Voltage buffer
A voltage buffer amplifier is used to transform a voltage signal with high output impedance from a first circuit into an identical voltage with low impedance for a second circuit. The interposed buffer amplifier prevents the second circuit from loading the first circuit unacceptably and interfering with its desired operation, since without the voltage buffer, the voltage of the second circuit is influenced by output impedance of the first circuit (as it is larger than the input impedance of the second circuit). In the ideal voltage buffer (Figure 1 top), the input impedance is infinite and the output impedance is zero. Other properties of the ideal buffer are: perfect linearity, regardless of signal amplitudes; and instant output response, regardless of the speed of the input signal. If the voltage is transferred unchanged (the voltage gain ''Av'' is 1), the amplifier is a unity gain buffer; also known as a voltage follower because the output voltage ''follows'' or tracks the input voltage. Although the voltage gain of a voltage buffer amplifier may be (approximately) unity, it usually provides considerable current gain and thus power gain. However, it is commonplace to say that it has a gain of 1 (or the equivalent 0 dB), referring to the voltage gain. As an example, consider a Thévenin source (voltage ''VA'', series resistance ''RA'') driving a resistor load ''RL''. Because of voltage division (also referred to as "loading") the voltage across the load is only '. However, if the Thévenin source drives a unity gain buffer such as that in Figure 1 (top, with unity gain), the voltage input to the amplifier is ''VA'', and with ''no voltage division'' because the amplifier input resistance is infinite. At the output the dependent voltage source delivers voltage ''Av VA = VA'' to the load, again without voltage division because the output resistance of the buffer is zero. A Thévenin equivalent circuit of the combined original Thévenin source ''and'' the buffer is an ideal voltage source ''VA'' with zero Thévenin resistance.Current buffer
Typically a current buffer amplifier is used to transform a current signal with a low output impedance from a first circuit into an identical current with high impedance for a second circuit. The interposed buffer amplifier prevents the second circuit from loading the first circuit's current unacceptably and interfering with its desired operation. In the ideal current buffer (Figure 1 bottom), the output impedance is infinite (an ideal current source) and the input impedance is zero (a short circuit). Again, other properties of the ideal buffer are: perfect linearity, regardless of signal amplitudes; and instant output response, regardless of the speed of the input signal. For a current buffer, if the current is transferred unchanged (the current gain ''βi'' is 1), the amplifier is again a unity gain buffer; this time known as a current follower because the output current ''follows'' or tracks the input current. As an example, consider a Norton source (current ''IA'', parallel resistance ''RA'') driving a resistor load ''RL''. Because of current division (also referred to as "loading") the current delivered to the load is only '. However, if the Norton source drives a unity gain buffer such as that in Figure 1 (bottom, with unity gain), the current input to the amplifier is ''IA'', with ''no current division'' because the amplifier input resistance is zero. At the output the dependent current source delivers current ''βi IA = IA'' to the load, again without current division because the output resistance of the buffer is infinite. A Norton equivalent circuit of the combined original Norton source ''and'' the buffer is an ideal current source ''IA'' with infinite Norton resistance.Voltage buffer examples
Op-amp implementation
A unity gain buffer amplifier may be constructed by applying a full seriesSimple transistor circuits
Other unity gain buffer amplifiers include theImpedance transformation using the bipolar voltage follower
Using the small-signal circuit in Figure 4, the impedance seen looking into the circuit is :: (The analysis uses the relation ''gmrπ = (IC /VT) (VT /IB)'' = β, which follows from the evaluation of these parameters in terms of the bias currents.) Assuming the usual case where ''rO'' >> ''RL'', the impedance looking into the buffer is larger than the load ''RL'' without the buffer by a factor of (β + 1), which is substantial because β is large. The impedance is increased even more by the added ''rπ'', but often ''rπ'' << (β + 1) RL, so the addition does not make much differenceImpedance transformation using the MOSFET voltage follower
Using the small-signal circuit in Figure 5, the impedance seen looking into the circuit is no longer ''RL'' but instead is infinite (at low frequencies) because the MOSFET draws no current. As frequency is increased, the parasitic capacitances of the transistors come into play and the transformed input impedance drops with frequency.Chart of single-transistor amplifiers
Some configurations of single-transistor amplifier can be used as a buffer to isolate the driver from the load. For most digital applications, an NMOS voltage follower (common drain) is the preferred configuration. These amplifiers have high input impedance, which means that the digital system will not need to supply a large current.Logic buffer amplifiers
A non-linear buffer amplifier is sometimes used in digital circuits where a high current is required, perhaps for driving more gates than the normal fan-out of the logic family used, or for driving displays, or long wires, or other difficult loads. It is common for a single package to contain several discrete buffer amplifiers. For example, a hex buffer is a single package containing 6 buffer amplifiers, and an octal buffer is a single package containing 8 buffer amplifiers. The terms inverting buffer and non-inverting buffer effectively correspond with high-current capability single-input NOR or OR gates respectively.Speaker array amplifiers
The majority of amplifiers used to drive large speaker arrays, such as those used for rock concerts, are amplifiers with 26-36dB voltage gain capable of high amounts of current into low impedance speaker arrays where the speakers are wired in parallel.Driven guards
A driven guard utilizes a voltage buffer to protect a very high impedance signal line by surrounding the line with a shield driven by a buffer to the same voltage as the line, the close voltage matching of the buffer prevents the shield from leaking significant current into the high impedance line while the low impedance of the shield can absorb any stray currents that could affect the signal line.Current buffer examples
Simple unity gain buffer amplifiers include theSimple transistor circuits
Figure 6 shows a bipolar current buffer biased with a current source (designated ''IE'' for DC emitter current) and driving another DC current source as active load (designated ''IC'' for DC collector current). The AC input signal current ''iin'' is applied to the emitter node of the transistor by an AC Norton current source with Norton resistance ''RS''. The AC output current ''iout'' is delivered by the buffer via a large coupling capacitor to load ''RL''. This coupling capacitor is large enough to be a short circuit at frequencies of interest. Because the transistor output resistance connects input and output sides of the circuit, there is a (very small) backward voltage feedback from the output to the input so this circuit is not unilateral. In addition, for the same reason, the input resistance depends (slightly) upon the output load resistance, and the output resistance depends significantly on the input driver resistance. For more detail see the article onSee also
* Preamplifier *References
{{Reflist Electronic amplifiers