V ±1 ±5 ±4 ±45 µa max A Inverting Input Bias Current Drift V CM = V ±1 ±1 ±1 ±15 na/ C max B Input Most Positive Input Voltage (5).7..2.1 V min A Most Negative Input Voltage (5) 1. 1.7 1.8 1.9 V min A Common-Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR) V CM = 2.5V, Input-Referred 5 49 48 47 db min A Noninverting Input Impedance 25 2 kω pf typ C Minimum Inverting Input Resistance Open-Loop 25 15 Ω min B Maximum Inverting Input Resistance Open-Loop 25 4 Ω max B Output Most Positive Output Voltage No Load 4.1.9.8.6 V min A R L = 1Ω.9.8.7.5 V min A Most Negative Output Voltage No Load.8 1. 1.1 1. V max A R L = 1Ω 1. 1.1 1.2 1.5 V max A Current Output V O = ±26 ±2 ±18 ±16 ma min A Closed-Loop Output Impedance G = +4, f 1kHz.2 Ω typ C Output (SO-14 Only) Current Output at Full Power A1 = 1, A = 1, V O = ±26 ±2 ±18 ±16 ma min A Current Output at Power Cutback A1 = 1, A =, V O = ±2 ±16 ±14 ±12 ma min A Current Output at Idle Power A1 =, A = 1, V O = ±8 ±5 ±45 ±4 ma min A UNITS MIN/ MAX TEST LEVEL () (1) Junction temperature = ambient for +25 C specifications. (2) Junction temperature = ambient at low temperature limit; junction temperature = ambient +2 C at high temperature limit for over temperature specifications. () Test levels: (A) 1% tested at +25 C. Over temperature limits by characterization and simulation. (B) Limits set by characterization and simulation. (C) Typical value only for information. (4) Current considered positive out of node. VCM is the input common-mode voltage. (5) Tested < db below minimum CMRR at min/max input ranges. 5

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 www.ti.com ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = +5V(continued) Boldface limits are tested at +25 C. At T A = +25 C, A 1 = 1, A = 1 (Full Power: for SO-14 only), G = +4, R F = 45Ω, and R L = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. See Figure for AC performance only. PARAMETER Power Supply (Single Supply Mode) TEST CONDITIONS TYP +25 C (1) OPA2674ID, OPA2674I-14D MIN/MAX OVER TEMPERATURE C to +7 C (2) 4 C to +85 C (2) Specified Operating Voltage +5 V typ C Maximum Operating Voltage 12.6 12.6 12.6 V max A Maximum Quiescent Current V S = +5V, Both Channels 1.6 14.8 15.2 15.6 ma max A Minimum Quiescent Current V S = +5V, Both Channels 1.6 12 11.7 11.4 ma min A Power-Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR) f = 1kHz, Input-Referred 52 db typ C Power Control (SO-14 Only) Maximum Logic A1, A, +V S = +5V 1.5 1..9.8 V max A Minimum Logic 1 A1, A, +V S = +5V 2.4 2.7.1. V min A Logic Input Current A1 = V, A = V, Each Line 5 8 9 95 µa max A Supply Current at Full Power A1 = 1, A = 1, Both Channels 1.8 14.8 15.2 15.6 ma max A Supply Current at Power Cutback A1 = 1, A =, Both Channels 1.2 1.8 11.1 11.4 ma max A Supply Current at Idle Power A1 = 1, A = 1, Both Channels..2.5.8 ma max A Supply Current at Shutdown A1 =, A =, Both Channels.6.9 1. 1.1 ma max A Output Impedance in Idle Power G = +4, f = 1MHz Ω typ C Output Impedance in Shutdown 1 4 kω pf typ C Supply Current Step Time 1% to 9% Change 2 ns typ C Output Switching Glitch Inputs at GND ±2 mv typ C Shutdown Isolation G = +4, 1MHz, A1 =, A = 85 db typ C Thermal Characteristics Specification: ID, I-14D Thermal Resistance, JA ID SO-8 Junction-to-Ambient 125 C/W typ C I-14D SO-14 1 C/W typ C +25 C 4 to +85 UNITS C MIN/ MAX TEST LEVEL () (1) Junction temperature = ambient for +25 C specifications. (2) Junction temperature = ambient at low temperature limit; junction temperature = ambient +2 C at high temperature limit for over temperature specifications. () Test levels: (A) 1% tested at +25 C. Over temperature limits by characterization and simulation. (B) Limits set by characterization and simulation. (C) Typical value only for information. (4) Current considered positive out of node. VCM is the input common-mode voltage. (5) Tested < db below minimum CMRR at min/max input ranges. 6

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 42Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. Normalized Gain (db) 6 9 V O =.5V PP NONINVERTING SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE OVER GAIN G=+8,R F =25Ω G=+1,R F =511Ω G=+2, R F = 475Ω Normalized Gain (db) 6 9 V O =.5V PP INVERTING SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE OVER GAIN G= 1, R F =475Ω G= 4, R F = 42Ω G= 2, R F = 422Ω 12 SeeFigure1 G=+4,R F = 42Ω 15 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) 12 See Figure 2 G= 8, R F =42Ω 15 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) 15 12 NONINVERTING SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE OVER POWER SETTINGS G=+4 V O =.5V PP 15 12 INVERTING SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE OVER POWER SETTINGS G= 4 V O =.5V PP 9 9 Gain (db) 6 Full Power Gain (db) 6 Full Power Power Cutback Power Cutback See Figure 1 Idle Power 6 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) SeeFigure2 Idle Power 6 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) 15 12 NONINVERTING LARGE SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE V O =2V PP G=+4 15 12 INVERTING LARGE SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE V O 1V PP G= 4 Gain (db) 9 6 V O =1V PP V O 1V PP Gain (db) 9 6 V O = 1V PP V O =8V PP V O =5V PP V O =8V PP SeeFigure1 6 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) SeeFigure2 6 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) 7

