Two examples of the most common types of Voltage followers (buffers). You can find some theory behind them in our amplifier gain and buffer amplifier pages.
Transistor voltage follower:
This first circuit is a very simple one transistor voltage follower.
Consist of two biasing resistors, and one other resistor at the emitter
to acquire the output voltage from.
How it works:
The first to resistors connected to the transistor's base are forming a
voltage divider, in order to set a biasing point for the transistor to
work in our desired range. Then the transistor, our gain component for
the circuit which in this case is only used as a gateway to isolate two
circuit stages.
The resistor in the emitter is used to create a voltage from the current
passing from the transistor; Without it we can't get any voltage as our
output would be effectively shorted to ground (0 volts).
The capacitors that are displayed in the schematic are optional, but
very useful to prevent a wrong operation of the circuit, specially in
audio or high frequency uses. they stop any DC voltage to move or
otherwise disrupt the bias point of the transistor, thus causing
undesired operation. If you build this circuit only with dc remove the
capacitors, as they will prevent the circuit from functioning under
those conditions.
This circuit's operation is far more predictable and stable than the
transistor version, and also requires less external components.
How it works:
Works as described above, no external elements to explain. This circuit
uses feedback to maintain the voltage output the same as the input. Note
that this schematic does not display power, ground and other
connections for the op amp, these vary widely among manufacturers and op
amps so refer to your op amp's datasheet for pinouts and power
connections.
Opamp voltage follower