
Application Introduction
(Continued)
has a typical short term settling time to 0.05% of 12ns for a
2V step. Also, the amplifier is virtually free of any long term
thermal tail effects at low gains.
When measuring settling time, a solid ground plane should
be used in order to reduce ground inductance which can
cause common-ground-impedance coupling. Power supply
and ground trace parasitic capacitances and the load ca-
pacitance will also affect settling time.
Placing a series resistor (R
) at the output pin is recom-
mended for optimal settling time performance when driving a
capacitive load. The Typical Performance plot labeled “R
S
and Settling Time vs. Capacitive Load” provides a means for
selecting a value of R
s
for a given capacitive load.
DC & NOISE PERFORMANCE
A current-feedback amplifier’s input stage does not have
equal nor correlated bias currents, therefore they cannot be
canceled and each contributes to the total DC offset voltage
at the output by the following equation:
The input resistance is the resistance looking from the non-
inverting input back toward the source. For inverting DC-
offset calculations, the source resistance seen by the input
resistor R
must be included in the output offset calculation
as a part of the non-inverting gain equation. Application note
OA-7 gives several circuits for DC offset correction. The
noise currents for the inverting and non-inverting inputs are
graphed in the Typical Performance plot labeled “Equivalent
Input Noise”. A more complete discussion of amplifier input-
referred noise and external resistor noise contribution can be
found in OA-12.
DIFFERENTIAL GAIN & PHASE
The LMH6715 can drive multiple video loads with very low
differential gain and phase errors. The Typical Performance
plots labeled “Differential Gain vs. Frequency” and “Differen-
tial Phase vs. Frequency” show performance for loads from
1 to 4. The Electrical Characteristics table also specifies
performance for one 150
load at 4.43MHz. For NTSC
video, the performance specifications also apply. Application
note OA-24 “Measuring and Improving Differential Gain &
Differential Phase for Video”, describes in detail the tech-
niques used to measure differential gain and phase.
I/O VOLTAGE & OUTPUT CURRENT
The usable common-mode input voltage range (CMIR) of
the LMH6715 specified in the Electrical Characteristics table
of the data sheet shows a range of
±
2.2 volts. Exceeding
this range will cause the input stage to saturate and clip the
output signal.
The output voltage range is determined by the load resistor
and the choice of power supplies. With
±
5 volts the classA/B
output driver will typically drive
±
3.9V into a load resistance
of 100
. Increasing the supply voltages will change the
common-mode input and output voltage swings while at the
same time increase the internal junction temperature.
Applications Circuits
SINGLE-TO-DIFFERENTIAL LINE DRIVER
The LMH6715’s well matchedAC channel-response allows a
single-ended input to be transformed to highly matched
push-pull driver. From a 1V single-ended input the circuit of
Figure 3
produces 1V differential signal between the two
outputs. For larger signals the input voltage divider (R
1
=
2R
2
) is necessary to limit the input voltage on channel 2.
DIFFERENTIAL LINE RECEIVER
Figure 4
and
Figure 5
show two different implementations of
an instrumentation amplifier which convert differential sig-
nals to single-ended.
Figure 5
allows CMRR adjustment
through R
2
.
20042945
FIGURE 3. Single-to-Differential Line Driver
20042946
FIGURE 4. Differential Line Receiver
L
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