| | This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007) | Virtual ground (sometimes called virtual earth) is an important concept found in electronic circuit designs. It identifies a point in a circuit as being held close to the circuit's ground or reference level electric potential. It is called virtual since this point does not have any real electrical connection to ground. The reference may or may not be the same as the local utility ground or earth. This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
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This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
It has been suggested that Ground conductor be merged into this article or section. ...
Electrical potential is the potential energy per unit charge associated with a static (time-invariant) electric field, also called the electrostatic potential or the electric potential, typically measured in volts. ...
Creation of a virtual ground is due to the actions or effects of the parts in the circuit. An ideal virtual ground would be able to source/sink an infinite amount of current. In practice, the sourcing/sinking capability is determined by the other circuit impedances and the amplifier used. The virtual ground concept aids circuit analysis in operational amplifier and other circuits and provides useful practical circuit effects that would be difficult to achieve in other ways. Creating a virtual ground point
Fig. 2. The parallel voltage summer is one of the simplest virtual ground circuits In electronics, virtual grounds are usually created by summing two (or more) opposite voltages. Direct parallel connection of voltage sources will cause excessive current flow and so resistors must be used (in spite of all, this technique is used in common base amplifier [1], differential amplifiers [2] etc.) Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 52 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Common base amplifier In electronics, common base refers to a type of bipolar transistor circuit configuration in which a transistor is connected such that its base terminal is wired to the ground or common rail of the circuit (or can be considered so for AC signals). ...
Simple form of a differential amplifier A differential amplifier is a type of an electronic amplifier that multiplies the difference between two inputs by some constant factor (the differential gain). ...
In the simplest virtual ground circuit (Fig. 2), the two opposite voltage sources (+V1 and -V2) are connected through the respective resistors (R1 and R2) to the virtual ground output (the voltage VA between the real and the virtual ground). In the circuit there are two parallel connected current sources - I1 (comprising V1 and R1) and I2 (comprising V2 and R2). From another viewpoint, the two resistors constitute an extremely useful resistive circuit of a parallel voltage summer, which is frequently used in the circuits with parallel feedback (op-amp inverting amplifier, op-amp inverting summer, op-amp non-inverting Schmitt trigger, etc.) In electronics, a Schmitt (or Schmidt) trigger is a comparator circuit that incorporates positive feedback. ...
Operation
Fig. 3. The electrical "tug of war" creates a virtual ground (a geometrical interpretation of Fig. 2) This circuit may be considered as an electrical "tug of war" (Fig. 3), where two voltage sources "fight" - V1 "pulls" the point A up while V2 "pulls" it down; the pull-up resistor R1 and the pull-down resistor R2 serve as electrical "ropes". If V1/V2 = -R2/R1, zero voltage appears in the point A; it is a virtual ground. In this arrangement, a current I = V1/R1 = V2/R2 passes continuously through the circuit; as a result, the resistors dissipate power continuously. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 62 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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A pull-up resistor is used in the design of electronic logic circuits. ...
Pull-up resistors are used in the design of electronic logic circuits to ensure that inputs to logic systems settle at expected logic levels if external devices are disconnected. ...
Coils of rope used for long-line fishing A rope (IPA: ) is a length of fibers, twisted or braided together to improve strength for pulling and connecting. ...
Virtual ground appears in the common point between two series connected resistors, if - two voltages are applied to the other ends of the resistors,
- they have opposite polarities,
- they bear the same proportion as between the respective resistors.
Maintaining a steady virtual ground Once the virtual ground is created, it has to be kept steady since the input sources and the loads connected to this point affect it by "injecting" or "sinking" a current. This is the well-known problem of keeping up a constant voltage (zero voltage is also a voltage); it may be solved by applying a dynamic resistance or negative feedback. This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Using dynamic resistance
Fig. 4. Keeping up a virtual ground by varying the resistance In order to resist the influences, in this case, the virtual ground is stabilized by applying two techniques as follows. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 51 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Varying resistance [3]. In order to keep up a virtual ground by varying the resistance, the resistor R2 has to be implemented as a voltage-stable dynamic resistor (diode, zener diode, LED, etc.) If the voltage V1 rises, the current I increases and the zero voltage VA of the point A (the virtual ground) tries to rise. However, the dynamic resistor R2 decreases its present resistance thus restoring the zero voltage VA. On the graphical presentation (Fig. 4), when the IV curve of the voltage source B1 moves horizontally from left to right the R2 IV curve rotates counterclockwise. As a result, the working point A slides from bottom to top over a new vertical IV curve, which represents the zero dynamic resistance Rd of the virtual ground.
