1
LT1166
Power Output Stage
Automatic Bias System
FEATURES
Set Class AB Bias Currents
Eliminates Adjustments
Eliminates Thermal Runaway of I
Q
Corrects for Device Mismatch
Simplifies Heat Sinking
Programmable Current Limit
May Be Paralleled for Higher Current
Small SO-8 or PDIP Package
The LT
®
1166 is a bias generating system for controlling
class AB output current in high powered amplifiers. When
connected with external transistors, the circuit becomes a
unity-gain voltage follower. The LT1166 is ideally suited
for driving power MOSFET devices because it eliminates
all quiescent current adjustments and critical transistor
matching. Multiple output stages using the LT1166 can be
paralleled to obtain higher output current.
Thermal runaway of the quiescent point is eliminated
because the bias system senses the current in each power
transistor by using a small external sense resistor. A high
speed regulator loop controls the amount of drive applied
to each power device. The LT1166 can be biased from a pair
of resistors or current sources and because it operates on the
drive voltage to the output transistors, it operates on any
supply voltage.
DESCRIPTION
U
Biasing Power MOSFETs
High Voltage Amplifiers
Shaker Table Amplifiers
Audio Power Amplifiers
APPLICATIONS
U
Unity Gain Buffer Amp Driving 1 Load
INPUT
OUTPUT
0V
0V
, LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation.
TYPICAL APPLICATION
U
7
3
6
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
1µF
1µF
1k
1k
R3
100
R
SENSE
0.33
R
SENSE+
0.33
1
V
OUT
4I
BOTTOM
= 15mA
1I
TOP
= 15mA
300pF
R2
100
300pF
IRF9530
IRF530
2N2222
R4
10047
MPS2222
+
220µF
2N2907
R1
100
MPS2907
+
220µF
15V
15V
5.6k
V
IN
V
IN
4.3k 2
1166 • F01
SENSE
5
SENSE
+
8
47
Figure 1. Unity Gain Buffer with Current Limit
1166 • TA01
2
LT1166
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
W
WW
U
PACKAGE/ORDER INFORMATION
W
UU
ORDER PART
NUMBER
Supply Current (Pin 1 or Pin 4) ............................ 75mA
Differential Voltage (Pin 2 to Pin 3) ......................... ±6V
Output Short-Circuit Duration (Note 1).........Continuous
Specified Temperature Range (Note 2)........ 0°C to 70°C
Operating Temperature Range ................ 40°C to 85°C
Storage Temperature Range ................. 65°C to 150°C
Junction Temperature (Note 3)............................ 150°C
Lead Temperature (Soldering, 10 sec).................. 300°C
S8 PART MARKING
1166
T
JMAX
= 150°C, θ
JA
= 100°C/ W (N8)
T
JMAX
= 150°C, θ
JA
= 150°C/ W (S8)
Consult factory for Industrial and Military grade parts.
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
Output Offset Voltage Operating Current 15mA to 50mA 50 250 mV
Input Bias Current Operating Current 15mA to 50mA (Note 4) 210µA
Input Resistance Operating Current 15mA to 50mA (Note 5) 215 M
V
AB
(Top) Measure Pin 8 to Pin 3, No Load 14 20 26 mV
V
AB
(Bottom) Measure Pin 5 to Pin 3, No Load 14 20 26 mV
Voltage Compliance Operating Current = 50mA (Notes 6, 9) ±2±10 V
Current Compliance Operating Voltage = ±2V ±4±50 mA
Transconductance (Note 7)
gm
CC2
Pin 1 = 2V, Pin 4 = – 2V 0.08 0.100 0.13 mho
gm
EE2
Pin 1 = 2V, Pin 4 = –2V 0.08 0.100 0.13 mho
gm
CC10
Pin 1 = 10V, Pin 4 = –10V 0.09 0.125 0.16 mho
gm
EE10
Pin 1 = 10V, Pin 4 = –10V 0.09 0.125 0.16 mho
PSRR
CC
(Note 8) 19 dB
PSRR
EE
(Note 8) 19 dB
Current Limit Voltage Operating Current 15mA to 50mA
Pin 7 Voltage to Pin 3 1.0 1.3 1.5 V
Pin 6 Voltage to Pin 3 –1.0 –1.3 –1.5 V
The denotes specifications which apply over the full operating
temperature range.
Note 1: External power devices may require heat sinking.
Note 2: Commercial grade parts are designed to operate over the
temperature range of –40°C to 85°C but are neither tested nor guaranteed
beyond 0°C to 70°C. Industrial grade parts specified and tested over
–40°C and 85°C are available on special request, consult factory.
