The TLC2252CD operates as a dual-channel CMOS operational amplifier using Texas Instruments Advanced LinCMOS process, combining micropower consumption with rail-to-rail output capability.
CMOS Input Stage: The input stage uses a differential pair of P-channel MOSFETs, providing extremely high input impedance (typically 10^12 Ω) and very low input bias current (1 pA typical). This CMOS input architecture eliminates the input bias current errors that plague bipolar op-amps in high-impedance circuits. The input common-mode voltage range extends from the negative rail (V-) to approximately 1.2V below the positive rail (V+), enabling ground-referenced operation in single-supply applications. The input offset voltage is laser-trimmed to 850 µV max (A-grade) or 1.5 mV max (standard grade) at 25°C.
Rail-to-Rail Output Stage: The output stage uses a complementary CMOS push-pull configuration with both P-channel and N-channel output transistors. This architecture allows the output to swing to within millivolts of both supply rails under light load conditions (typically 10 mV from V- and 60 mV from V+ with 100 kΩ load). The rail-to-rail output maximizes the usable signal range in single-supply applications, which is critical when interfacing with ADCs where even a few hundred millivolts of lost dynamic range can significantly reduce resolution.
Micropower Operation: The TLC2252 achieves its very low supply current (35 µA per channel, 80 µA total for dual) through careful biasing of the internal gain stages at very low quiescent current levels. This micropower design makes the device ideal for battery-powered applications where supply current must be minimized. The trade-off for low power is reduced bandwidth (200 kHz GBW) and slew rate (0.12 V/µs), which are adequate for DC and low-frequency signal conditioning.
Gain-Bandwidth Product: The 200 kHz gain-bandwidth product defines the frequency at which the open-loop gain drops to unity (0 dB). For a closed-loop gain of 10 (20 dB), the bandwidth is approximately 20 kHz; for a gain of 100 (40 dB), approximately 2 kHz. The TLC2252 is therefore best suited for DC and low-frequency applications such as sensor signal conditioning, transducer amplification, and active filtering below audio frequencies.
Slew Rate: The 0.12 V/µs slew rate limits the maximum output swing at high frequencies. For a full-scale sine wave output, the maximum frequency before slew-rate limiting is f_max = SR / (2π × Vp), where Vp is the peak output voltage. For a 5V peak-to-peak output (Vp = 2.5V), the maximum frequency is approximately 7.6 kHz. This is consistent with the device target application space of DC and low-frequency signal conditioning.
Noise Performance: The TLC2252 achieves 19 nV/√Hz input-referred voltage noise at 1 kHz, which is approximately four times lower than competing micropower CMOS op-amps. This improvement is achieved through optimized input transistor sizing and bias current distribution. The low noise, combined with the high input impedance, makes the device excellent for amplifying small signals from high-impedance sources such as piezoelectric sensors and photodiodes without significant noise degradation.