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V (continued) At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 42Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. NONINVERTING PULSE RESPONSE NONINVERTING PULSE RESPONSE Output Voltage (1V/div) Left Scale 4V PP Large Signal 2mV PP Small Signal G=+4 R L = 1Ω Right Scale Output Voltage (1mV/div) Output Voltage (1V/div) Left Scale 4V PP Large Signal 2mV PP Small Signal G=+4 R L = 1Ω Right Scale Output Voltage (1mV/div) SeeFigure1 SeeFigure1 Time (5ns/div) Time (5ns/div) Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 6 65 7 75 8 85 9 95 1 15 G=+4 V O =2V PP R L = 1Ω HARMONIC DISTORTION vs FREQUENCY Single Channel, See Figure 1.1 1 1 2 Frequency (MHz) 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 5 6 7 8 9 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs OUTPUT VOLTAGE f=5mhz R L =1Ω Single Channel, See Figure 1 1.1 1 1 Output Voltage (V PP ) 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic 6 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs NONINVERTING GAIN 6 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs INVERTING GAIN Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 65 7 75 8 85 V O =2V PP f=5mhz R L =1Ω 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 65 7 75 8 85 V O =2V PP f=5mhz R L =1Ω 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic 9 1 Single Channel, See Figure 1 1 9 1 Single Channel, See Figure 2 1 Gain Magnitude (V/V) Gain Magnitude ( V/V) 8

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V (continued) At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 42Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 5 55 6 65 7 75 8 85 9 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs LOAD RESISTANCE rd Harmonic 2nd Harmonic 95 Single Channel, See Figure 1 1 1 1 1k Load Resistance (Ω) V O =2V PP f=5mhz rd Order Spurious Level (dbc) 2 TONE, rd ORDER SPURIOUS LEVEL 6 dbc = db Below Carriers 65 2MHz 7 75 1MHz 8 85 9 5MHz 1MHz 95 Power at Matched 5ΩLoad, See Figure 1 1 1 5 5 1 Single Tone Load Power (dbm) Output Voltage (V) MAXIMUM OUTPUT SWING vs LOAD RESISTANCE 6 5 4 2 1 1 2 4 5 6 1 1 1k Load Resistance (Ω) V O (V) 6 5 4 2 1 1 2 4 5 6 6 OUTPUT VOLTAGE AND CURRENT LIMITATIONS R L = 1Ω R L =5Ω 1W Internal Power Single Channel 4 2 2 4 6 I O (ma) R L =25Ω 1W Internal Power Single Channel R L =1Ω Voltage Noise (nv/ Hz) Current Noise (pa/ Hz) 1 1 1 1 INPUT VOLTAGE AND CURRENT NOISE DENSITY Inverting Current Noise 24pA/ Hz Noninverting Current Noise 16pA/ Hz Voltage Noise 2.nV/ Hz 1k 1k 1k 1M 1M Frequency (Hz) Crosstalk, Input Referred (db) CHANNEL TO CHANNEL CROSSTALK 6 Input Referred 65 7 75 8 85 9 95 1 15 11 1M 1M 1M Frequency (Hz) 9

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V (continued) At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 42Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. R S (Ω) 9 8 7 6 5 4 2 1 RECOMMENDED R S vs CAPACITIVE LOAD Normalized Gain to Capacitive Load (db) 2 2 4 6 8 FREQUENCY RESPONSE vs CAPACITIVE LOAD C L = 1pF C L = 1pF C L = 22pF R S 1/2 C L =47pF OPA2674 C 1kΩ (1) L 42Ω 1Ω NOTE: (1) 1kΩ is optional. 1 1 1 1k Capacitive Load (pf) 1 1M 1M 1M 1G Frequency (Hz) Power Supply Rejection Ratio (db) Common Mode Rejection Ratio (db) 7 6 5 4 2 1 CMRR AND PSRR vs FREQUENCY CMRR PSRR +PSRR Transimpedance Gain (dbω) 12 1 8 6 4 2 OPEN LOOP TRANSIMPEDANCE GAIN AND PHASE Gain Phase 45 9 15 18 225 Transimpedance Phase () 1k 1k 1k 1M 1M 1M Frequency (Hz) 27 1k 1k 1M 1M 1M 1G Frequency (Hz) Output Resistance (Ω) 1 1 1.1.1 Full Power CLOSED LOOP OUTPUT IMPEDANCE vs FREQUENCY Idle Power Power Cutback dg/dp (%/).1.9.8.7.6.5.4..2.1 G=+2 R F =475Ω V S = ±5V COMPOSITE VIDEO dg/dp dp, Negative Video dp, Positive Video dg, Positive Video dg, Negative Video.1 1k 1M 1M 1M Frequency (Hz) 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 Number of 15ΩLoads 1

