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The maximum output of the OPA1652 opamp is about +4.2V when it has a 5V supply and is sourcing a current of 850uA. You need it attenuated to 3.3V. The series 1k and 3.9k resistors at the output of the opamp are an attenuator: 4.2V/(1k + 3.9k)= 857uA. 857uA x 3.9k= 3.34V.
You know what? I was wrong. Its output does go to 0V in the circuit when the opamp has no load current which is what happens without a dual polarity supply.
The maximum output voltage is reduced when the load current is higher so you can play around reducing the value of a single load resistor to ground until the maximum output voltage is 3.3V (but it might cause distortion). Or you could use a buffer opamp for a lower resistance if you want.
You know what? I was wrong. Its output does go to 0V in the circuit when the opamp has no load current which is what happens without a dual polarity supply.
The maximum output voltage is reduced when the load current is higher so you can play around reducing the value of a single load resistor to ground until the maximum output voltage is 3.3V (but it might cause distortion). Or you could use a buffer opamp for a lower resistance if you want.