Designers can build a
15-dB compressor with a miniature lamp and a current-feedback
amplifier. The circuit possesses extremely low distortion at frequencies above
lamp's thermal time constant. This means that distortion is negligible from
audio frequencies to beyond 10 MHz. There's also relatively
little change in phase versus gain compared to other automatic gain-control
circuits. Lastly, the circuit has many instrumentation, audio, and
high-frequency applications as a result of its low distortion and small
phase change.
The AD844 op amp is a
perfect fit for this application because it's a
current-feedback amplifier. Each stage of the circuit. U2. lamp,
and feedback resistor compresses an ac signal by over 15dB (see the figure).
Cascading a number of stages delivers higher compression
ranges.
Op amp U1 operates as a unity-gain
buffer to drive the input to the compressor. However. U1 is optional if a low-impedance signal source is used. The lamp's resistance will increase
with temperature, which reduces the ration of resistor R3 to the resistance of
the lamp. This ratio reduces the gain of U2. The lamp's cold resistance should
be greater then the input resistance of U2 (more then 50 ohms) for proper
operation. The lamp's resistance will change slightly for low input levels.
Therefore, the ratio of R3 to the resistance of the lamp and the gain of U2
stays high.
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