Diode clipper A simple diode clipper can be made with a diode and a resistor. This will remove either the positive, or the negative half of the waveform depending on the direction the diode is connected. The simple circuit clips at zero voltage (or to be more precise, at the small
forward voltage of the forward
biased diode) but the clipping voltage can be set to any desired value with the addition of a reference voltage. The diagram illustrates a positive reference voltage but the reference can be positive or negative for both positive and negative clipping giving four possible configurations in all. The simplest circuit for the voltage reference is a resistor
potential divider connected between the voltage rails. This can be improved by replacing the lower resistor with a
zener diode with a
breakdown voltage equal to the required reference voltage. The zener acts as a
voltage regulator stabilising the reference voltage against supply and load variations.
Zener diode In the example circuit on the right, two
zener diodes are used to clip the voltage VIN. The voltage in either direction is limited to the reverse breakdown voltage
plus the forward voltage drop across one zener diode.
Op-amp precision clipper For very small values of clipping voltage on low-level signals the
I-V curve of the diode can result in clipping onset that is not very sharp. Precision clippers can be made by placing the clipping device in the feedback circuit of an
operational amplifier in a manner similar to
precision rectifiers. ==Classification==