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Basic RC Oscillator Circuit

The RC Oscillator which is also called a Phase Shift Oscillator, produces a sine wave output signal using regenerative feedback from the resistor-capacitor combination. This regenerative feedback from the RC network is due to the ability of the capacitor to store an electric charge, (similar to the LC tank circuit). This resistor-capacitor feedback network can be connected as shown above to produce a leading phase shift (phase advance network) or interchanged to produce a lagging phase shift (phase retard network) the outcome is still the same as the sine wave oscillations only occur at the frequency at which the overall phase-shift is 360o. By varying one or more of the resistors or capacitors in the phase-shift network, the frequency can be varied and generally this is done using a 3-ganged variable capacitor. If all the resistors, R and the capacitors, C in the phase shift network are equal in value, then the frequency of oscillations produced by the RC oscillator is given as:

Where: is the Output Frequency in Hertz R is the Resistance in Ohms C is the Capacitance in Farads N is the number of RC stages. (in our example N = 3)

Since the resistor-capacitor combination in the RC Oscillator circuit also acts as an attenuator producing an attenuation of -1/29th (Vo/Vi = ) per stage, the gain of the amplifier must be sufficient to overcome the losses and in our three mesh network above the amplifier gain must be greater than 29. The loading effect of the amplifier on the feedback network has an effect on the frequency of oscillations and can cause the oscillator frequency to be up to 25% higher than calculated. Then the feedback network should be driven from a high impedance output source

and fed into a low impedance load such as a common emitter transistor amplifier but better still is to use an Operational Amplifier as it satisfies these conditions perfectly.
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The Op-amp RC Oscillator

When used as RC oscillators, Operational Amplifier RC Oscillators are more common than their bipolar transistors counterparts. The oscillator circuit consists of a negative-gain operational amplifier and a three section RC network that produces the 180o phase shift. The phase shift network is connected from the op-amps output back to its "non-inverting" input as shown below.
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Op-amp RC Oscillator Circuit

As the feedback is connected to the non-inverting input, the operational amplifier is therefore connected in its "inverting amplifier" configuration which produces the required 180o phase shift while the RC network produces the other 180o phase shift at the required frequency (180o + 180o). Although it is possible to cascade together only two RC stages to provide the required 180o of phase shift (90o + 90o), the stability of the oscillator at low frequencies is poor. One of the most important features of an RC Oscillator is its frequency stability which is its ability too provide a constant frequency output under varying load conditions. By cascading three or even four RC stages together (4 x 45o), the stability of the oscillator can be greatly improved. RC Oscillators with four stages are generally used because commonly available operational amplifiers come in quad IC packages so designing a 4-stage oscillator with 45o of phase shift relative to each other is relatively easy. RC Oscillators are stable and provide a well-shaped sine wave output with the frequency being proportional to 1/RC and therefore, a wider frequency range is possible when using a variable capacitor. However, RC Oscillators are restricted to frequency applications because of their bandwidth limitations to produce the desired phase shift at high frequencies.
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Example No1

Determine the frequency of oscillations of a RC Oscillator circuit having 3-stages each with a resistor and capacitor of equal values. R = 10k and C = 500pF The frequency of oscillations for a RC Oscillator is given as:

The circuit is a 3-stage oscillator which consists of three 10k resistors and three 500pF capacitors therefore the frequency of oscillation is given as:

Op-amp implementation

A simple example of a phase-shift oscillator One of the simplest implementations for this type of oscillator uses an operational amplifier (op-amp), three capacitors and four resistors , as shown in the diagram.
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The mathematics for calculating the oscillation frequency and oscillation criterion for this circuit are surprisingly complex, due to each R-C stage loading the previous ones. The calculations are greatly simplified by setting all the resistors (except the negative feedback resistor) and all the capacitors to the same values. In the diagram, if R1 = R2 = R3 = R, and C1 = C2 = C3 = C, then:
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and the oscillation criterion is: Rfeedback = 29(R)

Without the simplification of all the resistors and capacitors having the same values, the calculations become more complex:

Oscillation criterion:

A version of this circuit can be made by putting an op-amp buffer between each R-C stage which simplifies the calculations. he voltage gain of the inverting channel is always unity. When the oscillation frequency is high enough to be near the amplifier's cutoff frequency , the amplifier will contribute significant phase shift itself, which will add to the phase shift of the feedback network. Therefore the circuit will oscillate at a frequency at which the phase shift of the feedback filter is less than 180 degrees.
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The Wien Bridge Oscillator


