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The World Leader in High Performance Signal Processing Solutions




FUNDAMENTALS OF DESIGN
         Class 1
      Introduction

      Presented by David Kress
The Goal

 Capture what is going on in the real world
 Convert into a useful electronic format
 Analyze, Manipulate, Store, and Send
 Return to the real world
The real world is NOT digital
Analog to Electronic signal processing




           Sensor      Amp   Converter    Digital Processor
           (INPUT)




            Actuator   Amp    Converter
           (OUTPUT)
The Sensor



Analog, but                Analog
              Sensor
    NOT       (INPUT)        AND
                              Amp      Converter    Digital Processor

 electronic               electronic




               Actuator       Amp       Converter
              (OUTPUT)
Popular sensors

                  Sensor Type      Output

              Thermocouple         Voltage

                  Photodiode       Current

              Strain Gauge       Resistance

                  Microphone     Capacitance

              Touch Button      Charge Output

                   Antenna       Inductance
Thermocouple

 Very  low level (µV/ºC)
 Non-linear
 Difficult to handle
 Wires need insulation
 Susceptible to noise
 Fragile
Sensor Signal Conditioning


 Sensor                        Amp




             Analog,                                Analog,
            electronic,                            electronic,
            but “dirty”                           and “clean”



          •Amplify the signal to a noise-resistant level
          •Lower the source impedance
          •Linearize (sometimes but not always)
          •Filter
          •Protect
Types of Temperature Sensors


    THERMOCOUPLE               RTD          THERMISTOR         SEMICONDUCTOR


     Widest Range:           Range:             Range:               Range:
    –184ºC to +2300ºC    –200ºC to +850ºC    0ºC to +100ºC      –55ºC to +150ºC

   High Accuracy and      Fair Linearity    Poor Linearity        Linearity: 1ºC
      Repeatability                                              Accuracy: 1ºC
   Needs Cold Junction      Requires           Requires        Requires Excitation
     Compensation           Excitation        Excitation

   Low-Voltage Output       Low Cost        High Sensitivity    10mV/K, 20mV/K,
                                                                or 1µA/K Typical
                                                                     Output
Common Thermocouples

                               TYPICAL        NOMINAL         ANSI
    JUNCTION MATERIALS         USEFUL        SENSITIVITY   DESIGNATION
                              RANGE (ºC)       (µV/ºC)
    Platinum (6%)/ Rhodium-    38 to 1800        7.7           B
    Platinum (30%)/Rhodium
    Tungsten (5%)/Rhenium -    0 to 2300         16            C
    Tungsten (26%)/Rhenium
     Chromel - Constantan       0 to 982         76            E

       Iron - Constantan        0 to 760         55             J

       Chromel - Alumel       –184 to 1260       39            K

    Platinum (13%)/Rhodium-    0 to 1593        11.7           R
           Platinum
    Platinum (10%)/Rhodium-    0 to 1538        10.4           S
           Platinum
      Copper-Constantan       –184 to 400        45             T
Thermocouple Output Voltages
for Type J, K and S Thermocouples
      THERMOCOUPLE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (mV)   60


                                         50

                                                                                    TYPE K
                                         40                 TYPE J


                                         30


                                         20
                                                                                  TYPE S


                                         10


                                          0


                                         -10
                                           -250   0   250    500     750   1000    1250      1500   1750

                                                            TEMPERATURE (°C)
Thermocouple Seebeck Coefficient vs.
Temperature
                                     70


                                     60                           TYPE J
      SEEBECK COEFFICIENT - µV/ °C




                                     50

                                                                   TYPE K
                                     40


                                     30


                                     20
                                                                           TYPE S

                                     10


                                     0
                                     -250   0   250   500   750      1000     1250   1500   1750

                                                        TEMPERATURE (°C)
Thermocouple Basics

      A. THERMOELECTRIC VOLTAGE                C. THERMOCOUPLE MEASUREMENT
                                                   Metal A                        Metal A
                                                                    V1 – V2
                   Metal A

V1     T1                 Thermoelectric      V1     T1                                T2    V2
                              EMF
                   Metal B                                         Metal B



