The CMOS input stage keeps input bias current at 0.1 pA, which is useful when working with high-impedance sources like photodiodes or pH probes.
Supply current vs. speed — the trade-off that defines the BOM fit
At 820 µA per channel quiescent current, the LMV852MM/NOPB sits in a useful middle ground: it offers 8 MHz of bandwidth without the 2–3 mA per channel draw of a faster general-purpose amplifier. If your application needs higher slew rate (20 V/µs or more) and you can trade supply voltage range, the TLV9351IDCKR is a single-channel alternative at 3.5 MHz GBW but 20 V/µs slew; the TLV9362IDDFR offers 10.6 MHz and 25 V/µs in a dual package, though at 2.6 mA per channel. For designs where power budget is the priority and bandwidth below 3 MHz is acceptable, the OPA4374AIPWT (quad, 6.5 MHz, 600 µA per channel) is a functional second-source candidate in a different pin-count package.
For dual-sourcing or a pin-compatible alternate, the TLV9362IDDFR is a higher-speed CMOS dual op-amp in the same 8-VSSOP footprint, though its supply current is roughly 3× higher.
