Plecto
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The circuit has a negative feedback by inverting operation of the transistor. But it's unstable without additional compensation due to the additional transistor voltage gain. Please consider that universally compensated OPs (like TL082) are stable with feedback factors <=1 but not >1.The LM317 is configured for constant current, making the first transistor a high current voltage amplifier but the feedback goes back to the non-inverting input of the op-amp which probably accounts for the instability.
but the feedback goes back to the non-inverting input of the op-amp which probably accounts for the instability
The circuit has a negative feedback by inverting operation of the transistor. But it's unstable without additional compensation due to the additional transistor voltage gain. Please consider that universally compensated OPs (like TL082) are stable with feedback factors <=1 but not >1.
Are you saying that the transistor gain causes the instability? Shouldn't then a bigger value of R14 decrease the gain seen by the op-amp (the op-amp has to output a higher voltage) thus making it more stable?
As said before the circuit for setting the virtual "earth" is poor and will not work as expected.
Well look at the way the virtual ground is derived. The idea is that by biasing an op-amp, followed by a current providing stage, at mid rail voltage and using that as the ground reference, it will float the supply voltage equally above and below the reference. In the schematic there is no fixed current in the two output transistors and it relies on the second op-amp biasing one or the other transistor on to try to maintain mid-supply voltage. As the load on the rails changes, it has to move it's output enough positive to make the top transistor conduct or enough negative to make the bottom one conduct. It has to overcome the +/- 0.6V step before the transistors can conduct.
It would be more sensible to forget the second part of the amplifier altogether and connect the first stage bias to a pair of matched resistors between the + and - supplies. It will achieve the same effect.
The LM337 is not a good choice for a constant current source either. It's internal circuits need a decoupling capacitor across it's input to ground and obviously that will have bad consequences to your signal. There is also an issue of minimum current in these regulators. They do not work well at very low currents, that's why they normally specify low value resistors in the ADJ pin, it's to keep a small bleed current flowing through the voltage setting resistors. A constant current generator using a transistor with fixed B-E voltage would work better and be more stable.
The choice of NE5532 is bad one in this application because it has a maximum 0.6V differential input voltage because internally there are cross connected diodes between it's inverting and non-inverting inputs.
My previous comment about possible instability due to >1 feedback factor still holds. The "more complete" schematic still misses resistor values and load impedance, so at present it's just a guess that can't be verified.
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