               B. THERMOCOUPLE                 D. THERMOCOUPLE MEASUREMENT
                                                          Copper              Copper
     Metal A            R        Metal A                              V
                                               Metal A                                 Metal A
                    I                                         T3             T4
V1     T1                            T2    V2 V1     T1                             T2      V2
                    Metal B                                        Metal B
            R = Total Circuit Resistance
            I = (V1 – V2) / R                             V = V1 – V2, If T3 = T4
Using a Temperature Sensor for Cold-
Junction Compensations
                            V(OUT)                        TEMPERATURE
                                               V(COMP)    COMPENSATION
                                                             CIRCUIT
                   COPPER                    COPPER


       METAL A            SAME               METAL A
                          TEMP                                    TEMP
                                                                 SENSOR
  T1     V(T1)                                  V(T2)      T2

                            METAL B

                 V(COMP) = f(T2)
                                                         ISOTHERMAL BLOCK
                 V(OUT)   = V(T1) – V(T2) + V(COMP)

                 IF V(COMP) = V(T2) – V(0°C), THEN

                 V(OUT)   = V(T1) – V(0°C)
AD594/AD595 Monolithic Thermocouple
Amplifier with Cold-Junction Compensation
                                           +5V
                  0.1µF                        BROKEN
                          4.7k             THERMOCOUPLE            VOUT
                                                ALARM              10mV/°C


                                        OVERLOAD
  TYPE J: AD594                          DETECT
  TYPE K: AD595


 THERMOCOUPLE         AD594/AD595                    +A




                           –                     –                           –TC
                                                            ICE
                               G    +       G              POINT
                           +                     +         COMP
                                                                             +TC
Basic Relationships For Semiconductor
Temperature Sensors
                       IC                              IC
                                                            N TRANSISTORS
                   ONE TRANSISTOR




   VBE                              VN


           kT  IC                                kT  IC 
   VBE      ln                           VN      ln       
            q  IS                                 q  N  IS 

                                           kT
                       VBE  VBE  VN       ln(N)
                                            q


                        INDEPENDENT OF IC, IS
Classic Bandgap Temperature Sensor
                 +VIN
                              R                       R          "BROKAW CELL"

                                                            +        VBANDGAP = 1.205V
                                  I2 @ I1



                         Q2                      Q1
                         NA                      A
                                   VN                     VBE
                  kT
VBE  VBE  VN     ln(N)    R2                          (Q1)
                   q
                                                                             R1 kT
                                                                 VPTAT = 2         ln(N)
                                                                             R2 q

                                            R1
Analog Temperature Sensors

  Product   Accuracy   Max Accuracy     Operating        Supply        Max      Interface       Package
             (Max)        Range          Temp            Range        Current
                                         Range
             ± 0.5°C        25°C          -55°C to                                            TO-52,2-ld FP,
 AD590                                                  4 to 30V      298uA     Current Out
             ± 1.0°C   -25°C to 105°C      150°C                                                SOIC, Die
             ± 0.5°C        25°C          -25°C to                    298uA
 AD592                                                  4 to 30V                Current Out      TO-92
             ± 1.0°C   -55°C to 150°C      105°C
                         0°C to 85°C      -55°C to                                            TO-92, SOT23,
 TMP35       ± 2.0°C                                   2.7 to 5.5V     50uA     Voltage Out
                       -25°C to 100°C      150°C                                                  SOIC
                                                                                              TO-92, SOT23,
                       -40°C to 125°C     -55°C to                     50uA
 TMP36       ± 3.0°C                                   2.7V to 5.5V             Voltage Out       SOIC
                                           150°C

             ± 2.0°C   -50°C to 150°C     -50°C to
 AD22100                                                4 to 6.5V     650uA     Voltage Out TO-92, SOIC, Die
                                           150°C
             ± 2.5°C    0°C to 100°C    0°C to 100°C
 AD22103                                               2.7 to 3.6V    600uA     Voltage Out   TO-92, SOIC
Digital Temperature Sensors
Comprehensive Portfolio of Accuracy Options
          Product   Accuracy (Max)     Max Accuracy      Interface      Package
                                          Range
                        ± 0.2°C          -10°C to 85°C
     ADT7420/7320                                         I2C/SPI         LFCSP
                        ± 0.25°C        -20°C to 105°C

     ADT7410/7310       ± 0.5°C         -40°C to 105°C    I2C/SPI         SOIC

                     ± 1°C (B grade)      0°C to 85°C
     ADT75                                                  I2C        MSOP, SOIC
                     ± 2°C (A grade)    -25°C to 100°C
                         ± 1°C           0°C to 70°C
     ADT7301                                                SPI        SOT23, MSOP