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In the previous RC Oscillator tutorial we saw that a number of resistors and capacitors can be connected together with an inverting amplifier to produce an oscillating circuit. One of the simplest sine wave oscillators which uses a RC network in place of the conventional LC tuned tank circuit to produce a sinusoidal output waveform, is the Wien Bridge Oscillator. The Wien Bridge Oscillator is so called because the circuit is based on a frequency-selective form of the Whetstone bridge circuit. The Wien Bridge oscillator is a two-stage RC coupled amplifier circuit that has good stability at its resonant frequency, low distortion and is very easy to tune making it a popular circuit as an audio frequency oscillator but the phase shift of the output signal is considerably different from the previous phase shift RC Oscillator. The Wien Bridge Oscillator uses a feedback circuit consisting of a series RC circuit connected with a parallel RC of the same component values producing a phase delay or phase advance circuit depending upon the frequency. At the resonant frequency r the phase shift is 0o. Consider the circuit below.
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RC Phase Shift Network

The above RC network consists of a series RC circuit connected to a parallel RC forming basically a High Pass Filter connected to a Low Pass Filter producing a very selective secondorder frequency dependant Band Pass Filter with a high Q factor at the selected frequency, r.
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At low frequencies the reactance of the series capacitor (C1) is very high so acts like an open circuit and blocks any input signal at Vin. Therefore there is no output signal, Vout. At high frequencies, the reactance of the parallel capacitor, (C2) is very low so this parallel connected capacitor acts like a short circuit on the output so again there is no output signal. However, between these two extremes the output voltage reaches a maximum value with the frequency at which this happens being called the Resonant Frequency, (r). At this resonant frequency, the circuits reactance equals its resistance as Xc = R so the phase shift between the input and output equals zero degrees. The magnitude of the output voltage is therefore at its maximum and is equal to one third (1/3) of the input voltage as shown.

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Output Gain and Phase Shift

It can be seen that at very low frequencies the phase angle between the input and output signals is "Positive" (Phase Advanced), while at very high frequencies the phase angle becomes "Negative" (Phase Delay). In the middle of these two points the circuit is at its resonant frequency, (r) with the two signals being "in-phase" or 0o. We can therefore define this resonant frequency point with the following expression.
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Resonant Frequency

Where: r is the Resonant Frequency in Hertz R is the Resistance in Ohms C is the Capacitance in Farads

Then this frequency selective RC network forms the basis of the Wien Bridge Oscillator circuit. If we now place this RC network across a non-inverting amplifier which has a gain of 1+R1/R2 the following oscillator circuit is produced.

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Wien Bridge Oscillator

The output of the operational amplifier is fed back to both the inputs of the amplifier. One part of the feedback signal is connected to the inverting input terminal (negative feedback) via the resistor divider network of R1 and R2 which allows the amplifiers voltage gain to be adjusted within narrow limits. The other part is fed back to the non-inverting input terminal (positive feedback) via the RC Wien Bridge network. The RC network is connected in the positive feedback path of the amplifier and has zero phase shift a just one frequency. Then at the selected resonant frequency, ( r ) the voltages applied to the inverting and non-inverting inputs will be equal and "in-phase" so the positive feedback will cancel out the negative feedback signal causing the circuit to oscillate. Also the voltage gain of the amplifier circuit MUST be equal to three "Gain = 3" for oscillations to start. This value is set by the feedback resistor network, R1 and R2 for an inverting amplifier and is given as the ratio -R1/R2. Also, due to the open-loop gain limitations of operational amplifiers, frequencies above 1MHz are unachievable without the use of special high frequency op-amps.
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Wien Bridge Oscillator Summary

Then for oscillations to occur in a Wien Bridge Oscillator circuit the following conditions must apply.

1. With no input signal the Wien Bridge Oscillator produces output oscillations. 2. The Wien Bridge Oscillator can produce a large range of frequencies. 3. The Voltage gain of the amplifier must be at least 3. 4. The network can be used with a Non-inverting amplifier.

5. The input resistance of the amplifier must be high compared to R so that the RC network is not overloaded and alter the required conditions. 6. The output resistance of the amplifier must be low so that the effect of external loading is minimised. 7. Some method of stabilizing the amplitude of the oscillations must be provided because if the voltage gain of the amplifier is too small the desired oscillation will decay and stop and if it is too large the output amplitude rises to the value of the supply rails, which saturates the op-amp and causes the output waveform to become distorted. 8. With amplitude stabilisation in the form of feedback diodes, oscillations from the oscillator can go on indefinitely.

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Example No1

Determine the maximum and minimum frequency of oscillations of a Wien Bridge Oscillator circuit having a resistor of 10k and a variable capacitor of 1nF to 1000nF. The frequency of oscillations for a Wien Bridge Oscillator is given as:

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Lowest Frequency

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Highest Frequency ?

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