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Why high gain in opamp ?

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coolstuff07

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Hi,

Why high gain in opamp ?

Please answer my question.

Bye
 

The Op-Amp is nothing more than a differential amplifier that
amplifies the difference between two inputs. One input has a positive effect on
the output signal, the other input has a negative effect on the output.
The theoretically perfect Op-Amp has an infinite voltage gain, an infinite
bandwidth and infinite input impedances. In this way it just senses an input
voltage level without actually interfering with that voltage in any way. The
perfect Op-Amp also has a zero-Ohm output impedance. It may therefore be used
to drive heavy (in electronic terms) circuits.
The high gain does come as an advantage. If a sample of the output fed back to cancel out some of the input, the effective gain is reduced, but the gain becomes much more stable. This is called negative feedback and the more gain you have to start off with, the more stable you can make the effective gain.
The precision and flexibility of the operational amplifier is a direct result of the use of negative feedback. Generally speaking, amplifiers employing feedback will have superior operating characteristics at a sacrifice of gain.
With enough feedback, the closed loop amplifier characteristics become a function of the feedback elements. In the typical feedback circuit, the feedback elements are two resistors. The precision of the “closed loop” gain is set by the ratio of the two resistors and is practically independent of the “open loop” amplifier. Thus, amplification to almost any degree of precision can be achieved with ease.

Read more details here
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http://focus.ti.com/lit/an/sboa092a/sboa092a.pdf

http://www.dei.unipd.it/~pel/Elettronica_Analogica/understanding_OPAMP_specs.pdf
**broken link removed**
**broken link removed**
**broken link removed**
 

take the buffer as an example. the gain with feedback is =Ao/(1+AoB).since B=1 we have Af=Ao/(1+Ao), now if Ao -->inf Af-->1 ,hence we require high gain in opamp to reduce the dependence of closed loop gain on the open loop gain.The gain of an ideal opamp must depend only on its feedback elements,that's achieved only through a high gain.
 

Hi,

Is it some thing related to virtual ground.

Bye
 

in order to get high open loop gain in a opamp negative feedback system.

b/r
 

first, it depends on the application and not always high gain is desirable. In LNAs, we concentrate on the noise first.

An amplifier is supposed to amplify, the higher the gain, the more the amplification
 

The higher the gain , the opam is more close to ideal model.
 

If one input of your amplifier is connected to virture ground, then, the higher the gain, the other input is closer to virture ground.
 

op-amp is a device which could work both on dc as well as ac.its because it draws no currrent as well as its characteristics like virtual ground,high internal impedance and low output impedance.that it offers such a large gain to voltages specified by its Vcc.
 

sometimes the high gain comes from the request of linearity
 

You'd better learn something about feedback theory to full understand it!
 

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