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V (continued) At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 42Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. 16 12 NONINVERTING OVERDRIVE RECOVERY Input 4 16 12 INVERTING OVERDRIVE RECOVERY Input G= 4 R L =1Ω 4 Output Voltage (V) 8 4 4 8 12 16 Output G=+4 R L =1Ω See Figure 1 Time (25ns/div) 2 1 1 2 4 Input Voltage (V) Output Voltage (V) 8 4 4 8 12 16 Output SeeFigure2 Time (25ns/div) 2 1 1 2 4 Input Voltage (V) Input Offset Voltage (mv) Input Bias Current (µa) 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 2 4 6 8 1 12 14 5 TYPICAL DC DRIFT OVER TEMPERATURE Inverting Bias Current Noninverting Bias Current Input Offset Voltage 25 25 5 75 1 125 Ambient Temperature (C) Output Current (ma) SUPPLY AND OUTPUT CURRENT vs TEMPERATURE 75 2 Supply Current, Full Power 7 18 65 16 Supply Current, Power Cutback 6 55 5 45 4 5 25 Sinking Output Current Sourcing Output Current Supply Current, Idle Power 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 5 25 25 5 75 1 125 Temperature (C) Supply Current, Both Channels (ma) 6 COMMON MODE INPUT VOLTAGE RANGE AND OUTPUT SWING vs SUPPLY VOLTAGE Voltage Range (±V) 5 4 2 1 Positive Output Swing Negative Output Swing Negative Common Mode Input Voltage Positive Common Mode Input Voltage 2 4 5 6 Supply Voltage (±V) 11

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = ±6V At TA = +25 C, Differential Gain = +9, RF = Ω, and RL = 7Ω, unless otherwise noted. See Figure 5 for AC performance only. DIFFERENTIAL SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE 22 DIFFERENTIAL LARGE SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE Normalized Gain (db) 6 9 12 G D =+2, R F = 442Ω G D =+9, R F = Ω R L =7Ω V O =1V PP G D =+5, R F =8Ω Gain (db) 19 16 1 1 7 4 1V PP 16V PP 4V PP R L =7Ω G D =+9 8V PP 15 See Figure 5 5 1 15 2 25 1 See Figure 5 5 1 15 2 25 Frequency (MHz) Frequency (MHz) Harmonic Distortion (db) 6 65 7 75 8 85 9 95 1 15 11 DIFFERENTIAL DISTORTION vs LOAD RESISTANCE rd Harmonic SeeFigure5 1 1 1k Load Resistance (Ω) 2nd Harmonic f = 5kHz G=+9 R L =7Ω V O =4V PP Harmonic Distortion (db) 5 65 7 8 9 1 11 DIFFERENTIAL DISTORTION vs FREQUENCY 2nd Harmonic SeeFigure5 rd Harmonic.1 1 1 1 Frequency (MHz) G=+9 R L =7Ω Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 6 7 8 9 1 DIFFERENTIAL DISTORTION vs OUTPUT VOLTAGE f = 5kHz G=+9 R L =7Ω 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic Power (dbm) 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 ADSL MULTITONE POWER RATIO (Upstream) V S = ±6V 11 See Figure 5.1 1 1 2 Differential Output Voltage (V PP ) 9 SeeFigure5 1 2 4 6 8 1 12 14 16 Frequency (khz) 12

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = +5V At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 45Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. NONINVERTING SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE INVERTING SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE Normalized Gain (db) 6 9 12 15 18 See Figure G=+8 R F =2Ω G=+4 R F = 45Ω G=+1 R F = 549Ω G=+2 R F =511Ω Normalized Gain (db) 6 9 12 15 18 See Figure 4 G= 2 R F =511Ω G= 1 R F =549Ω G= 8 R F =42Ω G= 4 R F =45Ω 1 2 4 5 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) Frequency (MHz) 15 NONINVERTING LARGE SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE 15 INVERTING LARGE SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE 12 V O =2V PP G=+4 R L =1Ωto V S /2 12 G= 4 R L =1Ωto V S /2 9 9 Gain (db) 6 V O =V PP Gain (db) 6 V O =V PP V O =1V PP V O =2V PP V O =1V PP SeeFigure 6 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) SeeFigure4 6 1 2 4 5 Frequency (MHz) NONINVERTING PULSE RESPONSE INVERTING PULSE RESPONSE Output Voltage (.5V/div) Left Scale 2V PP Large Signal 2mV PP Small Signal Right Scale G=+4 R L =1Ωto V S /2 See Figure Input Voltage (1mV/div) Output Voltage (.5V/div) Left Scale G= 4 R L =1Ωto V S /2 2V PP Large Signal 2mV PP Small Signal Right Scale SeeFigure4 Input Voltage (1mV/div) Time (5ns/div) Time (5ns/div) 1

