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Quadrature oscillator

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sbinkhalid

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Hi I am making a quadrature oscillator project and am using the attached circuit schematic. I have checked the circuit schematic on Proteus and its simulating fine. But i am having difficulty in understanding the functions of the resistors and capacitors used. Also I need explanation as to how the circuit is causing a phase shift of 90 degrees in output. Thanx circuit.png

 

Dear sbinkhalid
Hi
I think the aim of those RC networks , is to provide enough phase shift . thus Av*beta can be around unit or greater , thus it can oscillate .
Best Wishes
Goldsmith
 
Hi
Thanx for your explanation but what i really wantd to know was what is the functionality of the resistors and capacitors and how differing their values will affect the output.
 

Hi
Thanx for your explanation but what i really wantd to know was what is the functionality of the resistors and capacitors and how differing their values will affect the output.

The shown oscillator circuit consists of two RC integrators connected in a closed loop.
It is a very versatile circuit that delivers two signals with a 90 deg phase difference.
The opamp circuit with R2, C2 is the classical inverting Miller integrator. The second opamp with R1, C1 together with the passive lowpass Rf, Cf form a non-inverting integrator stage (BTC integrator).
Thus, at the frequency w=1/RC (all RC elemets are equal) the loop gain magnitude is 0 dB and the loop phase is zero (90 deg. minus 90 deg). This fulfills the Barkhausen condition for oscillation.
 
An easy way to see the introduced phase shift of an oscillator is to break the loop, and see the phase shift introduced by the remain amplifier and phasing network (fed with similar signal).
 

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