Suggests that the instability is caused by the combination of amplifiers, respectively insufficient bypassing of the combi.I put 100R in series and 1nF ceramic cap (forming LPF) at the non-inverting input. The high-frequency oscillation is gone and it's amplifying correctly.
I actually removed the OPA657 and testing OPA847 only with signal generator inputting from non-inverting input of opamp and measuring after 50R with an oscilloscope. As you said I tried different combinations of capacitors as the bypass but it, unfortunately, didn't help. Maybe the problem is in the layout?Suggests that the instability is caused by the combination of amplifiers, respectively insufficient bypassing of the combi.
Thank you, I will move de-coupling cap closer to the pins and add vias close to their ground connection and share the last version. I hope this time caps are close enough.New layout looks more promising.Pay attention to de-coupling capacitors ( they might be closer to IC ).
Add mode VIA closer to GND pins of de-coupling and make them as close as possible to ICs.
Thank you, I made them closer and put vias near caps and R1 ground connection. Put jumper wire across the central pour gap, I understood as connecting regular breadboard jumper wire to ground on both sides and laying it over the central gap.Can be a layout problem. I would try vias (may be implemented as drilled holes with wires soldered at both sides) next to each high-frequency bypass capacitor + R1 and a jumper wire across the central ground pour gap.
Can you do scope screen captures and pics of actual board and probing
for the pics ? Model of scope and probe ?
Regards, Dana.
Hi,
And we need to see the scope setup.
Klaus
Yes, I tried removing negative, positive, and both.Have you tried remove ferritebead on negative side ?
Hi,
I neither can't see the numbers on your scope, nor is the timing setup useful to recognize the waveform.
Klaus
You are a lifesaver d123Hi,
It looks like you are possibly using 'the pointy hat'/'the witches hat' for the ground probe connection. Not recommended.
Power Tip #6 (see figure 2)
Short Ground Leads (see figure 7)
why is there a big hole in the gnd plane under the chips ... ?
--- Updated ---
and 10uf MLCC on the board for the supply ... ?
Maybe if you use correct terms people will understand you. what do you mean by hole, there are many types of holes(via is also a hole), be more specific. Do you mean "polygon cut out"? So far you have been useless, maybe you should just not write here.perhaps you are dyslexic? hole in the gnd plane under the chips ...
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