Design Ideas |
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You
usually obtain the product of two values by summing the outputs of logarithmic
amplifiers. The block diagram in Figure 1
shows a configuration that produces a two-quadrant product of analog
signals but uses no log amplifiers. VA and VB are the
multiplier inputs. The triangle generator produces a linear triangle whose
voltage range is between 0V and the maximum value that VB can
attain (VB>=0V). VA may assume both positive and
negative values. Figure 2
shows the circuit waveforms.![]()
The comparator allows the VA signal to reach the RC lowpass filter only when VB exceeds the amplitude of the triangle wave supplied by the generator. Neglecting the VA and VB variations during the interval T, the lowpass-filtered signal at the output is:
However, from Figure 2, the value of TON is
So, combining Equations 1 and 2, we obtain the output value
The circuit produces the product of the two input signals. It performs well, using ordinary, low-cost components. Its limitations stem from the RC lowpass filter, which must suppress the triangle-wave frequency without affecting the signal (VA and VB) frequencies. Consequently, you should select a triangle-wave frequency that is much higher than the signal frequencies. (DI #1928)
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