Fig. 5. Keeping up a virtual ground by varying the voltage Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 52 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Varying voltage [4]. In order to keep up a virtual ground by varying the voltage, the voltage source B2 has to be implemented as a varying voltage source (Fig. 1 at the top). Now, if the voltage source B1 tries to "pull" the virtual ground A up by raising its voltage V1 towards its positive voltage, the "dynamic" voltage source B2 "pulls" it down by increasing its voltage V2 towards its negative voltage and v.v. As a result, the point A retains its zero voltage. On the graphical presentation (Fig. 5), when the IV curve of the voltage source B1 moves horizontally from left to right, the IV curve of the voltage source B2 moves horizontally from right to left and v.v. As a result, the working point A slides from bottom to top over a new vertical IV curve, which represents the zero dynamic resistance Rd of the virtual ground. This idea is implemented on Fig. 6 by replacing the steady voltage source B2 with a negative impedance converter (NIC) acting as a negative resistor with resistance -R. In this circuit, the op-amp OA produces a voltage VOA = -2VR2. The negative impedance converter (NIC) is a configuration of an operational amplifier with the aim of creating a negative load. ...
A VI curve with a negative differential resistance region Negative resistance or negative differential resistance (NDR) is a property of electrical circuit elements composed of certain materials in which, over certain voltage ranges, current is a decreasing function of voltage. ...
Fig. 6. By compensating the voltage drop across the resistor R2 an NIC creates a virtual ground between the resistors R1 and R2 Half the voltage compensates the voltage drop VR = VR2 across the internal NIC's resistor; the rest half compensates the voltage drop VR2 across the resistor R2. As a result, a virtual ground appears in the point A between the resistors R1 and R2. It is interesting fact that if the negative resistance -R increases (for example, by increasing the resistance R), the virtual ground point A moves somewhere inside the resistor R1. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 75 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Keeping up a virtual ground by the techniques above may be observed in electrical distribution networks, where three-phase electrical "Y" (or star) circuits are said to have a virtual ground node when their sources and loads are balanced respectively. The virtual ground in this case exists at the star point.
Using negative feedback The most popular way of keeping up a virtual ground is a negative feedback. In this case, the varying voltage source B2 "observes" continuously the voltage VA of the virtual ground point and changes its voltage V2 so that the voltage VA is always zero. This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Fig. 7a. Op-amp inverting amplifier (a classical view) An op-amp inverting amplifier (Fig. 7a) is a typical circuit where the virtual ground point is kept up by a negative feedback. Since an operational amplifier has very high open loop gain, the amplifier acts automatically to make the potential difference between its inputs tend to zero. The non-inverting (+) input of the operational amplifier is grounded; then its inverting (-) input, although not connected to ground, will assume a similar potential, becoming a virtual ground. The circuit operation is illustrated more attractively on Fig. 7b by means of a voltage diagram; for this purpose, the two resistors are replaced by one linear potentiometer. Image File history File links Opampinverting. ...
Image File history File links Opampinverting. ...
Op-amp ICs (some single, some dual) in 8-pin dual in-line packages (DIPs) An operational amplifier, usually referred to as an op-amp for brevity, is a DC-coupled high-gain electronic voltage amplifier with differential inputs[1] and, usually, a single output. ...
If the input voltage source changes its voltage -VIN towards the negative supply voltage -V, a negative voltage VA = -VR2/(VR1 + VR2) tries to appear in the point A. However, the op-amp "observes" that and immediately reacts: it changes its output voltage VOA toward the positive supply voltage +V until it manages to zero again the potential VA (to restore the virtual ground).
Fig. 7b. Op-amp inverting amplifier visualized On the graphical presentation, the two sources "pull" the virtual ground point A in different directions; as a result, the voltage diagram rotates around the point A. Actually the op-amp serves here as the varying voltage source B2 from Fig. 1. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 69 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Comparison between the two techniques Negative feedback seems to be a perfect technique for keeping up a virtual ground as it compensates various disturbances. However, it can't keep up exactly zero voltage in this point; this voltage is VA = VOA/A (where A is the op-amp gain without a negative feedback applied). Typically, A > 105; therefore, VA is almost zero. It looks strange, but a perfect virtual ground (having exactly VA = 0) may be created (Fig. 1) and kept up (Fig. 6) without using negative feedback. However, it will not be as stable as the virtual ground kept by applying a negative feedback.