Note 3: T
J
calculated from the ambient temperature T
A
and the power
dissipation P
D
according to the following formulas:
LT1166CN8: T
J
= T
A
+ (P
D
• 100°C/W)
LT1166CS8: T
J
= T
A
+ (P
D
• 150°C/W)
Note 4: I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
Note 5: The input resistance is typically 15M when the loop is closed.
When the loop is open (current limit) the input resistance drops to 200
referred to Pin 3.
Note 6: Maximum T
J
can be exceeded with 50mA operating current and
simultaneous 10V and –10V (20V total).
Note 7: Apply ±200mV to Pin 2 and measure current change in Pin 1
and 4. Pin 3 is grounded.
Note 8:
Note 9: For Linear Operation, Pin 1 must not be less than 2V or more than
10V from Pin 3. Similarly, Pin 4 must not be less than 2V or more than
10V from Pin 3.
Pin 1 = 2V, Pin 4 = –2V, Operating current 15mA and RIN = 20k, unless otherwise specified.
1
2
3
4
8
7
6
5
TOP VIEW
V
TOP
V
IN
V
OUT
V
BOTTOM
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
I
LIM
SENSE
N8 PACKAGE
8-LEAD PDIP S8 PACKAGE
8-LEAD PLASTIC SO
+1
PSRR
CC
= gm
CC2
– gm
CC10
gm
CC2
PSRR
EE
= gm
EE2
– gm
EE10
gm
EE2
LT1166CN8
LT1166CS8
3
LT1166
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
UW
Input Bias Current vs
Current Source Mismatch
CURRENT SOURCE MISMATCH (%)
–10
INPUT BIAS CURRENT (µA)
5.0 0 5.0 10
LT1166 • TPC01
150
100
50
0
50
100
150 7.5 2.5 2.5 7.5
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 50mA
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 4mA
TEMPERATURE (°C)
–50
OUTPUT OFFSET VOLTAGE (mV)
60
55
50
45
40
35
30 25 75
LT1166 • TPC03
–25 0 50 100 125
R
L
=
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 15mA 
R
IN
= 4.3k
Output Offset Voltage vs
Temperature
Output Offset Voltage vs
Current Source Mismatch
Input Bias Current vs
Temperature
TEMPERATURE (°C)
–50
INPUT BIAS CURRENT (µA)
3.0
2.9
2.8
2.7
2.6
2.5
2.4
2.3
2.2
2.1
2.0 050 75
LT1166 • TPC04
–25 25 100 125
R
L
=
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 15mA
R
IN
= 4.3k
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
–10
OUTPUT VOLTAGE SWING (V)
10
8
6
4
2
0
–2
–4
–6
–8
–10 6
LT1166 • TPC05
–6–8 –4 0 4 8
–2 210
R
IN
= 4.3k
C
1
= C
2
= 500pF
R
L
= 10
SEE FIGURE 8
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 12mA
R
TOP
= R
BOTTOM
= 1k
Output Voltage vs Input Voltage Open-Loop Voltage Gain vs
Frequency
Closed-Loop Voltage Gain vs
Frequency Current Limit Pin Voltage vs
Temperature
FREQUENCY (MHz)
GAIN (dB)
2
1
0
–1
–2
–3
–4
–5
–6
–7
–8
0.001 0.1 1 10
LT1166 • TPC07
0.01
V
S
= ±15V
R
IN
= 4.3k
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 12mA
C
1
= C
2
= 500pF
SEE FIGURE 8
R
L
=
R
L
=10
Voltage Across Sense Resistors
vs Temperature
TEMPERATURE (°C)
–50
VOLTAGE DROP ACROSS SENSE RESISTORS (mV)
24
22
20
18
16
16
18
20
22
–24 050 75
LT1166 • TPC08
–25 25 100 125
SENSE
+
SENSE
TEMPERATURE (°C)
–50
I
LIM
PIN VOLTAGE REFERENCED TO V
OUT
(V)
1.25
1.20
1.15
1.15
1.20
1.25 050 75
LT1166 • TPC09
–25 25 100 125
PIN 7 TO PIN 3
PIN 6 TO PIN 3
V
IN
= ±1.5V
I
TOP
AND I
BOTTOM
MISMATCH (mA)
1.0
OUTPUT OFFSET VOLTAGE (mV)
1.0
LT1166 • TPC02
0.5 00.5
800
600
400
200
0
200
400
600
800 0.75 0.25 0.25 0.75
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 50mA
R
IN
= 20k
R
IN
= 2k
FREQUENCY (MHz)
GAIN (dB)
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
–5
10
15
–20
0.001 0.1 1 10
LT1166 • TPC06
0.01
V
S
= ±15V
R
IN
= 4.3k
I
TOP
= I
BOTTOM
= 12mA
C
1
= C
2
= 500pF
SEE FIGURE 8
R
L
=
R
L
=10
4
LT1166
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
UW
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
0
INPUT TRANSCONDUCTANCE (mhos)
0.120
0.110
0.100
0.090
0.080
0.080
0.090
0.100
0.110
0.120 8
LT1166 • TPC10
213579
4610
V
IN
= ±200mV
R
L
= 0
R
IN
= 0
125°C
25°C
–55°C
125°C
–55°C
