I'm working on a parallel REF102 design, which is generally going well, but as part of my experiments I built three different output options into the board to ultimately figure out the best output method:
1. Straight 10V output direct from the parallel REF102's.
2. A simple buffered output (currently OPA189)
3. A filtered output (as per figure 14 on the REF102 data sheet)
Quite bizarrely I am getting the best results with the buffered output, then the 10V output and the filtered output is the worst with a huge amount of 50Hz noise. All of them show some 50Hz noise, but the filtered one is absolutely awful!
My assumption at this point is that this is a PCB design flaw on my part, either to do with the lengths of the tracks or the ground plane underneath this section (I've never really understood when you should and when you shouldn't!) ... I fear I have built the worlds best radio receiver!
Can anyone give me any pointers?
Attached is the section of the PCB (I can include the schematic, but it's actually really simple to see from the PCB and the component values match the REF102 datasheet (apart from it being OPA189's))
I've also attached a couple of the signal analyser outputs (apologies for the awful photos, I haven't got GPIB setup yet on this), the bad one if the "filtered" output, the other one is the unbuffered 10V output.
EDIT: Just having a quick look at the higher frequencies (2kHz+) I can see the the filter is having some positive effect (noise is around -111dBV on buffered, -114dBV on 10V, and about -120dbV on the filtered output) ... so this does seem like a low frequency problem.
EDIT2: I've just made a small circular "probe" which I connected to my sig-gen at 130Hz and I can induce that signal into the "filter" line really easily, with some careful positioning almost as much signal as the 50Hz peak, but I can't get it to even show on the 10V and buffered lines. So I really have done something specific on that section.