Design Idea

Square-wave modulator has variable frequency and pulse width

Edited by Bill Travis

Michael Fisch, Agere Systems, Longmont, CO -- EDN, 8/8/2002

A few years ago, I worked at a disk-drive company. We had a plating facility that required square waves to drive the high-voltage plating operation. The challenge was that the square wave's pulse width had to be variable, along with the duty cycle. Also, the amplitude of the pulses had to be adjustable. The circuit in Figure 1 satisfies all these criteria. The circuit delivers a unipolar (adjustable from 0 to 12V) pulse with adjustable frequency and pulse width. The first half of a dual, retriggerable monostable multivibrator, IC1A, generates the frequency of the pulse train. The 100-kΩ potentiometer, R1, along with R2 and C1, sets the adjustable frequency. R3, R4, and C2 set the adjustable pulse width in the second section of the multivibrator, IC1B. The ac-coupled op amp, IC2A, running open-loop, delivers a ±12V pulse output. D1 and D2 clamp the negative-going excursions of the pulse train to ground. The other half of the op amp, IC2B, serves as a level shifter that allows amplitude control over the range 0 to 12V. You can modulate the amplitude at low frequency by varying the amplitude-control voltage.

Is this the best Design Idea in this issue? Select at www.edn.com.



ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Feedback Loop


Post a CommentPost a Comment

There are no comments posted for this article.

Related Content

 

By This Author


ADVERTISEMENT

Knowledge Center



Technology Quick Links

EDN Marketplace


©1997-2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Please visit these other Reed Business sites