Transimpedance-amplifier-noise issues
How much noise is too much noise in a photodiode-preamplifier circuit? Calculate the noise performance of a transimpedance amplifier by considering six regions in the frequency spectrum and adding each region with a root-sum-square equation.
By Bonnie Baker -- EDN, October 2, 2008
How much noise is too much noise in a photodiode-preamplifier circuit? You can derive the noise performance of a transimpedance amplifier (Figure 1a) with calculations or by using a Spice simulation (Reference 1). When calculating the noise performance of the circuit, consider six regions in the frequency spectrum (Figure 1b) and add each region with a root-sum-square equation or the following equation (Reference 2):
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The first five regions are equal to the multiple of the areas under the closed-loop-gain and amplifier-noise-density curves. The area under the noise-density curve in the e1, flicker-noise (1/f), region is V1/f:fB–fA=AN
, where AN is the amplifier’s input-noise-density at 1 Hz and fB is the corner frequency where the flicker noise tapers off. For many CMOS or FET amplifiers, the flicker-noise region usually ranges from dc to 100 or 1000 Hz. A calculation proves that the contribution to noise in this low-frequency region is relatively low:
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where RF is the feedback resistor and RPD is the device’s parallel resistance.
In the e2 region, multiply the broadband noise of the amplifier, the closed-loop dc-noise gain (1+RF/RPD), and the square root of the region’s bandwidth. Again, the contributed noise in this region is usually relatively low because of its location in the lower frequency range.
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Calculate the noise contribution and the e3 region in the same manner with fP=1/[2π(RPD||RF) (CPD+CCM+CDIFF+CF+CRF)] and fZ=1/[2π(RF) (CF+CRF)].
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where CPD is the device’s capacitance and CDIFF is the differential amplifier’s capacitance.
The noise in regions e4 and e5 uses the higher-frequency gain of the closed-loop-gain curve with the value of C1 being the parallel combination of the input capacitors, or [CP–R1||2CCM||CDIFF], and C2 is the parallel combination of CF and CRF.
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The sixth part of the noise equation, e6, represents the noise contribution of the feedback resistor. The amplifier does not gain the contribution of noise from the feedback resistor:
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where K is Boltzmann’s constant, which is 1.38×10–23; T is temperature in Kelvin; RF is the feedback resistor in ohms; and BW is the bandwidth of interest.
When asking how much noise is too much noise in this photodiode-preamp circuit, consider that a 12-bit system operating with a 5V input range has an LSB of 1.22 mV. The LSB for a 16-bit system with the same input-voltage range is 76.29 µV. Both LSBs are peak-to-peak numbers, and the values in this column are root-mean-square values (Reference 3).
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