                         ± 1°C           0°C to 70°C
     TMP05/6                                               PWM         SC70, SOT23

                        ± 1.5°C         -40°C to 70°C
     AD7414/5                                               I2C        SOT23,MSOP

     ADT7302             ± 2°C           0°C to 70°C        SPI        SOT23,MSOP

                         ± 4°C
     TMP03/4                            -20°C to 100°C     PWM       TO-92,SOIC,TSSOP




21
Position and Motion Sensors

 Linear   Position: Linear Variable Differential Transformers
  (LVDT)
 Hall Effect Sensors

   Proximity Detectors

   Linear Output (Magnetic Field Strength)

 Rotational Position:

   Optical Rotational Encoders

   Synchros and Resolvers

   Inductosyns (Linear and Rotational Position)

   Motor Control Applications

 Acceleration and Tilt: Accelerometers

 Gyroscopes
+
     THREADED
       CORE                                 VA

                       ~                         VOUT = VA – VB
                  AC
                SOURCE                      VB
        1.75"
                                    _

                VOUT                        VOUT



SCHAEVITZ
            _          POSITION +       _          POSITION +
  E100


   LVDT – Linear Variable Differential
   Transformer
AD698

EXCITATION              AMP       ~       REFERENCE

                              OSCILLATOR
                    B
             VB
    +
                              A                        VOUT
                                      FILTER    AMP
                              B
                    A
             VA


                  A, B = ABSOLUTE VALUE + FILTER
    _
  4-WIRE LVDT
 AD698 LVDT Signal Conditioner
Hall Effect Sensors

    T                  CONDUCTOR
                           OR
                     SEMICONDUCTOR
I                                        I


                             VH

           I   = CURRENT
                                     B
        B = MAGNETIC FIELD

          T    = THICKNESS

        VH = HALL VOLTAGE
AD22151 Linear Output Magnetic
Field Sensor V / 2       V = +5V                                 CC
                                CC                VCC / 2

                                                                      R2
                        +
 R1                         TEMP
                             REF                    _                 R3
                        _
                                 AD22151                                   VOUT
                                                    +
                                                        OUTPUT
                                                         AMP
                                        CHOPPER
                                          AMP




      VOUT =   1 + R3   0.4mV        Gauss   NONLINEARITY = 0.1% FS
                   R2
Accelerometer Applications
 Tilt or Inclination
   Car Alarms

   Patient Monitors

   Cell phones

   Video games

 Inertial Forces

   Laptop Computer Disc Drive Protection

   Airbag Crash Sensors

   Car Navigation systems

   Elevator Controls

 Shock or Vibration

   Machine Monitoring

   Control of Shaker Tables

 ADI Accelerometer Fullscale g-Range: ± 2g to ± 100g

 ADI Accelerometer Frequency Range: DC to 10kHz
ADXL-family Micro-machined
  Accelerometers
 AT REST               CS1      CS2   APPLIED ACCELERATION

CENTER
 PLATE


         TETHER




                BEAM




  CS1                                     CS1
        = CS2                                   < CS2

   FIXED
  OUTER
  PLATES
                             DENOTES ANCHOR
Using an Accelerometer to Measure Tilt

                              +90°       X

                   X                                    1g
                                                   Acceleration
                                             0°


                              –90°
    +1g


 Acceleration = 1g × sin 


      0g                                              
                   –90°      0°              +90°



    –1g
Gyro Axes of Rotational Sensitivity
Coriolis acceleration example.
Displacement due to the Coriolis Effect
Photograph of mechanical sensor.
High Impedance Sensors
 Photodiodes

 Piezoelectric   Sensors
  Accelerometers
  Hydrophones

 Humidity   Monitors

 pH   Monitors

 Chemical   Sensors

 Smoke    Detectors

 Charge   Coupled Devices and

 Contact Image Sensors for Imaging
Photodiode Equivalent Circuit


INCIDENT
  LIGHT

                  PHOTO    RSH(T)
                 CURRENT             CJ
   IDEAL
   DIODE                   100k -
                           100G



