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Name of the Experiment- Design & simulate Non-Inverting amplifier using 741 Op-Amp IC.

Instrument/ Components Required- Proteus Simulator.

Theory:-
An Operational Amplifier or op-amp is a voltage amplifying device designed to be used with external
feedback components such as resistors and capacitors between its output and input terminals. It is a
high-gain electronic voltage amplifier with a differential input and usually a single-ended output. Op-
amps are among the most widely used electronic devices today, being used in a vast array of consumer,
industrial, and scientific devices.
Operational amplifiers are available in IC packages of single, dual or quad op-amps within one single
device. The most commonly available and used of all operational amplifiers in basic electronic kits and
projects is the industry standard μA-741.

Non-Inverting Amplifier-
A non-inverting amplifier is an op-amp circuit configuration which produces an amplified output
signal. This output signal of non-inverting op amp is in-phase with the input signal applied. In other
words a non-inverting amplifier behaves like a voltage follower circuit. A non-inverting amplifier also
uses negative feedback connection, but instead of feeding the entire output signal to the input, only a
part of the output signal voltage is fed back as input to the inverting input terminal of the op-amp. The
high input impedance and low output impedance of the non-inverting amplifier makes the circuit ideal
for impedance buffering applications.
Circuit Description-
A simple practical inverting amplifier using 741 IC which is a high performance and of course the
most popular widely used Op-amp amplifier. It can be used in various application like integrator,
differentiator, voltage follower, amplifier etc. 741 IC has a wide supply voltage range of (+22 V) .IC has
an integrated compensation network for improving stability of has shot circuit protection. Signal to be
amplified is applied to the Non-inverting pin (3) of IC. Inverting pin (2) is connected to ground. R1 is
input resistor & Rf (10 K) is feedback resistor. They both set the gain of amplifier. RL is load resistor (1
k), the amplified signal available across it.

Procedure-
1. Open Proteus simulator, Click on “P” option on selective window to pick components /devices
from virtual library.
2. In library search the required components and select it by click ok option.
3. Then select one by one component and placed on the editing window or screen.
4. Right click on the components to change its required value.
5. Placed an Oscilloscope for visualization of input & output signal.
6. Finally run the simulation.
Observation-

SL.No
Frequency Vout Vin Gain
.

Conclusion-

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