0:00:00.080,0:00:04.620 >> In this video, I would like to review what a non-inverting summer does. 0:00:04.620,0:00:08.630 We begin by starting with a non-inverting amplifier that you see here, 0:00:08.630,0:00:12.335 where you have a single input voltage going to a single output voltage. 0:00:12.335,0:00:15.885 Then, we're just going to start adding input voltages to it. 0:00:15.885,0:00:21.855 So, we've got this Rs2 with a second voltage Vs2. 0:00:21.855,0:00:28.170 What happens over here is that this side acts somewhat like a voltage divider, 0:00:28.170,0:00:31.260 and so we're going to have an additional gain term over here which is 0:00:31.260,0:00:36.150 Rs2 over Rs2 plus Rs1, 0:00:36.150,0:00:45.210 and then we're going to add in our second voltage Vs2 times Rs1 over Rs1 plus Rs2. 0:00:45.210,0:00:49.145 This again right here is multiplied by both of them. 0:00:49.145,0:00:53.075 This gives us a circuit that has positive, 0:00:53.075,0:00:54.649 both of these are positive, 0:00:54.649,0:00:56.419 this value is positive, 0:00:56.419,0:01:00.320 this is positive, this is the non-inverting part that we 0:01:00.320,0:01:04.519 have no change in the polarity or the positive-negative of our values. 0:01:04.519,0:01:10.580 So, we could bring Vs1 and Vs2 into 0:01:10.580,0:01:16.715 a circuit where we're going to multiply each of them by a separate value, 0:01:16.715,0:01:18.920 a gain term, and then we're going to bring them 0:01:18.920,0:01:22.900 together and add them up and that gives us the V out. 0:01:22.900,0:01:25.055 This is what a non-inverting summer does. 0:01:25.055,0:01:29.005 Remember that as with all of our op-amp circuits, 0:01:29.005,0:01:32.810 the value of V out is still limited between 0:01:32.810,0:01:37.490 the two power supply voltages Vcc and minus Vcc, 0:01:37.490,0:01:39.935 we can't get any bigger or smaller than the 0:01:39.935,0:01:43.710 power supplies that we're using, and there's our circuit.