Hawaslsh
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I am using a voltage controlled attenuator to try and achieve a specific power output from a VCO. The output from the attenuator is split and fed into a Schottky diode detection circuit. A non-inverting amplifier (U1) adds a gain of 10, and the output goes to another op-amp (U2) where there detected voltage is “compared” to a reference I provide through a potentiometer.
Initially I did not have the LPF network in the dashed box. When I probed the control voltage I saw U2’s output oscillating around some DC value at 15 KHz. Knowing the control voltage pin draws nearly no current, a very simple RC filter fixed the output to that DC value. Now the circuit produces a stable output at the expected level. However, there are still a few lingering issues.
The main issue being the voltage control pin (Vcont) on the variable attenuator can not go negative. If I am operating U2 with a dual supply, there are instances where U2 will place its output at the negative rail. The easiest solution is to operate U2 on a single supply, and that works ok. However, it significantly increases the time it takes to decrease Vcont and discharge the 10uF cap. I could easily change the LFP to avoid the large 10K resistor, but is there an alternate way to ensure the output of U2 never goes negative but keep U2 operating on a dual supply?
I’ve also been trying to understand the practical limit of how small a voltage U1 can amplify before its buried in noise. Assuming the output from the diode detection circuit is noise free, what's the limited factor U1’s performance? The datasheet for U1 has 3 noise specs at the bottom of page 4, I’m not too sure how to interpret them. I’m also not sure if that matters and if U1’s offset voltage would have more of an influence on this spec. Using test measurement equipment, I can measure changes in the diode detection circuit down to the 100uV range before it become indistinguishable to the presence of RF power.
Thanks in advance