    NOTE: RSH HALVES EVERY 10 C TEMPERATURE RISE
Current-to-voltage Converter (Simplified)
                         R = 1000M
       ISC = 30pA
        (0.001 fc)

                     _
                                           VOUT = 30mV




                     +                Sensitivity: 1mV / pA
Preamplifier DC Offset Errors
                          1000M   R2
                         IB
                   ~          _
                                          OFFSET
                   VOS                     RTO
       R1

                         IB
                              +

                   R3         DC NOISE GAIN = 1 + R2
                                                  R1

   IB DOUBLES EVERY 10 C TEMPERATURE RISE

  R1 = 1000M @ 25 C (DIODE SHUNT RESISTANCE)

    R1 HALVES EVERY 10 C TEMPERATURE RISE

  R3 CANCELLATION RESISTOR NOT EFFECTIVE
Sensor Resistances Used In Bridge
Circuits Span A Wide Dynamic Range
   Strain Gages                            120, 350, 3500

   Weigh-Scale Load Cells                  350 - 3500

   Pressure Sensors                        350 - 3500

   Relative Humidity                       100k - 10M

   Resistance Temperature Devices (RTDs)   100 , 1000

   Thermistors                             100 - 10M
Wheatstone Bridge Produces An Output Null
When The Ratios Of Sidearm Resistances Match
                          VB



                                    THE WHEATSTONE BRIDGE:
              R4               R3
                                              R1        R2 
                                     VO  VB                 
                                              R1 + R4 R2 + R3 

                     VO                    AT BALANCE,
                                                  R1 R2
                                        VO = 0 if   
                                                  R4 R3
              R1               R2
Output Voltage Sensitivity And Linearity Of Constant Current Drive
Bridge Configurations Differs According To The Number Of Active
Elements
                 IB                   IB                   IB                      IB

     R                R   R+R         R     R             RR   R+R         RR



            VO                   VO                   VO                  VO



     R           R+R      R          R+R   R             R+R   RR         R+R

               R
 VO: IBR         R
                               IB
                                      R
                                                 IB
                                                           R        IB    R
      4      R +                2                 2
                  4
Linearity
             0.25%/%                  0                     0                  0
Error:
   (A) Single-Element          (B) Two-Element   (C) Two-Element (D) All-Element
         Varying                  Varying (1)       Varying (2)      Varying
A Generally Preferred Method Of Bridge Amplification Employs
An Instrumentation Amplifier For Stable Gain And High CMR
          VB
                                        OPTIONAL RATIOMETRIC OUTPUT


                                           VREF = VB
                          +VS
    R            R

                                                          R
                                                  VB
                                          VOUT =            R    GAIN
                                                    4   R +
                     RG                                      2
                          IN AMP
                                  REF      VOUT
                          +

     R
                R+R       -VS*
                                    * SEE TEXT REGARDING
                                   SINGLE-SUPPLY OPERATION
Upcoming webcasts

 Converter     Simulation: Beyond the Eval Board
    January 19th at 3:00 p.m. (ET)

 RF   Detectors
    February 16th at Noon (ET)

 Challenges    in Embedded Design for real-time systems
    March 16th at Noon (ET)



                         www.analog.com/webcast
Fundamentals Webcasts 2011

 January  Introduction and Fundamentals of Sensors
 February The Op Amp
 March Beyond the Op Amp
 April Converters, Part 1, Understanding Sampled Data Systems
 May Converters, Part 2, Digital-to-Analog Converters
 June Converters, Part 3, Analog-to-Digital Converters
 July Powering your circuit
 August RF: Making your circuit mobile
 September Fundamentals of DSP/Embedded System design
 October Challenges in Industrial Design
 November Tips and Tricks for laying out your PC board
 December Final Exam, Ask Analog Devices


                        www.analog.com/webcast

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Fundamentals of Designing with Sensors