25°C
gm
CC
gm
EE
Input Transconductance vs
Supply Voltage
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
1086420246810
SENSE PIN VOLTAGE REFERENCED TO V
OUT
(mV)
LT1166 • TPC12
1000
100
10
1
R
SENSE
= 100
V
BOTTOM
V
TOP
SINKING SOURCING
Sense Pin Voltage Referenced to
VOUT vs Load Current
FREQUENCY (kHz)
0.1
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (%)
1
0.01 1 10 100
LT1166 • TPC11
0.01 0.1
10
RL = 10
PO = 1W
SEE FIGURE 8
Total Harmonic Distortion vs
Frequency
PIN FUNCTIONS
UUU
V
TOP
(Pin 1): Pin 1 establishes the top side drive voltage
for the output transistors. Operating supply current enters
Pin 1 and a portion biases internal circuitry; Pin 1 current
should be greater than 4mA. Pin 1 voltage is internally
clamped to 12V with respect to V
OUT
and the pin current
should be limited to 75mA maximum.
V
IN
(Pin 2): Pin 2 is the input to a unity gain buffer which
drives V
OUT
(Pin 3). During a fault condition (short circuit)
the input impedance drops to 200 and the input current
must be limited to 5mA or V
IN
to V
OUT
limited to less than
±6V.
V
OUT
(Pin 3): Pin 3 of the LT1166 is the output of a voltage
control loop that maintains the output voltage at the input
voltage.
V
BOTTOM
(Pin 4): Pin 4 establishes the bottom side drive
voltage for the output transistors. Operating supply cur-
rent exits this pin; Pin 4 current should be greater than
4mA. Pin 4 voltage is internally clamped to –12V with
respect to V
OUT
and the pin current should be limited to
75mA maximum.
SENSE
(Pin 5): The Sense
pin voltage is established
by the current control loop and it controls the output
quiescent current in the bottom side power device. Limit
the maximum differential voltage between Pin 5 and Pin 3
to ±6V during fault conditions.
I
LIM
(Pin 6): The negative side current limit, limits the
voltage at V
BOTTOM
to V
OUT
during a negative fault condi-
tion. The maximum reverse voltage on Pin 6 with respect
to V
OUT
is 6V.
I
LIM+
(Pin 7): The positive side current limit, limits the
voltage at V
TOP
to V
OUT
during a positive fault condition.
The maximum reverse voltage on Pin 7 with respect to
V
OUT
is –6V.
SENSE
+
(Pin 8): The Sense
+
pin voltage is established by
the current control loop and it controls the output quies-
cent current in the top side power device. Limit the
maximum differential voltage between Pin 8 and Pin 3 to
±6V during fault conditions.
5
LT1166
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
Overvoltage Protection
The supplies V
TOP
(Pin 1) and V
BOTTOM
(Pin 4) have clamp
diodes that turn on when they exceed ±12V. These diodes
act as ESD protection and serve to protect the LT1166
when used with large power MOS devices that produce
high V
GS
voltage. Current into Pin 1 or Pin 4 should be
limited to ±75mA maximum.
Multiplier Operation
Figure 2 shows the current multiplier circuit internal to the
LT1166 and how it works in conjunction with power
output transistors. The supply voltages V
T
(top) and V
B
(bottom) of the LT1166 are set by the required “on”
voltage of the power devices. A reference current I
REF
sets
a constant V
BE7
and V
BE8
. This voltage is across emitter
base of Q9 and Q10 which are 1/10 the emitter area of Q7
and Q8. The expression for this current multiplier is:
V
BE7
+ V
BE8
= V
BE9
+ V
BE10
or in terms of current:
(I
C9
)(I
C10
) = (I
REF
)
2
/100 = Constant
The product of I
C9
and I
C10
is constant. These currents are
mirrored and set the voltage on the (+) inputs of a pair of
internal op amps. The feedback of the op amps force the
same voltage on the (–) inputs and these voltages then
appear on the sense resistors in series with the power
devices. The product of the two currents in the power
devices is constant, as one increases the other decreases.
