Electronic Projects, forums and more.

Go Back   Electronic Circuits Projects Diagrams Free > Electronics Forums > General Electronics Chat


General Electronics Chat This forum is for general chat about electronics, eg: Dont know what a part does? Dont know how to read a circuit? Want to get an opinion?

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 8th November 2005, 10:01 PM   (permalink)
Default Op amps and input resistance.

Hey, I'm supposed to answer the following question:

A certain microphone is capable of delivering + 0.1 V when someone claps their hands at a distance of 20 feet. A particular electronic switching circuit has an input resistance of 670 ohms and requires + 20 mA to activate the switching action. Design a circuit that will connect the microphone to the electronic switching circuit in such a way that the switch is activated by someone clapping their hands.

I don't understand what the input resistance is about. Do they mean the resistance in the switching circuit, that would be connected to the output of an op amp?

I don't think they mean the resistance of the op amp, becuase we're doing ideal op amp analysis, in which case i htink we're supposed to assume the input resistance is infinite.

We're supposed to be solving these problems using basic op amp building blocks.

Can anybody help me about, just explain what htey mean by input resistance?

thanks;
sean
SeanHatch is offline  
Old 8th November 2005, 10:06 PM   (permalink)
Default

I'll give you a clue!.

You've got a resistance specified (670 ohms), and a current (20mA), what formula do you know that uses those two, and gives a third?.

This (very simple) question makes it easy, because you can treat the load as a simple resistor.
__________________
PIC programmer software, and PIC Tutorials at:
http://www.winpicprog.co.uk
Nigel Goodwin is offline  
Old 8th November 2005, 10:46 PM   (permalink)
Default Re: Op amps and input resistance.

Quote:
Originally Posted by SeanHatch
Do they mean the resistance in the switching circuit, that would be connected to the output of an op amp?
My beginner's knowledge of electronics tells me yes. So you only need to figure out what voltage is needed to get 20ma at the switch, and how to produce that voltage using your input of 0.1V (or higher?)
__________________
Time is nature\'s way of keeping everything from happening at once.
http://membres.lycos.fr/jrainville/
Joel Rainville is offline  
Old 9th November 2005, 03:53 AM   (permalink)
Default

So input resistance is synonomous with load? that seems weird.
SeanHatch is offline  
Old 9th November 2005, 04:14 AM   (permalink)
Default

I though the input resistance was just the resistance between your signal and the +/- input--because of the virtual ground.
__________________
The most-hated young engineer in America.
* AVR Projects
* Robot War: TI
* About
DigiTan is offline  
Old 9th November 2005, 04:28 AM   (permalink)
Default

that's what i originally imagined, but then I'd have to generate 20ma across a load or resistance they don't give me.
SeanHatch is offline  
Old 9th November 2005, 09:25 AM   (permalink)
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by SeanHatch
So input resistance is synonomous with load? that seems weird.
The OUTPUT resistance of one circuit feeds to the INPUT resistance of the next.

The question is really very badly phrased though, you wouldn't normally use input and output resistances for something like this.

You also have the added complication of having to 'guess' exactly what's wanted? - it's fairly uncommon to match impedances, normally you feed low output into high input, for maximum signal transfer. Matching impedances gives maximum POWER transfer, but only transfers 50% of the original. The first would be the correct method for this, but which do they want?.
__________________
PIC programmer software, and PIC Tutorials at:
http://www.winpicprog.co.uk
Nigel Goodwin is offline  
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes





All times are GMT. The time now is 07:01 AM.


Electronic Circuits  |  Learning Electronics
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

eXTReMe Tracker