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
100Ω resistors (R2 and R3) in series with the gates of the
output devices stop oscillations in the 100MHz region as do
the 100Ω 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 10Ω 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 1Ω 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