Introductory Circuit Analysis (13th Edition)
13th Edition
ISBN: 9780133923605
Author: Robert L. Boylestad
Publisher: PEARSON
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- OAP 2 ( (a) Design a circuit which provides a gain of -5 V/V for an input voltage source vs. You have an op-amp powered at VDD = +5 V and Vss = -5 V. Design your circuit such that 1 µA is drawn from the input vs when Vs = 200 mV. Include a drawing of the circuit and label all resistors that you use with their respective values. (b) What is the op-amp output voltage when vs = 200 mV? OAP 3 (a) Design a circuit that provides a gain of +10 V/V for an input signal vs. Use 100 kn as the smaller/smallest resistor value in your design. Include a drawing of the circuit and label all resistors that you use with their respective values. (b) Assume the op-amp is powered at VDD = +15 V and Vss = -15 V. At what positive and negative values of vs will the output vo be +/-15 V? (c) What will happen if the values of vs go beyond the values from (b)?arrow_forwardPlease show all the work.arrow_forward1. Consider the ideal op-amp circuit below. Let Us = 0.1 V, R1 = R2 = R3 = R3 = 100 kN, and R4 = 98 kN, Solve for Vo. R1 RA R5 vo R2 Us R3arrow_forward
- OAP 5 Design an op-amp circuit using a single op-amp that adds two input signals V₁1 and Vs2. That is, Vo = Vs1 + Vs2. Each input signal can vary between -5 V and +5 V: -5 V ≤ Vs1 ≤ +5 V and -5 V ≤ Vs2 ≤ +5 V. Choose resistor values such that the maximum current leaving or entering either voltage source (vs1 or Vs2) is 1 mA. (You can assume the power rails VDD and Vss are large enough to accommodate the most extreme outputs.)arrow_forwardPlease show me how to do this problem and find the unknowns. Some of them are already given as this is an example problem. Thank you!arrow_forward
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