  • 1. The World Leader in High Performance Signal Processing Solutions FUNDAMENTALS OF DESIGN Class 1 Introduction Presented by David Kress
  • 2. The Goal  Capture what is going on in the real world  Convert into a useful electronic format  Analyze, Manipulate, Store, and Send  Return to the real world
  • 3. The real world is NOT digital
  • 4. Analog to Electronic signal processing Sensor Amp Converter Digital Processor (INPUT) Actuator Amp Converter (OUTPUT)
  • 5. The Sensor Analog, but Analog Sensor NOT (INPUT) AND Amp Converter Digital Processor electronic electronic Actuator Amp Converter (OUTPUT)
  • 6. Popular sensors Sensor Type Output Thermocouple Voltage Photodiode Current Strain Gauge Resistance Microphone Capacitance Touch Button Charge Output Antenna Inductance
  • 7. Thermocouple  Very low level (µV/ºC)  Non-linear  Difficult to handle  Wires need insulation  Susceptible to noise  Fragile
  • 8. Sensor Signal Conditioning Sensor Amp Analog, Analog, electronic, electronic, but “dirty” and “clean” •Amplify the signal to a noise-resistant level •Lower the source impedance •Linearize (sometimes but not always) •Filter •Protect
  • 9. Types of Temperature Sensors THERMOCOUPLE RTD THERMISTOR SEMICONDUCTOR Widest Range: Range: Range: Range: –184ºC to +2300ºC –200ºC to +850ºC 0ºC to +100ºC –55ºC to +150ºC High Accuracy and Fair Linearity Poor Linearity Linearity: 1ºC Repeatability Accuracy: 1ºC Needs Cold Junction Requires Requires Requires Excitation Compensation Excitation Excitation Low-Voltage Output Low Cost High Sensitivity 10mV/K, 20mV/K, or 1µA/K Typical Output
  • 10. Common Thermocouples TYPICAL NOMINAL ANSI JUNCTION MATERIALS USEFUL SENSITIVITY DESIGNATION RANGE (ºC) (µV/ºC) Platinum (6%)/ Rhodium- 38 to 1800 7.7 B Platinum (30%)/Rhodium Tungsten (5%)/Rhenium - 0 to 2300 16 C Tungsten (26%)/Rhenium Chromel - Constantan 0 to 982 76 E Iron - Constantan 0 to 760 55 J Chromel - Alumel –184 to 1260 39 K Platinum (13%)/Rhodium- 0 to 1593 11.7 R Platinum Platinum (10%)/Rhodium- 0 to 1538 10.4 S Platinum Copper-Constantan –184 to 400 45 T
  • 11. Thermocouple Output Voltages for Type J, K and S Thermocouples THERMOCOUPLE OUTPUT VOLTAGE (mV) 60 50 TYPE K 40 TYPE J 30 20 TYPE S 10 0 -10 -250 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 TEMPERATURE (°C)
  • 12. Thermocouple Seebeck Coefficient vs. Temperature 70 60 TYPE J SEEBECK COEFFICIENT - µV/ °C 50 TYPE K 40 30 20 TYPE S 10 0 -250 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 TEMPERATURE (°C)
  • 13. Thermocouple Basics A. THERMOELECTRIC VOLTAGE C. THERMOCOUPLE MEASUREMENT Metal A Metal A V1 – V2 Metal A V1 T1 Thermoelectric V1 T1 T2 V2 EMF Metal B Metal B B. THERMOCOUPLE D. THERMOCOUPLE MEASUREMENT Copper Copper Metal A R Metal A V Metal A Metal A I T3 T4 V1 T1 T2 V2 V1 T1 T2 V2 Metal B Metal B R = Total Circuit Resistance I = (V1 – V2) / R V = V1 – V2, If T3 = T4
  • 14. Using a Temperature Sensor for Cold- Junction Compensations V(OUT) TEMPERATURE V(COMP) COMPENSATION CIRCUIT COPPER COPPER METAL A SAME METAL A TEMP TEMP SENSOR T1 V(T1) V(T2) T2 METAL B V(COMP) = f(T2) ISOTHERMAL BLOCK V(OUT) = V(T1) – V(T2) + V(COMP) IF V(COMP) = V(T2) – V(0°C), THEN V(OUT) = V(T1) – V(0°C)