The excellent logging nature of Q9 and Q10 allows this
relation to hold over many decades in current.
The total current in Q7 and Q8 is actually the sum of I
REF
and a small error current from the shunt regulator. During
high output current conditions the error current from the
regulator decreases. Current conducted by the regulator
also decreases allowing V
T
or V
B
to increase by an amount
needed to drive the power devices.
Driving the Input Stage
Figure 3 shows the input transconductance stage of the
LT1166 that provides a way to drive V
T
and V
B
. When a
positive voltage V
IN
is applied to R
IN
, a small input current
flows into R2 and the emitter of Q2. This effect causes V
O
to follow V
IN
within the gain error of the amplifier. The
input current is then mirrored by Q3/Q4 and current
supplied to Q4’s collector is sourced by power device M1.
The signal current in Q4’s emitter is absorbed by external
resistor R
B
and this causes V
B
to rise by the same amount
Figure 2. Constant Product Generator
V
AB+
V
AB
1k
1k
1
1
8
1
3
5
4
V
O
V
V
+
Q7
× 10
Q8
× 10
Q9
× 1
Q10
× 1
R
B
1k
R
T
1k
+
+
M
2
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
I
REF
I
REF
10
SHUNT
REGULATOR
1166 • F02
M
1
1
1
R1
R2
1
3
4
V
O
V
V
+
Q11
Q12
Q1
Q2
R
B
1k
R
T
1k
M
2
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
1166 • F03
Q4
× 32
Q6
× 32
Q3
× 1
Q5
× 1
C
EXT1
V
IN
R
IN
C
EXT2
2
M
1
Figure 3. Input Stage Driving Gates
6
LT1166
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
as V
IN
. Similarly for V
T
, when positive voltage is applied to
R
IN
, current that was flowing in R1 and Q1 is now supplied
through R
IN
. This effect reduces the current in mirror Q5/
Q6. The reduced current has the effect of reducing the drop
on R
T
, and V
T
rises to make V
O
track V
IN
.
The open-loop voltage gain V
O
/(V
IN
– V
PIN2
) can be
increased by replacing R
T
and R
B
with current sources.
The effect of this is to increase the voltage gain V
OUT
/ V
IN
from approximately 0.8 to 1 (see Typical Performance
Characteristics curves). The use of current sources in-
stead of resistors greatly increases loop gain and this
compensates for the nonlinearity of the output stage
resulting in much lower distortion.
Frequency Compensation and Stability
The input transconductance is set by the input resistor R
IN
and the 32:1 current mirrors Q3/Q4 and Q5/Q6. The
resistors R1 and R2 are small compared to the value of
R
IN
. Current in R
IN
appears 32 times larger in Q4 or Q6,
which drive external compensation capacitors C
EXT1
and
C
EXT2
. These two input signal paths appear in parallel to
give an input transconductance of:
g
m
= 16/R
IN
The gain bandwidth is:
GBW = 16
2π(R
IN
)(C
EXT
)
Depending on the speed of the output devices, typical
values are R
IN
= 4.3k and C
EXT1
= C
EXT2
= 500pF giving a
3dB bandwidth of 1.2MHz (see Typical Performance
Characteristics curves).
To prevent instability it is important to provide good
supply bypassing as shown in Figure 1. Large supply
bypass capacitors (220µF) and short power leads can
eliminate instabilities at these high current levels. The
100 resistors (R2 and R3) in series with the gates of the
output devices stop oscillations in the 100MHz region as do
the 100 resistors R1 and R4 in Figure 1.
Driving Capacitive Loads
Ideally, amplifiers have enough phase margin that they
don’t oscillate but just slow down with capacitive loads.
Practically, amplifiers that drive significant power require
some isolation from heavy capacitive loads to prevent
oscillation. This isolation is normally an inductor in series
with the output of the amplifier. A 1µH inductor in parallel
with a 10 resistor is sufficient for many applications.
Setting Output AB Bias Current
Setting the output AB quiescent current requires no ad-
justments. The internal op amps force V
AB
= ±20mV
between each Sense (Pins 5 and 8) to the Output (Pin 3).
