Realization of lossy inductor employing current feedback operational amplifier and its applications

Author(s):  
Tajinder Singh Arora ◽  
Soumya Gupta
ETRI Journal ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 212-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soliman A. Mahmoud ◽  
Ahmed H. Madian ◽  
Ahmed M. Soliman

Author(s):  
Muhammad Taher Abuelma’atti ◽  
Abdullah Yousef Alnafisa

<span>This paper presents a simple chaotic-masking system. The system uses a chaos generator built around a grounded memristor. The memristor is emulated using the current-feedback operational amplifier (CFOA). At the sending end the signal is masked by adding chaos. At the receiving end the signal is recovered by subtracting the chaos. The performance of proposed system is investigated using sinusoidal and square wave signals.</span>


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (15) ◽  
pp. 2050247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hasan Sozen ◽  
Ugur Cam

Meminductor is a nonlinear two-terminal element with storage energy and memory ability. To date, meminductor element is not available commercially as memristor and memcapacitor are. Therefore, it is of great significance to implement a meminductor emulator for breadboard experiment. In this paper, a flux-controlled floating/grounded meminductor emulator without a memristor is presented. It is built with commercially available off-the-shelf electronic devices. It consists of single operational transconductance amplifier (OTA), single multiplier, two second-generation current conveyors (CCIIs), single current-feedback operational amplifier (CFOA) and single operational amplifier. Using OTA device introduces an additional control parameter besides frequency and amplitude values of applied voltage to control the area of pinched hysteresis loop of meminductor. Mathematical model of proposed emulator circuit is given to describe the behavior of meminductor circuit. The breadboard experiment is performed using CA3080, AD844, AD633J and LM741 for OTA, CCII–CFOA, multiplier and operational amplifier, respectively. Simulation and experimental test results are given to verify the theoretical analyses. Frequency-dependent pinched hysteresis loop is maintained up to 5 kHz. The presented meminductor emulator tends to work as ordinary inductor for higher frequencies.


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