Another viewpoint at the virtual ground phenomenon Actually, there is nothing special about the virtual ground phenomenon; it is nothing else than to create and keep up a steady voltage (usually zero volts). According to this viewpoint, a circuit with virtual ground point acts as a constant voltage source, where the virtual ground point serves as a source output. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Current source. ...
Applications Virtual ground serving as a power ground Comparison between real and virtual power ground Real ground. Voltage is a differential quantity, which appears between two points. In order to deal only with a voltage (an electrical potential) of a single point, the second point has to be connected to a reference point (ground) having usually zero voltage. This point has to have steady potential, which does not vary when the electrical sources "attack" the ground by "injecting" or "sucking" a current to/from it. Usually, the power supply terminals serve as grounds; when the internal points of compound power sources are accessible, they can also serve as real grounds (Fig. 8a). International safety symbol Caution, risk of electric shock (ISO 3864), colloquially known as high voltage symbol. ...
Electrical potential is the potential energy per unit charge associated with a static (time-invariant) electric field, also called the electrostatic potential or the electric potential, typically measured in volts. ...
The word ground has several meanings: The surface of the Earth Soil, a mixture of sand and organic material present on the surface of the Earth Ground (electricity), in electrical engineering, something that is connected to the Earth or at the voltage defined as zero (in the US, called ground...
Real ground is a point with a steady voltage inside the supply voltage source. |
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 | | Fig. 8a. Any point inside a compound voltage source can act as a real ground | Fig. 8b. Circuit points having steady potentials can serve as artificial virtual grounds | Virtual ground. If there are not accessible source internal points, external circuit points having steady voltage towards the source terminals can serve as artificial virtual grounds (Fig. 8b). Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 566 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 707 pixels, file size: 54 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Virtual ground is a circuit point with a steady voltage outside the supply voltage source.
Fig. 9. Comparing different kinds of grounds regarding consumption Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 561 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 701 pixels, file size: 64 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Energy considerations Real and virtual grounds are compared on Fig. 9 regarding the eneergy consumption. Real ground (the right part of Fig. 9). In this most economical case, only a useful power is dissipated in the load: P1 = I1.V. Static virtual ground (the left part of Fig. 9). This is the worst case as an additional useless power is dissipated in the Element 1 and Element 2 (the current I2 passes through the lower element of this voltage divider because the load is connected to the positive rail): P2,3 = PL + P'E2 + P"E2 + PE1 = 2I2.V + 2I3.V = 2(PL + PE) The lower resistive the voltage divider is, the more steady the virtual ground is; however, the consumption increases. In addition, this simple configuration is prone to become unbalanced [5]. Dynamic virtual ground. In this worse case, only a relatively small additional power is dissipated in the dynamic Element 2 (usually, the Element 1 does not exist in this arrangement): P3 = PL + PE2 = 2I2.V = 2PL Whenever it is possible, a real ground has to be used, in order to reduce the consumption.
Virtual ground serving as a circuit point: Inputs
Fig. 10. Op-amp current-to-voltage converter (transimpedance amplifier) In all the circuits with parallel negative feedback (e.g., the inverting op-amp circuits), the main duty of the (op-amp) amplifier is to "look after" the virtual ground, in order to keep an almost zero voltage in this point. However, the input sources affect the virtual ground by "injecting" or "sucking" a current to/from this point. In the simplest case, the input current sources do this directly (examples: transimpedance amplifier - Fig. 10, current integrator and charge amplifier). Image File history File links Op-amp_i-to-v_pos_300. ...
A transimpedance amplifier is a circuit that performs current to voltage transfomation and is sometimes known simply as a current-to-voltage converter. ...
A current integrator is an electronic device performing a time integration of an electrical current, thus measuring a total electric charge. ...
A charge amplifier is an electronic amplifier which converts an input charge (stored on a capacitor, or significantly capacitive transducer) to a voltage output. ...
A virtual ground presents a very low impedance to any signal connected to it and it therefore provides the perfect type of input for current type signal sources (piezoelectric sensors, photodiodes etc.) For example, in the circuit of a charge amplifier, stray capacitance at the input to the amplifier is not detrimental to operation because this capacitance is always at a virtual ground. Electrical impedance, or simply impedance, is a measure of opposition to a sinusoidal alternating electric current. ...
In telecommunication, signalling (or signaling) has the following meanings: The use of signals for controlling communications. ...
A piezoelectric sensor is a device that uses the piezoelectric effect to measure pressure, acceleration, strain or force by converting them to an electrical signal. ...
Photodiode closeup A photodiode A photodiode is a semiconductor diode that functions as a photodetector. ...