At quiescent levels the output current is set by:
I
AB
= 20mV/R
SENSE
The LT1166 does not require a heat sink or mounting on
the heat sink for thermal tracking. The temperature coef-
ficient of V
AB
is approximately 0.3%/°C and is set by the
junction temperature of the LT1166 and not the tempera-
ture of the power transistors.
Output Offset Voltage and Input Bias Current
The output offset voltage is a function of the value of R
IN
and the mismatch between external current sources I
TOP
and I
BOTTOM
(see the Typical Performance Characteristics
curves). Any error in I
TOP
and I
BOTTOM
match is reduced
by the 32:1 input current mirror, but is multiplied by the
input resistor R
IN
.
Current Limit
The voltage to activate the current limit is ±1.3V. The
simplest way to protect the output transistors is to con-
nect the Current Limit pins 6 and 7 to the Sense pins 5 and
8. A current limit of 1.3A can be set by using 1 sense
resistors. To keep the current limit circuit from oscillating
in hard limit, it is necessary to add an RC (1k and 1µF)
between the Sense pin and the I
LIM
as shown in Figure 1.
The sense resistors can be tapped up or down to increase
or decrease the current limit without changing AB bias
current in the power transistors. Figure 4 demonstrates
7
LT1166
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
how tapping the sense resistors gives twice the limit
current or one half the limit current.
Foldback current limit can be added to the normal or
“square” current limit by including two resistors (30k
typical) from the power supplies to the I
LIM
pins as shown
in Figure 5. With square current limit the maximum output
current is independent of the voltage across the power
devices. Foldback limit simply makes the output current
dependent on output voltage. This scheme puts dissipa-
tion limits on the output devices. The larger the voltage
across the power device, the lower the available output
current. This is represented in Figure 6, Output Voltage vs
Output Current for the circuit of Figure 5.
Driving the Shunt Regulator
It is possible to current drive the shunt regulator directly
without driving the input transconductance stage. This
has the advantage of higher speed and eliminates the need
to compensate the g
m
stage. With Pin 2 floating, the
LT1166 can be placed inside a feedback loop and
driven through the biasing current sources. The input
transconductance stage remains biased but has no effect
on circuit operation. The R
L
in Figure 7 is used to modu-
late the op amp supply current with input signal. This op
amp functions as a V-to-I with the supply leads acting as
current source outputs. The load resistor and the positive
input of the op amp are connected to the output of the
LT1166 for feedback to set A
V
= 1V/V. The capacitor C
F
eliminates output V
OS
due to mismatch between I
TOP
and
I
BOTTOM
, and it also forms a pole at DC and a zero at
1/R
F
C
F
. The zero frequency is selected to give a –1V/V
gain in the op amp before the phase of the MOSFETs
degenerate the stability of the loop.
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
–
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
0.5
0.5
1
V
OUT
V+
V
4
1
V
IN
V
IN
R
IN
2
1166 • F04
1
(2)(I
LIM
)
(1/2)(I
LIM
)
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
1µF
1µF
1k
1k
100
10
10
30k
30k
V
OUT
4
1
100
IRFR9024
IRFR024
15V
15V
V
IN
5.1k 2
1166 • F05
+
330pF
330pF
20mA
20mA
mA
Figure 5. Unity Gain Buffer Amp with Foldback Current Limit
Figure 4. Tapping Current Limit Resistors
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
–10
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
200
160
120
80
40
0
40
80
120
160
200 6
LT1166 • F06
–6–8 –4 0 4 8
–2 210
SQUARE I
LIM+
SQUARE I
LIM
FOLDBACK I
LIM+
FOLDBACK I
LIM
Figure 6. Output Current vs Output Voltage
8
LT1166
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
APPLICATION CIRCUITS
Bipolar Buffer
Similar to the unity gain buffer in Figure 1, the LT1166 can
be used to bias bipolar transistors as shown in Figure 8.
The minimum operating voltage for the LT1166 is ±2V, so
it is necessary to bias the part with adequate voltage from
the output stage. The simplest way to do this is to use
Darlington drivers and series diodes. There are no thermal
tracking circuits or adjustments necessary and the LT1166
does not need to be mounted on the heat sink with the
power devices. R
TOP
and R
BOTTOM
can be used to replace
I
TOP
and I
BOTTOM
; see Typical Characteristics curves.
