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Boosting a Frequency Generator Output

Andrew J
Andrew J over 4 years ago

My generator will output a 20Vp-p sine wave, resulting in a 7Vrms AC voltage (10V * 0.7)  I want to boost this to >=12Vrms AC and I thought an Op Amp would do that; if I use a gain of x2 that would suffice for my purpose.  The problem is I can't get it to work and I suspect I'm doing something stupid that I just can't see.  The Op Amp I have is a TI UA741

 

image

I don't care about quality nor if the signal is clipped - common mode input voltage range is +-13V at 15Vin and I could increase Vin to +-18V.  At the moment, I'm getting a wholly unexpected output which makes me think I'm doing something wrong.  I originally thought it was because I'd got the ground wrong but when I change the ground point of the Op Amp output to the Ground of the Function Generator, it still doesn't work AND channel 1 of the PSU oscillates between 0V and 32V! 

 

Is there a better way that I can do this with parts that I might have at hand?  Ultimately, I want to be able to variably alter the output voltage level to amounts < 12Vac and alter the frequency (hence why I thought using my frequency generator was a good idea)

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  • three-phase
    three-phase over 4 years ago +5 verified
    Hello Andrew, Some of my thoughts for you. Do you have the ground from the waveform generator connected to the ground for the op-amp? I would have thought all the grounds should be connected together,…
  • Andrew J
    Andrew J over 4 years ago in reply to shabaz +4
    Donald, Ralph: yes you were both right: 1K was too much of a load and it needed the generator -ve connecting to GNDREF. I'd wrongly assumed that would cause problems given that they belonged to two different…
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 4 years ago in reply to phoenixcomm +3 suggested
    phoenixcomm You're aiming for 115 * 5 = 575W minimum with a hope for double that. When I needed to do this last I bought a no name mega disco audio amplifier for about £200. It can manage about 1500W out…
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  • ralphjy
    0 ralphjy over 4 years ago

    I agree with Donald, what you trying to achieve is outside the capabilities of a 741.  From your description I think you’ve damaged the opamp.

     

    You could try a higher voltage opamp like a TI OPA990, but you probably don’t have one of those at hand.

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  • Andrew J
    0 Andrew J over 4 years ago in reply to ralphjy

    It seems ok at the moment - having removed the load - but I wouldn't rule it out.  I'm just not understanding why I'm putting in too high a voltage: +7Vac and I can't measure any DC voltage at the input.  It seems there's a capacitive effect on the output.  If I disconnect the DMM from the output for a few seconds, then reconnect, the output voltage jumps back up to x2 and then starts its decline.

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  • ralphjy
    0 ralphjy over 4 years ago in reply to Andrew J

    You definitely need to tie the generator ground to the op-amp ground - otherwise the two circuits are not referenced together (the input is floating).  Do you move your DMM ground when making measurements?

     

    Because you have 2X gain - if you put in +/-10V - the output will swing into the rails and the op-amp is not designed to do that.  It shouldn't damage it (unless it latches up), but if your negative supply really went to 32V that would have caused problems.  I think you're having measurement issues because the grounds are not connected.

     

    I guess I should clarify - by generator ground I mean the output negative reference from the generator should tie to the op-amp gndref.

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  • ralphjy
    0 ralphjy over 4 years ago in reply to Andrew J

    You definitely need to tie the generator ground to the op-amp ground - otherwise the two circuits are not referenced together (the input is floating).  Do you move your DMM ground when making measurements?

     

    Because you have 2X gain - if you put in +/-10V - the output will swing into the rails and the op-amp is not designed to do that.  It shouldn't damage it (unless it latches up), but if your negative supply really went to 32V that would have caused problems.  I think you're having measurement issues because the grounds are not connected.

     

    I guess I should clarify - by generator ground I mean the output negative reference from the generator should tie to the op-amp gndref.

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