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = +5V (continued) At TA = +25 C, G = +4, RF = 45Ω, and RL = 1Ω, unless otherwise noted. Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 5 55 6 65 7 75 8 85 9 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs FREQUENCY V O =2V PP G=+4 R L =1Ω to V S /2 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic Single Channel, See Figure.1 1 1 2 Frequency (MHz) Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 6 65 7 75 8 85 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs OUTPUT VOLTAGE f=5mhz R L = 1Ω to V S /2 2nd Harmonic Single Channel, See Figure 9.1 1 5 Output Voltage (V PP ) rd Harmonic Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 55 6 65 7 75 8 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs NONINVERTING GAIN V O =2V PP f=5mhz R L =1Ω to V S /2 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 55 6 65 7 75 8 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs INVERTING GAIN V O =2V PP f=5mhz R L = 1Ω to V S /2 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic 85 1 Single Channel, See Figure Gain Magnitude (V/V) 1 85 1 Single Channel, See Figure 4 Gain Magnitude ( V/V) 1 Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 4 45 5 55 6 65 7 75 8 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs LOAD RESISTANCE rd Harmonic 2nd Harmonic 85 Single Channel, See Figure 9 1 1 1k Load Resistance (Ω) V O =2V PP f=5mhz R L =1Ωto V S /2 rd Order Spurious Level (dbc) 55 6 65 7 75 8 2 TONE, rd ORDER SPURIOUS LEVEL 1MHz 5MHz 85 9 1MHz Single Channel. See Figure. Power at matched 5Ωload. 95 14 12 1 8 6 4 2 2 Single Tone Load Power (dbm) 2MHz 14

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS: V S = +5V At TA = +25 C, Differential Gain = +9, RF = 16Ω, and RL = 7Ω, unless otherwise noted. DIFFERENTIAL PERFORMANCE TEST CIRCUIT +5V DIFFERENTIAL SMALL SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE R L =7Ω V I R G C G R F 16Ω R F 16Ω R L V O G D = 1+ 2 R F R G = V O V I Normalized Gain (db) 6 G D =+9 9 R F =16Ω G D =+2 12 R F = 511Ω G D =+5 15 R F = 422Ω 5 1 15 2 25 Frequency (MHz) Gain (db) 22 19 16 1 1 7 4 R L =7Ω G D =+9 DIFFERENTIAL LARGE SIGNAL FREQUENCY RESPONSE 1V PP 2V PP 4V PP 5V PP Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 6 65 7 75 8 85 9 95 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs LOAD RESISTANCE 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic G D =+9 R L =7Ω f = 5kHz V O =4V PP 1 5 1 15 2 25 Frequency (MHz) 1 1 1 1k Load Resistance (Ω) Harmonic Distortion (dbc) 5 6 7 8 9 DIFFERENTIAL DISTORTION vs FREQUENCY G D =+9 R L =7Ω 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic Harmonic Distortion (db) 6 7 8 9 HARMONIC DISTORTION vs OUTPUT VOLTAGE G D =+9 R L =7Ω f = 5kHz 2nd Harmonic rd Harmonic 1.1 1 1 1 Frequency (MHz) 1 1 1 Output Voltage (V PP ) 15

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 APPLICATION INFORMATION WIDEBAND CURRENT-FEEDBACK OPERATION The OPA2674 gives the exceptional AC performance of a wideband current-feedback op amp with a highly linear, high-power output stage. Requiring only 9mA/ch quiescent current, the OPA2674 swings to within 1V of either supply rail and delivers in excess of 8mA at room temperature. This low output headroom requirement, along with supply voltage independent biasing, gives remarkable single (+5V) supply operation. The OPA2674 delivers greater than 15MHz bandwidth driving a 2V PP output into 1Ω on a single +5V supply. Previous boosted output stage amplifiers typically suffer from very poor crossover distortion as the output current goes through zero. The OPA2674 achieves a comparable power gain with much better linearity. The primary advantage of a current-feedback op amp over a voltage-feedback op amp is that AC performance (bandwidth and distortion) is relatively independent of signal gain. Figure 1 shows the DC-coupled, gain of +4, dual power-supply circuit configuration used as the basis of the ±6V Electrical and Typical Characteristics. For test purposes, the input impedance is set to 5Ω with a resistor to ground and the output impedance is set to 5Ω with a series output resistor. Voltage swings reported in the electrical characteristics are taken directly at the input and output pins whereas load powers (dbm) are defined at a matched 5Ω load. For the circuit of Figure 1, the total effective load is 1Ω 55Ω = 84Ω. 5ΩSource V I 5Ω R G 1Ω +6V +V S.1µF 6.8µF + 1/2 OPA2674 V S 6V R F 42Ω + 6.8µF V O 5ΩLoad 5Ω.1µF Figure 1. DC-Coupled, G = +4, Bipolar Supply, Specification and Test Circuit www.ti.com Figure 2 shows the DC-coupled, bipolar supply circuit inverting gain configuration used as the basis for the ±6V Electrical and Typical Characteristics. Key design considerations of the inverting configuration are developed in the Inverting Amplifier Operation discussion. 5Ω Source V I R G 1Ω R M 1Ω +6V 1/2 OPA2674 6V Power supply decoupling not shown. R F 42Ω V O 5ΩLoad 5Ω Figure 2. DC-Coupled, G = 4, Bipolar Supply, Specification and Test Circuit Figure shows the AC-coupled, gain of +4, single-supply circuit configuration used as the basis of the +5V Electrical and Typical Characteristics. Though not a rail-to-rail design, the OPA2674 requires minimal input and output voltage headroom compared to other wideband current-feedback op amps. It will deliver a V PP output swing on a single +5V supply with greater than 1MHz bandwidth. The key requirement of broadband single- supply operation is to maintain input and output signal swings within the usable voltage ranges at both the input and the output. The circuit of Figure establishes an input midpoint bias using a simple resistive divider from the +5V supply (two 86Ω resistors). The input signal is then AC-coupled into this midpoint voltage bias. The input voltage can swing to within 1.V of either supply pin, giving a 2.4V PP input signal range centered between the supply pins. The input impedance matching resistor (57.6Ω) used for testing is adjusted to give a 5Ω input match when the parallel combination of the biasing divider network is included. The gain resistor (R G ) is AC-coupled, giving the circuit a DC gain of +1 which puts the input DC bias voltage (2.5V) on the output as well. The feedback resistor value is adjusted from the bipolar supply condition to re-optimize for a flat frequency response in +5V, gain of +4, operation. Again, on a single +5V supply, the output voltage can swing to within 1V of either supply pin while delivering more than 2mA output current. A demanding 1Ω load to a midpoint bias is used in this characterization circuit. The new output stage used in the OPA2674 can deliver large bipolar output currents into this midpoint load with minimal crossover distortion, as shown by the +5V supply, harmonic distortion plots in the Typical Characteristics charts. 16