Figure 8. Bipolar Buffer Amp
Figure 7. Current Source Drive
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
1
1
V
OUT
4
1
M2
M1
V
+
V
V
IN
V
IN
R
IN
2
1166 • F07
I
T
I
B
+
R
L
R
F
C
F
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
100
1
1
150
150
10
V
OUT
4
I
BOT
=
15mA
1
I
TOP
=
15mA 100
2N2222
47
100
2N2222
+
220µF
2N2907
47
100
2N2907
+
220µF
15V
15V
5.6k
V
IN
V
IN
4.7k 2
1166 • F08
500pF
TIP29
2N2222
IN4001
IN4001
500pF
TIP30
2N2907
R
TOP
R
BOTTOM
9
LT1166
Adding Voltage Gain
The circuit in Figure 9 adds voltage gain to the circuit in
Figure 1. At low frequency the LT1166 is in the feedback loop of the LT1360 so the gain error and the V
OS
are
reduced and the closed-loop gain is 10V/V.
Figure 10. Power Amp Driving 1 Load Figure 11. Power Amp at 6A Current Limit
INPUT
OUTPUT
INPUT
OUTPUT
0V
0V
0V
0V
Figure 9. Power Op Amp AV = 10
7
3
6
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
LT1166
V
T
V
BOT
100
0.33
0.33
1
4
15mA
1
15mA
100
MPS2222
110
110
5.1k
5.1k
+
440µF
15V
15V
V
IN
39k 2
1166 • F09
300pF
300pF
MPS2907
IRF530
IRF9530
1µF
1µF
1k
1k
LT1004-2.5
LT1004
2.5
+
C
F
500pF 0.1µF
0.1µF
1k LT1360
76
4
3
2
909
500pF
100
+
440µF
SENSE
+
SENSE
8
5
V
IN
V
OUT
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
1166 • F10 1166 • F11
10
LT1166
1A Adjustable Voltage Reference
The circuit in Figure 12 uses the LT1166 in a feedback loop
with the LT1431 to make a voltage reference with an
“attitude.” This 5V reference can drive ±1A and maintain
0.4% tolerance at the output. If other output voltages are
desired, external resistors can be used instead of the
LT1431’s internal 5k resistors.
HIGH VOLTAGE APPLICATION CIRCUITS
In order to use op amps in high voltage applications it is
necessary to use techniques that confine the amplifier’s
common mode voltage to its output. The following appli-
cations utilize amplifiers operating in suspended-supply
operation (Figure 13). See “Linear Technology Magazine”
Volume IV Number 2 for a discussion of suspended
supplies. The gain setting resistors used in suspended-
supply operation must be tight tolerance or the gain will be
wrong. For example: with 1% resistors the gain can be as
far off as 75%, but with 0.1% resistors that error is cut to
less than 5%. Using the values shown in Figure 13, the
formula for computing the gain is:
A
V
= = –11.22
R8(R9 + R10)
(R8 • R9) – (R7 • R10)
OUT
1166 • F13
+
R8
1k
R7
10k
R9
9.1k
R10
1k
IN
Figure 13. Op Amp in Suspended-Supply Operation
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
100
1
1
5k
5k
4
1
100
12V
V
IN
2k
1387
65
4
1166 • F12
1µF
1µF
1k
1k
100
100
12V
12V
220µF
+
5V
OUT
2
1k
COLV
+
2.5V
REF
R
TOP
R
MID
GND/SENSE

GND
FORCE
+
LT1431 IRF9530
IRF530
Figure 12. ±1A, 5V Voltage Reference
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
11
LT1166
Parallel Operation
Parallel operation is an effective way to get more output
power by connecting multiple power drivers. All that is
required is a small ballast resistor to ensure current
sharing between the drivers and an isolation inductor to
keep the drivers apart at high frequency. In Figure 14 one
power slice can deliver ±6A at 100V
PK
, or 300W RMS into
16. The addition of another slice boosts the power
output to 600W RMS into 8 and the addition of two or
more drivers theoretically raises the power output to
1200W RMS into 4. Due to IR loss across the sense
resistors, the FET R
ON
resistance at 10A, and some
sagging of the power supply, the circuit of Figure 14
actually delivers 350W RMS into 8. Performance photos
and a THD vs frequency plot are included in Figure 15
through 18. Frequency compensation is provided by the
2k input resistor, 180µH inductor and the 1nF compensa-
tion capacitors. The common node in the auxiliary power
supplies is connected to amplifier output to generate the
floating ±15V supplies.
