As an aside, Mr Tayloe took an existing idea (the switched commutator) which had been invented long ago, and attempted to give it his name. There is a history of this- It's common name is the Gilbert Cell (after Barrie Gilbert), but was actually the invention of Howard Jones in 1963!
For better performance, it is common to use a high speed mux chip or pair of fast N/P mosfets.
Yeah - I was planning to use a bus-switch chip like Tayloe shows in his paper. I know about the Gilbert Cell, but I'm didn't know it was considered a commutating mixer.
Putting a capacitor on the inverting input of an opamp is simply wrong: The circuit becomes instable because it sets the opamp to infinite gain at high frequencies. That's peak at 100kHz.
The capacitor should be connected between the inverting input and output. But this creates another problem: The opamp is probably too slow for the rf/mixing frequency. Therefore many mixers add a seperate lowpass filter between the multiplexer and the differential amplifier to attenuate the rf signal before it enteres the opamp.
In addtion to the capacitor, the simplified differential amplifier has another problem: The feedback resistor at the inverting input forms a voltage divider with the source impedance. But at the non inverting input there is no resistor, therefore the voltage is higher at this point. The ouput of the differential amplifier is not exactly the difference. This should result in a bad image rejection.
Instead of improving the circuit, Mr Tayloe made it worse...
Thanks for your insight. One note - the mixer (consisting of the source impedance and switch capacitance) forms a lowpass filter, with a rolloff typically starting from a few kHz to a few tens of kHz, which means that the op-amp shouldn't see too much high-frequency signal at its input - especially considering the op-amp used is reasonably fast.
You are right about the problems with the simplified differential amplifier - the more I think about it, I think it is a fatally flawed idea. I think I will use a two op-amp instrumentation amplifier as shown here:
http://www.linear.com/solutions/1574. This should sidestep all of the problems of the circuit I showed above, while also making it so the gain of the circuit doesn't depend on the input impedance (this kind of bothered me about the circuit...)
Well... this thread will be interesting! I have already one thread here with many problems with this type of mixer. (tl,dr: does not work at all)
Some of my questions were never answered, like why 200MHz BW or so opamp is usually used on the output, when the baseband is just few kHz?
I will definitely watch this thread and try to learn something from it.
If I use an instrumentation amplifier instead of the "simplified differential" amplifier, do you think the mixer will work well? I'm not an expert, but the theory seems sound, even if the specific implementation with the odd op-amp circuit is wrong.
The op-amp shown in the circuit in my first post has a GBW of 40MHz, and with a gain of 100 it has a bandwidth of 400kHz. This is rather higher than the baseband (a few kHz), like you said, but doesn't seem ridiculous either. The rolloff of the mixer response is only -6dB an octave, so it seems like a good idea to make sure than the op-amp deals properly with reasonably high frequency signals - but that's only my intuition about this circuit, I could be quite wrong.
I think the LT1115 in the circuit was chosen more on the merit of its low noise rather than its GBW, though.