I have worked a lot with OpAmp designs, and based on my experience I would do a few things slightly differently.
I.M.O. The first thing I would claim is that MAX419 is not suitable at all for this application. It is simply too slow, with both limited bandwidth and low slew rate. Also, it doesn't work well with gains under 10, but may have stability problems.
Therefore you should check, that the amplifier is fully specified and performing properly when fed with the available voltage (5V, I suppose in this case).
Some things to look at:
You should definitely select an amplifier with sufficient gain-bandwidth product. Likely around or a little over ten MHz would be good enough for descent performance here. Another important parameter is the slew rate, which defines the maximum speed of large amplitude. For 3V in 1 us the theoretical limit is 3V/us, but in practice the amplifier should be faster - especially because the condition used for specification is likely easier than in the real application with some output capacitance etc. That also should reduce overshoot and ringing, as a slow amplifier would not react to its own feedback fast enough to swing nicely.
Also, if you wan to use the OpAmp with low gain such as a G=1 buffer configuration, check that it is guaranteed to be stable in that condition ("unity-gain-stable" is required for buffer / G=1 situation), and also tolerates your output-loading capacitance.
Ral-to-Rail I/O functionality is good, as then it is easier to get everything working right. (No clipping, and a good performance in the full supply voltage range)
For instance, MAX44259AUK in SOT-23 package likely would work with capacitive loads up to around 200-250pF. I have earlier proposed in this message chain some other amplifiers as well, at least one from Texas Instruments with even better capacitive drive ability. To find good enough OpAmp should be relatively easy, as there are quite many on the market performing well enough for this kind of application.
hello, the device is the DG419, not the max419
Posted on: December 12, 2015, 11:25:37 23:25 - Automerged
Did you mean the DG419 works fine at5V? MAX 419 is a very slow Op-Amp.
The spikes are probably the result of a feedback effect due to the rising voltage or just crosstalk from your gate to the output.
It will probably go away when you put a load on the output, even if its only some kohm
But what the loaded curve shows: the analog switch has to much resistance to charge your input capacitance in less than 1us.
You need to operate it with a higher voltage (12V), that will decrease the resistance or add an OP-Amp as a buffer.
@vern
there's no max419 involved . Anyway i'll increase Vdd to 9-10V on monday and check how much Rdson i can reduce. the 'load to the output' concerns the logic gate clock?