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 +5V +V S SINGLE-SUPPLY ADSL UPSTREAM DRIVER Figure 5 shows a single-supply ADSL upstream driver. The dual OPA2674 is configured as a differential gain stage to provide signal drive to the primary of the transformer (here, a step-up transformer with a turns ratio of 1:1.7). The main advantage of this configuration is the reduction of even-order harmonic distortion products. Another important advantage for ADSL is that each amplifier needs only half of the total output swing required to drive the load. 86Ω.1µF + 6.8µF 2Ω +12V.1µF V I 57.6Ω 86Ω 1/2 OPA2674 V O 1Ω V S /2.1µF 1/2 OPA2674 R F 24Ω I P = 128mA 17.4Ω R M 1:1.7 R G 15Ω R F 45Ω AFE 2V PP Max Assumed +6V 2kΩ R G Z Line 82.5Ω 17.7V PP.1µF 2kΩ 1µF R 17.4Ω 1Ω F 24Ω R M.1µF I P = 128mA 2Ω 1/2 OPA2674 Figure. AC-Coupled, G = +4, Single-Supply, Specification and Test Circuit The last configuration used as the basis of the +5V Electrical and Typical Characteristics is shown in Figure 4. Design considerations for this inverting, bipolar supply configuration are covered either in single-supply configuration (as shown in Figure ) or in the Inverting Amplifier Operation discussion. V I.1µF R M 88.7Ω R G 11Ω 86Ω 86Ω +5V 1/2 OPA2674 R F 45Ω.1µF V O + 6.8µF 1Ω Figure 4. AC-Coupled, G = 4, Single-Supply, Specification and Test Circuit V S /2 Figure 5. Single-Supply ADSL Upstream Driver The analog front-end (AFE) signal is AC-coupled to the driver and the noninverting input of each amplifier is biased to the mid-supply voltage (in this case, +6V). Furthermore, by providing the proper biasing to the amplifier, this scheme also provides high-pass filtering with a corner frequency set here at 5kHz. As the upstream signal bandwidth starts at 26kHz, this high-pass filter does not generate any problems and has the advantage of filtering out unwanted lower frequencies. The input signal is amplified with a gain set by the following equation: G D 1 2 R F R G With R F = 24Ω and R G = 82.5Ω, the gain for this differential amplifier is 8.85. This gain boosts the AFE signal, assumed to be a maximum of 2V PP, to a maximum of 17.7V PP. Refer to the Setting Resistor Values to Optimize Bandwidth section for a discussion on which feedback resistor value to choose. The two back-termination resistors (17.4Ω each) added at each input of the transformer make the impedance of the modem match the impedance of the phone line, and also provide a means of detecting the received signal for the receiver. The value of these resistors (R M ) is a function of the line impedance and the transformer turns ratio (n), given by the following equation: R M Z LINE 2n 2 (1) (2) 17

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 OPA2674 HDSL2 UPSTREAM DRIVER Figure 6 shows an HDSL2 implementation of a singlesupply driver. AFE 2V PP Max Assumed.1µF 2Ω 24Ω +6V 2kΩ 82.5Ω Z Line 17.7V PP 15Ω.1µF 2kΩ 1µF 24Ω 11.5Ω 2Ω +12V 1/2 OPA2674 1/2 OPA2674 I P = 185mA 11.5Ω I P = 185mA 1:2.4 www.ti.com Consolidating Equations through 6 allows the required peak-to-peak voltage at the load function of the crest factor, the load impedance, and the power in the load to be expressed. Thus: V LPP 2 CF (1mW) R L 1 P L 1 This V LPP is usually computed for a nominal line impedance and may be taken as a fixed design target. The next step for the driver is to compute the individual amplifier output voltage and currents as a function of V PP on the line and transformer turns ratio. As the turns ratio changes, the minimum allowed supply voltage also changes. The peak current in the amplifier is given by: I P 1 2 2 V LPP n 1 4R M (8) With V LPP defined in Equation 7 and R M defined in Equation 2. The peak current is computed in Figure 7 by noting that the total load is 4R M and that the peak current is half of the peak-to-peak calculated using V LPP. (7) Figure 6. HDSL2 Upstream Driver The two designs differ by the values of the matching impedance, the load impedance, and the ratio turns of the transformers. All of these differences are reflected in the higher peak current and thus, the higher maximum power dissipation in the output of the driver. 2V LPP n ±I P R M V LPP n R M 1:n R L V LPP LINE DRIVER HEADROOM MODEL The first step in a driver design is to compute the peak-topeak output voltage from the target specifications. This is done using the following equations: V RMS 2 P L 1 log (1mW) R L With P L power and V RMS voltage at the load, and R L load impedance, this gives: V RMS (1mW) R L 1 P L 1 V P CrestFactor V RMS CF V RMS with V P peak voltage at the load and CF Crest Factor; V LPP 2 CF V RMS with V LPP : peak-to-peak voltage at the load. () (4) (5) (6) ±I P Figure 7. Driver Peak Output Model With the required output voltage and current versus turns ratio set, an output stage headroom model will allow the required supply voltage versus turns ratio to be developed. The headroom model (see Figure 8) can be described with the following set of equations: First, as available output voltage for each amplifier: V OPP V CC (V 1 V 2 ) I P (R 1 R 2 ) Or, second, as required single-supply voltage: (9) V CC V OPP (V 1 V 2 ) I P (R 1 R 2 ) (1) The minimum supply voltage for a power and load requirement is given by Equation 1. 18