Figure 14. 350W Shaker Table Amplifier
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
R11
100
R4
0.22R17
0.22
R3
0.22
4
1
R2
100
2N3904
R12
100
R1
100
V
IN
R
IN
2k 2
1166 • F14
1nF
1nF
2N3906
IRF230
C1
1µF
C2
1µF
R5
1k
R6
1k
+
LT1360
7
6
4
3
2
100V
–100V
L1**
0.4µH
L3***
1.5µH
180µH
FB
FB
POWER SLICE
POWER SLICE
R8*
1k
R7*
10k
R15
390
R10*
1k
R9*
9.1k
C4
0.1µF
LT1004-2.5
LT1004-2.5
15V
15V
V
IN
R13
200
C3
3300pF
R16
390
+
10µF
+
10µF
R14
1k
1
10A
FAST-BLOW
V
OUT
+
C5
220µF
25V
+
C6
220µF
25V
C7
1000µF
35V
C8
1000µF
35V 15V
15V
~
~
+
110V
AC
DIODE
BRIDGE
+
+
7815
7915
0.1% RESISTORS
4 TURNS T37-52 (MICROMETALS)
6 TURNS T80-52 (MICROMETALS)
*
**
***
12.5V
12.5V
IRF9240
AUXILARY SUPPLIES
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
12
LT1166
100W Audio Power Amplifier
The details of a low distortion audio amplifier are shown in
Figure 19. The LT1360, designated U1, was chosen for its
good CMRR and is operated in suspended-supply mode at
a closed-loop gain of –26.5V/V. The ±15V supplies of U1
are effectively bootstrapped by the output at point D and
are generated as shown in Figure 14. A 3V
P-P
signal at V
IN
will cause an 80V
PP
output at point A. Resistors 7 to 10 set
the gain of –26.5V/V of U1, while C1 compensates for the
additional pole generated by the CMRR of U1. The rest of
the circuit (point A to point D) is an ultralow distortion
unity-gain buffer.
The main component in the unity-gain buffer is U4
(LT1166). This controller performs two important func-
tions, first it modifies the DC voltage between the gates of
M1 and M2 by keeping the product of the voltage across
R20 and R21 constant. Its secondary role is to perform
current limit, protecting M1 and M2 during short circuit.
The function of U3 is to drive the gates of M1 and M2. This
amplifier’s real output is not point C as it appears, but
rather the Power Supply pins. Current through R6 is used
to modulate the supply current and thus provide drive to
V
TOP
and V
BOTTOM
. Because the output impedance of U3
(through its supply pins) is very high, it is not able to drive
the capacitive inputs of M1 and M2 with the combination
of speed and accuracy needed to have very low distortion
at 20kHz. The purposes of U2 are to drive the gate
capacitance of M1 and M2 through its low output imped-
ance and to reduce the nonlinearty of the M1 and M2
transconductance. R24, C4 set a frequency above which
U2 no longer looks after U3 and U4, but just looks after
itself as its gain goes through unity. R1/R2 and C2/C3 are
compensation components for the CMRR feedthough.
Curves showing the performance of the amplifier are
shown in Figures 20 through 22.
FREQUENCY (Hz)
10
0.01
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (%)
0.1
1.0
1k 100k
100 10k
LT1166 • F18
PO = 350W
RL = 8
Figure 18. THD vs Frequency
Figure 16. Clipping at 1kHz, RL = 8
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
1166 • F15
Figure 15. 0.3% THD at 10kHz, PO = 350W, RL = 8
1166 • F16
1166 • F17
Figure 17. 2kHz Square-Wave, CL = 1µF
13
LT1166
8
7
3
6
5
SENSE
+
I
LIM+
V
OUT
I
LIM
SENSE
U4
LT1166
V
TOP
V
BOTTOM
R21
0.22
R20
0.22
4
1
R18
100
R14
500
R17
500
V
IN
2
1166 • F18
M1
IRF530
M2
IRF9530
C10
1µF
C11
1µF
R19
1k
R22
1k
+
U3
LT1360
7
6
4
3
2
L1
1µH
R4
1k
LT1009-2.5
LT1009-2.5
R23
10
V
OUT
C14
0.1µFC15
22µF
+
C6
22µF
+
–50V
C12
0.1µFC13
22µF
+
50V
C7
0.01µF
R5
3.3k
C5
3300pF
R16
30
C9
0.01µF
R13
30R15
100
+
15V**
2N3904
R12
100
C8
22µF
+
+
15V**
2N3906
R11
100
R3
10k
+
U2
LT1363
7
6
4
3
2
C2
470pF
R2
