The two circuits below illustrate generating low frequency sinewaves
by shifting the phase of the signal through an RC network so that
oscillation occurs where the total phase shift is 360 degrees. The transistor
circuit on the right produces a reasonable sinewave at the collector
of the 3904 which is buffered by the JFET to yield a low impedance
output. The circuit gain is critical for low distortion and you may need
to adjust the 500 ohm resistor to achieve a stable waveform with minimum
distortion. The transistor circuit is not recommended for practical
applications due to the critical adjustments needed.
The op-amp based phase shift oscillator is much more stable than the
single transistor version since the gain can be set higher than
needed to sustain oscillation and the output is taken from the
RC network which filters out most of the harmonic distortion.
The sinewave output from the RC network is buffered and the amplitude
restored by the second (top) op-amp which has gain of around 28dB. Frequency
is around 600 Hz for RC values shown (7.5K and 0.1uF) and can
be reduced by proportionally increasing the network resistors (7.5K).
The 7.5K value at pin 2 of the op-amp controls the oscillator circuit gain
and is selected so that the output at pin 1 is slightly clipped at the
positive and negative peaks. The sinewave output at pin 7 is about 5 volts
p-p using a 12 volt supply and appears very clean on a scope since the
RC network filters out most all distortion occurring at pin 1.
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