www.ti.com SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 +V CC R 1 V1 V O be the peak current in the load given by Equation 8 divided by the crest factor (CF) for the xdsl modulation. This total power from the supply is then reduced by the power in R T to leave the power dissipated internal to the drivers in the four output stage transistors. That power is simply the target line power used in Equation 2 plus the power lost in the matching elements (R M ). In the examples here, a perfect match is targeted giving the same power in the matching elements as in the load. The output stage power is then set by Equation 11. I P V 2 R 2 P OUT I P C F V CC 2P L The total amplifier power is then: (11) Figure 8. Line Driver Headroom Model Table 1 gives V 1, V 2, R 1, and R 2 for both +12V and +5V operation of the OPA2674. Table 1. Line Driver Headroom Model Values V 1 R 1 V 2 R 2 +5V.9V 5Ω.8V 5Ω +12V.9V 2Ω.9V 2Ω TOTAL DRIVER POWER FOR xdsl APPLICATIONS The total internal power dissipation for the OPA2674 in an xdsl line driver application will be the sum of the quiescent power and the output stage power. The OPA2674 holds a relatively constant quiescent current versus supply voltage giving a power contribution that is simply the quiescent current times the supply voltage used (the supply voltage will be greater than the solution given in Equation 1). The total output stage power may be computed with reference to Figure 9. +V CC IAVG = I P C F P TOT I q V CC I P C F V CC 2P L For the ADSL CPE upstream driver design of Figure 5, the peak current is 128mA for a signal that requires a crest factor of 5. with a target line power of 1dBm into 1Ω (2mW). With a typical quiescent current of 18mA and a nominal supply voltage of +12V, the total internal power dissipation for the solution of Figure 5 will be: (1) P TOT 18mA(12V) 128mA (12V) 2(2mW) 464mW 5. DESIGN-IN TOOLS DEMONSTRATION FIXTURES Two printed circuit boards (PCBs) are available to assist in the initial evaluation of circuit performance using the OPA2674 in its two package options. Both of these are offered free of charge as unpopulated PCBs, delivered with a user s guide. The summary information for these fixtures is shown in Table 2. Table 2. Demonstration Fixtures by Package (12) ORDERING LITERATURE PRODUCT PACKAGE NUMBER NUMBER OPA2674ID SO-8 DEM-OPA-SO-2A SBOU OPA2674I-14D SO-14 DEM-OPA-SO-2D SBOU2 R T Figure 9. Output Stage Power Model The two output stages used to drive the load of Figure 7 can be seen as an H-Bridge in Figure 9. The average current drawn from the supply into this H-Bridge and load will The demonstration fixtures can be requested at the Texas Instruments web site (www.ti.com) through the OPA2674 product folder. MACROMODELS AND APPLICATIONS SUPPORT Computer simulation of circuit performance using SPICE is often useful when analyzing the performance of analog circuits and systems. This is particularly true for video and RF amplifier circuits where parasitic capacitance and inductance can have a major effect on circuit performance. A SPICE model for the OPA2674 is available through the 19

