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Hi my name is Matt Duff. I'm an amplifier applications engineer
here at Analog Devices and today we're going to talk about stability.
So for example how you analyze the stability of a typical
op-amp circuit and before we can actually get
and the details and let you know a few of amps or gonna do
is we're in talk about this concept called loop gain;
very important in terms of analyzing stability. So,
let's say we have a a typical circuit here I've drawn a non-inverting
op and configuration we can represent this configuration and block diagram
form so I can take this
amplifier I can represented as block with
adult might gain a and then I can take
the feedback network and that we have with these resistors here
and the typical way to represent that is a block
with gainer beta so if I once I have this block diagram
then I can I go and copulates a
be back equation and
we're not actually in this video going ok act like this thousands of engineers
have done this before
so we're gonna skip that you have to trust 'em I A
but here is the be back equation that's pretty famous
and what gives this is the actual what's called the close loop gain up the
amplifier just basically that output referred to the input
but the the key term that we wanna
focus on his something called loop gain which is this term
right here and the reason that this term is so important
is because when it goes to -1 you'll notice that this equation blows up
as he knows that he goes to infinity another way of saying this goes to -1
is if we say that this goes to one with a 180-degree
phase shift so we do not want that to happen
and im so the next video will talk about how
we can better make sure that doesn't happen one thing that I
did want to point out is we're calling this loop gain and just don't get
confused between the
open-loop gain which is a the the amplifier
the closed loop gain have the actual
circuit itself and just plain old
loop gain which is the term that were interested in