- May 11, 2008
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I had been thinking,
The minimum load current or also called quiescent current for the LT3081 can vary between 1.1mA typical and 5mA maximum. There is nothing wrong with the circuit, just a bit of tolerance. I have not yet had enough coffee to be awake enough to think it through.
I guess when the current potentiometer is set to 0V, the LT3081 essentially turns the output transistor of the LT3081 off. The current throug the resistor R2 is reduced to the minimal required quiescent current, meaning the voltage over the resistor R2 is also reduced. The emittor of Q1 becomes more negative, starts saturating more and the collector voltage becomes more negative. The -0.76V is just the Vbe voltage.
If the circuit is calculated at 2*4mA but the required quiescent current is less than that, the voltage at junction R2 and emitter Q1 would be more negative, hence the negative voltage.
The minimum load current or also called quiescent current for the LT3081 can vary between 1.1mA typical and 5mA maximum. There is nothing wrong with the circuit, just a bit of tolerance. I have not yet had enough coffee to be awake enough to think it through.
I guess when the current potentiometer is set to 0V, the LT3081 essentially turns the output transistor of the LT3081 off. The current throug the resistor R2 is reduced to the minimal required quiescent current, meaning the voltage over the resistor R2 is also reduced. The emittor of Q1 becomes more negative, starts saturating more and the collector voltage becomes more negative. The -0.76V is just the Vbe voltage.
If the circuit is calculated at 2*4mA but the required quiescent current is less than that, the voltage at junction R2 and emitter Q1 would be more negative, hence the negative voltage.
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