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 TI web site (www.ti.com). This model does a good job of predicting small-signal AC and transient performance under a wide variety of operating conditions, but does not do as well in predicting the harmonic distortion or dg/dp characteristics. This model does not attempt to distinguish between the package types in small-signal AC performance, nor does it attempt to simulate channel-to- channel coupling. OPERATING SUGGESTIONS SETTING RESISTOR VALUES TO OPTIMIZE BANDWIDTH A current-feedback op amp such as the OPA2674 can hold an almost constant bandwidth over signal gain settings with the proper adjustment of the external resistor values, which are shown in the Typical Characteristics; the smallsignal bandwidth decreases only slightly with increasing gain. These characteristic curves also show that the feedback resistor is changed for each gain setting. The resistor values on the inverting side of the circuit for a current-feedback op amp can be treated as frequency response compensation elements, whereas the ratios set the signal gain. Figure 1 shows the small-signal frequency response analysis circuit for the OPA2674. V I I ERR R G α R I R F Z (S) I ERR Figure 1. Current-Feedback Transfer Function Analysis Circuit The key elements of this current-feedback op amp model are: α = buffer gain from the noninverting input to the inverting input R I = buffer output impedance I ERR = feedback error current signal V O www.ti.com Z(s) = frequency dependent open-loop transimpedance gain from I ERR to V O NG NoiseGain 1 R F R G The buffer gain is typically very close to 1. and is normally neglected from signal gain considerations. This gain, however, sets the CMRR for a single op amp differential amplifier configuration. For a buffer gain of α < 1., the CMRR = 2 log(1 α)db. R I, the buffer output impedance, is a critical portion of the bandwidth control equation. The OPA2674 inverting output impedance is typically 22Ω. A current-feedback op amp senses an error current in the inverting node (as opposed to a differential input error voltage for a voltage-feedback op amp) and passes this on to the output through an internal frequency dependent transimpedance gain. The Typical Characteristics show this open-loop transimpedance response, which is analogous to the open-loop voltage gain curve for a voltage-feedback op amp. Developing the transfer function for the circuit of Figure 1 gives Equation 14: V O V I 1 R F R G R R1 R F F I R G 1 Z(s) NG 1 R F R I NG Z(s) This is written in a loop-gain analysis format, where the errors arising from a non-infinite open-loop gain are shown in the denominator. If Z(s) were infinite over all frequencies, the denominator of Equation 14 reduces to 1 and the ideal desired signal gain shown in the numerator is achieved. The fraction in the denominator of Equation 14 determines the frequency response. Equation 15 shows this as the loop-gain equation: Z(s) LoopGain R F R I NG (14) (15) If 2 log(r F + NG R I ) is drawn on top of the open-loop transimpedance plot, the difference between the two would be the loop gain at a given frequency. Eventually, Z(s) rolls off to equal the denominator of Equation 15, at which point the loop gain has reduced to 1 (and the curves have intersected). This point of equality is where the amplifier closed-loop frequency response given by Equation 14 starts to roll off, and is exactly analogous to the frequency at which the noise gain equals the open-loop voltage gain for a voltage-feedback op amp. The difference here is that the total impedance in the denominator of Equation 15 may be controlled somewhat separately from the desired signal gain (or NG). The OPA2674 is internally compensated to give a maximally flat frequency response for R F = 42Ω at NG = 4 on ±6V supplies. Evaluating the denomi- 2

www.ti.com nator of Equation 15 (which is the feedback transimpedance) gives an optimal target of 49Ω. As the signal gain changes, the contribution of the NG R I term in the feedback transimpedance changes, but the total can be held constant by adjusting R F. Equation 16 gives an approximate equation for optimum R F over signal gain: R F 49 NG R I As the desired signal gain increases, this equation eventually suggests a negative R F. A somewhat subjective limit to this adjustment can also be set by holding R G to a minimum value of 2Ω. Lower values load both the buffer stage at the input and the output stage if R F gets too low actually decreasing the bandwidth. Figure 11 shows the recommended R F versus NG for both ±6V and a single +5V operation. The values for R F versus gain shown here are approximately equal to the values used to generate the Typical Characteristics. They differ in that the optimized values used in the Typical Characteristics are also correcting for board parasitic not considered in the simplified analysis leading to Equation 16. The values shown in Figure 11 give a good starting point for designs where bandwidth optimization is desired. 6 (16) SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28 INVERTING AMPLIFIER OPERATION As the OPA2674 is a general-purpose, wideband currentfeedback op amp, most of the familiar op amp application circuits are available to the designer. Those dual op amp applications that require considerable flexibility in the feedback element (for example, integrators, transimpedance, and some filters) should consider a unity-gain stable, voltage-feedback amplifier such as the OPA2822, because the feedback resistor is the compensation element for a current-feedback op amp. Wideband inverting operation (and especially summing) is particularly suited to the OPA2674. Figure 12 shows a typical inverting configuration where the I/O impedances and signal gain from Figure 1 are retained in an inverting circuit configuration. V I 5Ω Source R G 97.6Ω +6V 1/2 OPA2674 Power supply decoupling not shown. R F 92Ω V O 5Ω Load 5Ω Feedback Resistor (Ω) 5 4 2 ±6V +5V 5 1 15 2 25 Noise Gain R G =2Ω Figure 11. Feedback Resistor vs Noise Gain The total impedance going into the inverting input may be used to adjust the closed-loop signal bandwidth. Inserting a series resistor between the inverting input and the summing junction increases the feedback impedance (the denominator of Equation 15), decreasing the bandwidth. The internal buffer output impedance for the OPA2674 is slightly influenced by the source impedance coming from of the noninverting input terminal. High-source resistors also have the effect of increasing R I, decreasing the bandwidth. For those single-supply applications that develop a midpoint bias at the noninverting input through high valued resistors, the decoupling capacitor is essential for powersupply ripple rejection, noninverting input noise current shunting, and to minimize the high-frequency value for R I in Figure 1. R M 12Ω 6V Figure 12. Inverting Gain of 4 with Impedance Matching In the inverting configuration, two key design considerations must be noted. First, the gain resistor (R G ) becomes part of the signal source input impedance. If input impedance matching is desired (which is beneficial whenever the signal is coupled through a cable, twisted pair, long PCB trace, or other transmission line conductor), it is normally necessary to add an additional matching resistor to ground. R G, by itself, normally is not set to the required input impedance since its value, along with the desired gain, will determine an R F, which may be nonoptimal from a frequency response standpoint. The total input impedance for the source becomes the parallel combination of R G and R M. The second major consideration is that the signal source impedance becomes part of the noise gain equation and has a slight effect on the bandwidth through Equation 15. The values shown in Figure 12 have accounted for this by slightly decreasing R F (from the optimum values) to reoptimize the bandwidth for the noise gain of Figure 12 (NG =.98). In the example of Figure 12, the R M value combines in parallel with the external 5Ω source impedance, yielding an effective driving impedance of 5Ω 12Ω = 21