100
R1
100
C4
20pF
C3
470pF
C
B
A
R24
2.4k
+
7
6
4
3
2
U1
LT1360
R10*
1k
R8*
1k
R9*
9.6k
R7*
10k
C1
10pF
D
* 0.1% RESISTORS
** SEE POWER SUPPLY OF FIGURE 13
R6
160
V
IN
Figure 19. 100W Audio Amplifier
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
14
LT1166
R
L
= 8
f = 8kHz R
L
= 8
f = 20kHz
Figure 20. Square Wave Response Into 8Figure 21. 100W 20kHz Sine Wave and Its Distortion
FREQUENCY (Hz)
10
0.001
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (%)
0.01
0.1
1k 100k100 10k
LT1166 • F21
RL = 8
POWER OUT = 100W
Figure 22. THD vs Frequency
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU U
1166 • F20 1166 • F21
15
LT1166
SCHEMATIC
WW
SI PLIFIED
V
AB+
V
AB
1k
1k
R1
200
R2
200
8
7
1
3
2
5
6
4
Q7
× 10
Q8
× 10
Q9
× 1
Q10
× 1
+
+
Q11
Q12
Q1
Q2
I
REF
I
REF
10
SHUNT
REGULATOR
1166 • SS
Q4
× 32 Q3
× 1
Q6
× 32 Q5
× 1
V
TOP
SENSE
+
V
BOTTOM
SENSE
I
LIM
V
OUT
I
LIM+
V
IN
N8 0695
0.005
(0.127)
MIN
0.100 ± 0.010
(2.540 ± 0.254)
0.065
(1.651)
TYP
0.045 – 0.065
(1.143 – 1.651)
0.130 ± 0.005
(3.302 ± 0.127)
0.015
(0.380)
MIN
0.018 ± 0.003
(0.457 ± 0.076)
0.125
(3.175)
MIN
12 34
8765
0.255 ± 0.015*
(6.477 ± 0.381)
0.400*
(10.160)
MAX
0.009 – 0.015
(0.229 – 0.381)
0.300 – 0.325
(7.620 – 8.255)
0.325 +0.025
0.015
+0.635
0.381
8.255
()
*THESE DIMENSIONS DO NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH OR PROTRUSIONS.
MOLD FLASH OR PROTRUSIONS SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.010 INCH (0.254mm)
Dimensions in inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted.
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION
U
N8 Package
8-Lead PDIP (Narrow 0.300)
(LTC DWG # 05-08-1510)
Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no represen-
tation that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights.
16
LT1166
Linear Technology Corporation
1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417
(408) 432-1900
FAX
: (408) 434-0507
TELEX
: 499-3977
LINEAR TECHNO LO G Y CO RPOR ATIO N 1995
LT/GP 1195 6K • PRINTED IN USA
Dimensions in inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted.
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION
U
S8 Package
8-Lead Plastic Small Outline (Narrow 0.150)
(LTC DWG # 05-08-1610)
1234
0.150 – 0.157**
(3.810 – 3.988)
8765
0.189 – 0.197*
(4.801 – 5.004)
0.228 – 0.244
(5.791 – 6.197)
0.016 – 0.050
0.406 – 1.270
0.010 – 0.020
(0.254 – 0.508)× 45°
0°– 8° TYP
0.008 – 0.010
(0.203 – 0.254)
SO8 0695
0.053 – 0.069
(1.346 – 1.752)
0.014 – 0.019
(0.355 – 0.483)
0.004 – 0.010
(0.101 – 0.254)
0.050
(1.270)
BSC
DIMENSION DOES NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH 
SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.006" (0.152mm) PER SIDE
DIMENSION DOES NOT INCLUDE INTERLEAD FLASH. INTERLEAD 
FLASH SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.010" (0.254mm) PER SIDE
*
**
RELATED PARTS
PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION COMMENTS
LT1010 Fast ±150mA Power Buffer Ideal for Boosting Op Amp Output Current
LT1105 Off-Line Switching Regulator Generate High Power Supplies
LT1206 250mA/60MHz Current Feedback Amplifier C-LoadTM
Op Amp with Shutdown and 900V/µs Slew Rate
LT1210 1A/40MHz Current Feedback Amplifier C-Load Op Amp with Shutdown and 700V/µs Slew Rate
LT1270A 10A High Efficiency Switching Regulator Use as Battery Boost Converter
LT1360 50MHz, 800V/µs Op Amp ±15V, Ideal for Driving Capacitive Loads
LT1363 70MHz, 800V/µs Op Amp ±15V, Very High Speed, C-Load
C-Load is a registered trademark of Linear Technology