Project Report Group 01
Project Report Group 01
Project Report
Semester: Spring-2025
Sec: 04
Group No: 01
Group Members:
Submitted to-
Dr. Sarwar Jahan
Associate Professor
Department of Computer Science & Engineering
East West University
Design of a Triangular wave generator using an Operational
Amplifier for a specified input.
Fig - 1
Fig.1 shows a design process of a Triangular wave generator circuit. The design
process includes two design segments (a square wave generator & a triangular wave
generator) to get the final output Vo (V). Use a 10Vpp sinusoid as input and
operational amplifiers to the design. Design the circuit components, implement, and
finally test the circuit. [Note that, for design purposes, the values of the resistors
should not exceed more than 10kΩ.]
………………………………………………………………………………………
Objective:
The objective of this project is to design and analyze a triangular wave generator
circuit using op-amps that takes a 10V peak-to-peak sinusoidal input and outputs a
triangular waveform, by utilizing a two-stage process: first generating a square wave,
then integrating it to form a triangular waveform.
Theory:
➢ Triangular Wave Generator (Integrator): The square wave output from the
comparator is then fed into an op-amp configured as an integrator. This circuit
includes a resistor at the input and a capacitor in the feedback loop. The
integrator mathematically integrates the square wave, producing a linearly
increasing and decreasing voltage over time, which forms a triangular
waveform.
➢ Biasing: Proper biasing ensures that the transistor operates in the active
region, where it can amplify signals effectively. The voltage divider formed
by the base resistors (R1 and R2) sets the initial bias voltage for the transistor.
➢ Coupling Capacitors: Capacitors are used at the input and output to block
DC components while allowing AC signals to pass through. This prevents
interference with the biasing of the transistor and ensures only the desired
signal is amplified.
● Op-amp: 741
● R1 =1k, R2 = 10kΩ
● Configuration: Comparator with feedback (Schmitt Trigger)
● Op-amp: 741
● R3 = 100kΩ
● C1 = 0.1 µF
● Configuration: Integrator
Design Considerations:
To design the circuit, the following steps were followed:
1. The op-amps must be powered with a dual supply (±10V) to handle bipolar
output.
3. The RC time constant of the integrator (R1C1) determines the slope of the
triangular wave.
Output:
Equipment and Components Used:
Calculations:
𝑅2 1𝑘
𝑉𝑇𝐻+ = × 𝑉𝑂𝑢𝑡 = × 10𝑉 ≈ 0.098𝑉
𝑅2 + 𝑅3 1𝑘 + 100𝑘
𝑅2 1𝑘
𝑉𝑇𝐻− = × 𝑉𝑂𝑢𝑡 = × −10𝑉 ≈ − 0.098𝑉
𝑅2 + 𝑅3 1𝑘 + 100𝑘
∆𝑉 𝑉𝑠𝑞𝑢𝑎𝑟𝑒 10
𝑆𝑙𝑜𝑝𝑒 = = = = 10,000𝑉/𝑠
∆𝑡 𝑅𝐶 1𝑚𝑠
3. Frequency of Oscillation (Approx.):
1 1
𝑓= = = 250 𝐻
4𝑅𝐶 4 × 10𝑘 × 0.1𝜇𝑓
Observations and Adjustments:
● The square wave output was observed to be sharp and symmetric when tested
with an oscilloscope.
● The triangular wave output followed the expected linear rise and fall.
● Slight variations in waveform symmetry were observed due to component
tolerances.
Adjustments Made:
Conclusion:
The triangular wave generator circuit was successfully designed, implemented, and
tested. By using a two-stage op-amp configuration, we converted a 10Vpp sine wave
into a triangular waveform. This project demonstrated the practical application
operational amplifiers in waveform generation and reinforced concepts of comparator
and integrator circuits.
The final circuit met all design constraints and functioned as expected.