Internal node
Fig. 11. Summing amplifier is based on the virtual ground concept. It may, for example, be used as an audio mixing circuit to sum input signals from a few voltage sources (with the input resistors acting as voltage-to-current converters) or from current sources (if no input resistor is used). In the latter case, the op amp realises an ideal current-to-voltage converter. By creating a virtual ground, it provides isolation of the input signals. A conflict point. A virtual ground appears in the common point between the emitters of the two transistors of a transistor differential amplifier at differential input signal [6]. Similarly, a virtual ground appears in the internal middle point of the common resistor Rgain connecting the outputs of the input op-amp followers of an instrumentation amplifier working at differential input signal. A summing operational amplifier configuration. ...
A summing operational amplifier configuration. ...
In professional audio, a mixing console, digital mixing console, mixing desk (Brit. ...
Each entity in this world may be presented as a system of connected components. ...
Three kinds of devices are used in electronics: generators (having only outputs), converters (having inputs and outputs) and loads (having only inputs). ...
Look up isolation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Typical instrumentation amplifier schematic An instrumentation amplifier is a type of differential amplifier that has been specifically designed to have characteristics suitable for use in measurement and test equipment. ...
An intervention point. The input voltage sources affect the virtual ground existing in the op-amp circuits with parallel negative feedback through a circuit component acting as a voltage-to-current converter - a resistor (inverting amplifier - Fig. 7, integrator, logarithmic amplifier), a capacitor (differentiator), a diode (antilogarithmic amplifier), etc. In some circuits (for example, summing amplifier - Fig. 11), a few input sources "attack" simultaneously the virtual ground. Each entity in this world may be presented as a system of connected components. ...
An integrator is a device to perform the mathematical operation known as integration, a fundamental operation in calculus. ...
A Differentiator is a circuit that is designed such that the output of the circuit is proportional to the derivative of the input. ...
This article illustrates some typical applications of solid-state integrated circuit operational amplifiers. ...
The op-amp reacts to the input intervention, in order to restore the normal virtual ground state (VA = 0). For this purpose, it changes its output voltage, in order to "suck" or to "push" a current through another circuit component (a capacitor, a diode, a resistor, etc.) from/to this point. Actually, the op-amp's output voltage in the circuits with parallel negative feedback represents the op-amp's reaction to the input intervention. Although the virtual ground point is the actual output of the circuits with parallel negative feedback, in this case it is non-used. Instead, the op-amp reaction to the input intervention against the virtual ground is used as an output. Intentionally worsened virtual ground. In some single-supplied circuits with positive feedback (for example, an op-amp inverting comparator with hysteresis [7] or Smitt trigger), the virtual ground is preliminarily worsened. In this arrangements, this point has significant internal resistance, in order to be easily influenced by the op-amp output. The same trick is frequently used in the single supply op-amp circuits with negative feedback. A system with hysteresis exhibits path-dependence, or rate-independent memory. Consider a deterministic system with no hysteresis and no dynamics. ...
Outputs
Fig. 12. Op-amp parallel diode limiter Clipping indicator. In the circuits with parallel negative feedback, the voltage of the virtual ground point indicates the system's state. When the system works properly, its output quantity (usually voltage) manages to "neutralize" the input influence in the virtual ground; there is approximately a zero voltage in this point. If the system runs out of output voltage, it saturates and a voltage appears in the virtual ground (click Exploring in [8] and go to Page 7-1, in order to see an animated presentation of this phenomenon). Actually, this voltage is a part of the input voltage. For example, in the circuit of an inverting amplifier (Fig. 7a), the resistors Rin and Rf act as a voltage divider; therefore, Rf/(Rf + Rin) part of the input voltage begins crossing over to the op-amp's inverting input when the op amp saturates. This voltage may be used (for example, in audio amplifiers) as an output signal indicating the clipping. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 571 pixelsFull resolutionâ (1,000 Ã 714 pixels, file size: 25 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1. ...
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Diode limiter. In some circuits (for example, a parallel diode limiter), the virtual ground point is the output of the circuit.
See also Each entity in this world may be presented as a system of connected components. ...
Three kinds of devices are used in electronics: generators (having only outputs), converters (having inputs and outputs) and loads (having only inputs). ...
A VI curve with a negative differential resistance region Negative resistance or negative differential resistance (NDR) is a property of electrical circuit elements composed of certain materials in which, over certain voltage ranges, current is a decreasing function of voltage. ...
The negative impedance converter (NIC) is a configuration of an operational amplifier with the aim of creating a negative load. ...
External links |