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    Comparators

    A Comparator is a circuit that accepts two voltages or currents and then switches the output showing which of the two is bigger. Comparators are found in components such as analogue to digital converters (ADCs). Comparators are like operational amplifiers except a comparator is designed specifically to operate with positive feedback and output saturated at one power rail or the other.

    How a Comparator works

    A comparator samples two input pins and turns on the output when identifying either a difference or similarity. An example is when you have a minus voltage on the inverting Pin and a plus non-inverting. When the voltage on the non-inverting equals the inverting voltage the Pin turns on. Normally the output Pin is open and switches to ground when the comparator is activated.

    Why use a Comparator?

    The primary use of a comparator is converting analogue to digital (ADC). Two supply voltages are applied and the difference determines a high or low digital signal.

    Types of Comparator

    • Current sense
    • Differential / Dual differential
    • Dual / Dual CMOS
    • Dual voltage / General voltage
    • General-purpose
    • Ground sense
    • High speed / high-speed CMOS
    • Low current CMOS
    • Low power / low voltage / low-power CMOS
    • Micropower
    • Nano power
    • Precision
    • Push/pull output
    • Quad differential
    • Rail to rail
    • Voltage
    • Window

    Mounting Types

    Comparators can be found in both surface mount and through-hole mounting configurations to enable use in a wide variety of applications.

    Comparator power supply types

    Available in both single and dual power supply configurations, a comparator can easily be implemented into a robust solution.

    Various package types, pins, sizes, channels per chip, PSRR (power supply rejection ratio), CMRR (common-mode rejection ratio) are all available.

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