精密模拟电路的最常见问题是什么?

问题:

精密模拟电路的最常见问题是什么?

RAQ:  Issue 79

答案:

Probably grounding errors, but there are a number of frequently seen mistakes. They are mostly sins of omission; engineers are not perfect and can forget things

  1. Don’t forget to read the data sheet. (Application engineers routinely shout “RTFDS”1 as they hang up after an enquiry.) Extracting implicit information from a data sheet, not just the explicit details, is important.

  2. Don’t forget Ohm’s Law. The resistance of a wire or PC track is not zero, and leakage in “insulators” matters when measuring low currents.

  3. Don’t forget the bias current. Sometimes greasy fingerprints provide a current path in the prototype, leading to surprises in the clean(er) final version.

  4. Don’t forget the stray resistances, inductances, and capacitances of the final (crowded) PCB; don’t assume that all is well because the breadboard (or the SPICE model) worked.

  5. Don’t forget that EMI and RFI occur everywhere; filter your supplies and input/output leads.

  6. Don’t forget to consider the effects of temperature variation on components (including the effects of differing temperature coefficients in nominally identical components).

  7. Don’t forget to verify that the circuit can tolerate having its supplies (and signals) applied in any order (and with any value of dv/dt)—or to ensure that it cannot be exposed to unacceptable power/signal sequences and rates.

  8. Don’t forget that switching power supplies are not as noise free as a battery.

  9. Don’t forget that analog circuits, unlike microprocessors, often do not reset on power up and that you may need to ensure correct start-up.

  10. Don’t forget that circuits don’t start instantly: capacitors must charge and precision circuits must stabilize.

  11. Don’t forget that some circuits are unstable when driving a reactive load. An output stage that will drive a wide range of resistive loads may oscillate with capacitance, such as that of a cable.

  12. Don’t forget that noise, like death and taxes, is universal. Every ADC has quantization noise, every resistor has Johnson noise—you can’t avoid them.

  13. Don’t forget that IC designers may not be user friendly. Devices may not work as you expect. Again I say, “RTFDS!”

All these issues, and more, have been discussed in earlier columns. Read them all, and pin up this list where you can read it every day!

Troubleshooting: A Dozen Ways to Make a Circuit Fail


1 RTFDS = "Read The Friendly Data Sheet."

作者

james-m-bryant

James Bryant

James Bryant自1982年起担任ADI公司的欧洲应用经理,直至2009年退休为止。至今仍从事撰写和咨询工作。他拥有英国利兹大学的物理学和哲学学位,同时还是注册工程师(C.Eng.)、欧洲注册工程师(EurEng.)、电机工程师协会会员(MIET)以及对外广播新闻处(FBIS)会员。除了热情钻研工程学外,他还是一名无线电爱好者,他的呼叫代号是G4CLF。