Katy1163
Electrical
- Apr 4, 2002
- 19
I have recently designed a servo loop circuit in which current is sensed across a 0.1 ohm resistor and fed back into the input. The difference across the resistor is fed into an opamp with a gain of 10. The output of this opamp with the current artwork is approximately 30% higher than expected (a gain of about 12.6). The previous artwork of the same circuit functioned correctly and the only difference that was noticed is that the trace on the low side of the current sensing resistor is thinner than the other side. The way we found to fix it is to supplement the trace with a jumper, which indeed fixed the issue. The problem is that the calculations don't match. The increased resistance due to the smaller trace should not be enough to affect the output by 30%.
A couple notes: The values of the passives in the circuit were measured out of the circuit and found to be correct. The problem is known to be a common-mode gain of about 0.03, but not sure where this gain is coming from (typically impedance mismatch). The opamp is functioning correctly based upon measurements and calculations.
Any suggestions of things to look into would be appreciated!
A couple notes: The values of the passives in the circuit were measured out of the circuit and found to be correct. The problem is known to be a common-mode gain of about 0.03, but not sure where this gain is coming from (typically impedance mismatch). The opamp is functioning correctly based upon measurements and calculations.
Any suggestions of things to look into would be appreciated!