SBOS27C AUGUST 2 REVISED AUGUST 28.5Ω. This impedance is added in series with R G for calculating the noise gain which gives NG =.98. This value, and the inverting input impedance of 22Ω, are inserted into Equation 16 to get the R F that appears in Figure 12. Note that the noninverting input in this bipolar supply inverting application is connected directly to ground. It is often suggested that an additional resistor be connected to ground on the noninverting input to achieve bias current error cancellation at the output. The input bias currents for a current-feedback op amp are not generally matched in either magnitude or polarity. Connecting a resistor to ground on the noninverting input of the OPA2674 in the circuit of Figure 12 actually provides additional gain for that input bias and noise currents, but does not decrease the output DC error because the input bias currents are not matched. OUTPUT CURRENT AND VOLTAGE The OPA2674 provides output voltage and current capabilities that are unsurpassed in a low-cost dual monolithic op amp. Under no-load conditions at 25 C, the output voltage typically swings closer than 1V to either supply rail; the tested (+25 C) swing limit is within 1.1V of either rail. Into a 6Ω load (the minimum tested load), it delivers more than ±8mA. The specifications described previously, though familiar in the industry, consider voltage and current limits separately. In many applications, it is the voltage times current (or V I product) that is more relevant to circuit operation. Refer to the Output Voltage and Current Limitations plot in the Typical Characteristics (see page 9). The X and Y axes of this graph show the zero-voltage output current limit and the zero-current output voltage limit, respectively. The four quadrants give a more detailed view of the OPA2674 output drive capabilities, noting that the graph is bounded by a safe operating area of 1W maximum internal power dissipation (in this case, for one channel only). Superimposing resistor load lines onto the plot shows that the OPA2674 can drive ±4V into 1Ω or ±4.5V into 25Ω without exceeding the output capabilities or the 1W dissipation limit. A 1Ω load line (the standard test circuit load) shows the full ±5.V output swing capability, as stated in the Electrical Characteristics tables. The minimum specified output voltage and current over temperature are set by worst-case simulations at the cold temperature extreme. Only at cold startup will the output current and voltage decrease to the numbers shown in the Electrical Characteristics tables. As the output transistors deliver power, the junction temperatures increase, decreasing the V BE s (increasing the available output voltage swing), and increasing the current gains (increasing the available output current). In steady-state operation, the available output voltage and current will always be greater than that shown in the over-temperature specifications since the output stage junction temperatures will be higher than the minimum specified operating ambient. www.ti.com DRIVING CAPACITIVE LOADS One of the most demanding and yet very common load conditions for an op amp is capacitive loading. Often, the capacitive load is the input of an analog-to-digital (A/D) converter including additional external capacitance that may be recommended to improve the A/D converter linearity. A high-speed, high open-loop gain amplifier like the OPA2674 can be very susceptible to decreased stability and closed-loop response peaking when a capacitive load is placed directly on the output pin. When the amplifier open-loop output resistance is considered, this capacitive load introduces an additional pole in the signal path that can decrease the phase margin. Several external solutions to this problem have been suggested. When the primary considerations are frequency response flatness, pulse response fidelity, and/or distortion, the simplest and most effective solution is to isolate the capacitive load from the feedback loop by inserting a series isolation resistor between the amplifier output and the capacitive load. This does not eliminate the pole from the loop response, but rather shifts it and adds a zero at a higher frequency. The additional zero acts to cancel the phase lag from the capacitive load pole, thus increasing the phase margin and improving stability. The Typical Characteristics show the Recommended R S vs Capacitive Load and the resulting frequency response at the load. Parasitic capacitive loads greater than 2pF can begin to degrade the performance of the OPA2674. Long PC board traces, unmatched cables, and connections to multiple devices can easily cause this value to be exceeded. Always consider this effect carefully, and add the recommended series resistor as close as possible to the OPA2674 output pin (see the Board Layout Guidelines section). DISTORTION PERFORMANCE The OPA2674 provides good distortion performance into a 1Ω load on ±6V supplies. It also provides exceptional performance into lighter loads and/or operating on a single +5V supply. Generally, until the fundamental signal reaches very high frequency or power levels, the 2nd-harmonic dominates the distortion with a negligible rd-harmonic component. Focusing then on the 2nd-harmonic, increasing the load impedance improves distortion directly. Remember that the total load includes the feedback network in the noninverting configuration (see Figure 1), this is the sum of R F + R G ; in the inverting configuration, it is R F. Also, providing an additional supply decoupling capacitor (.1µF) between the supply pins (for bipolar operation) improves the 2nd-order distortion slightly (db to 6dB). In most op amps, increasing the output voltage swing directly increases harmonic distortion. The Typical Characteristics show the 2nd-harmonic increasing at a little less than the expected 2x rate, whereas the rd-harmonic increases at a little less than the expected x rate. Where the test power doubles, the difference between it and the 22