Hi all-
Let's talk about the small capacitor(s) that are typically used for power rail bypassing of op-amps. The usual idea is 100nF from B+ to ground and 100nF from B- to ground, with both caps being placed in close proximity to the chip.
I recently read about an alternative to this: Using just one 100nF cap, wired directly from B+ to B-, in other words not connected to ground at all. The idea is this will avoid injecting rail noise into the ground. That argument makes some sense to me, especially if board layout is less than ideal, but I have to say I've never actually seen this implementation in anything I've ever worked on.
I've got the usual questions here: What do we think about this? Have you ever seen this done in a design, and did it work well? Are there any particular op-amps that just hate this idea and misbehave?
All comments welcome. Thanks.