  • 15. AD594/AD595 Monolithic Thermocouple Amplifier with Cold-Junction Compensation +5V 0.1µF BROKEN 4.7k THERMOCOUPLE VOUT ALARM 10mV/°C OVERLOAD TYPE J: AD594 DETECT TYPE K: AD595 THERMOCOUPLE AD594/AD595 +A – – –TC ICE G + G POINT + + COMP +TC
  • 16. Basic Relationships For Semiconductor Temperature Sensors IC IC N TRANSISTORS ONE TRANSISTOR VBE VN kT  IC  kT  IC  VBE  ln  VN  ln  q  IS  q  N  IS  kT VBE  VBE  VN  ln(N) q INDEPENDENT OF IC, IS
  • 17. Classic Bandgap Temperature Sensor +VIN R R "BROKAW CELL" + VBANDGAP = 1.205V I2 @ I1 Q2 Q1 NA A VN VBE kT VBE  VBE  VN  ln(N) R2 (Q1) q R1 kT VPTAT = 2 ln(N) R2 q R1
  • 18. Analog Temperature Sensors Product Accuracy Max Accuracy Operating Supply Max Interface Package (Max) Range Temp Range Current Range ± 0.5°C 25°C -55°C to TO-52,2-ld FP, AD590 4 to 30V 298uA Current Out ± 1.0°C -25°C to 105°C 150°C SOIC, Die ± 0.5°C 25°C -25°C to 298uA AD592 4 to 30V Current Out TO-92 ± 1.0°C -55°C to 150°C 105°C 0°C to 85°C -55°C to TO-92, SOT23, TMP35 ± 2.0°C 2.7 to 5.5V 50uA Voltage Out -25°C to 100°C 150°C SOIC TO-92, SOT23, -40°C to 125°C -55°C to 50uA TMP36 ± 3.0°C 2.7V to 5.5V Voltage Out SOIC 150°C ± 2.0°C -50°C to 150°C -50°C to AD22100 4 to 6.5V 650uA Voltage Out TO-92, SOIC, Die 150°C ± 2.5°C 0°C to 100°C 0°C to 100°C AD22103 2.7 to 3.6V 600uA Voltage Out TO-92, SOIC
  • 19. Digital Temperature Sensors Comprehensive Portfolio of Accuracy Options Product Accuracy (Max) Max Accuracy Interface Package Range ± 0.2°C -10°C to 85°C ADT7420/7320 I2C/SPI LFCSP ± 0.25°C -20°C to 105°C ADT7410/7310 ± 0.5°C -40°C to 105°C I2C/SPI SOIC ± 1°C (B grade) 0°C to 85°C ADT75 I2C MSOP, SOIC ± 2°C (A grade) -25°C to 100°C ± 1°C 0°C to 70°C ADT7301 SPI SOT23, MSOP ± 1°C 0°C to 70°C TMP05/6 PWM SC70, SOT23 ± 1.5°C -40°C to 70°C AD7414/5 I2C SOT23,MSOP ADT7302 ± 2°C 0°C to 70°C SPI SOT23,MSOP ± 4°C TMP03/4 -20°C to 100°C PWM TO-92,SOIC,TSSOP 21
  • 20. Position and Motion Sensors  Linear Position: Linear Variable Differential Transformers (LVDT)  Hall Effect Sensors  Proximity Detectors  Linear Output (Magnetic Field Strength)  Rotational Position:  Optical Rotational Encoders  Synchros and Resolvers  Inductosyns (Linear and Rotational Position)  Motor Control Applications  Acceleration and Tilt: Accelerometers  Gyroscopes
  • 21. + THREADED CORE VA ~ VOUT = VA – VB AC SOURCE VB 1.75" _ VOUT VOUT SCHAEVITZ _ POSITION + _ POSITION + E100 LVDT – Linear Variable Differential Transformer
  • 22. AD698 EXCITATION AMP ~ REFERENCE OSCILLATOR B VB + A VOUT FILTER AMP B A VA A, B = ABSOLUTE VALUE + FILTER _ 4-WIRE LVDT AD698 LVDT Signal Conditioner
  • 23. Hall Effect Sensors T CONDUCTOR OR SEMICONDUCTOR I I VH I = CURRENT B B = MAGNETIC FIELD T = THICKNESS VH = HALL VOLTAGE
  • 24. AD22151 Linear Output Magnetic Field Sensor V / 2 V = +5V CC CC VCC / 2 R2 + R1 TEMP REF _ R3 _ AD22151 VOUT + OUTPUT AMP CHOPPER AMP VOUT = 1 + R3 0.4mV Gauss NONLINEARITY = 0.1% FS R2
  • 25. Accelerometer Applications  Tilt or Inclination  Car Alarms  Patient Monitors  Cell phones  Video games  Inertial Forces  Laptop Computer Disc Drive Protection  Airbag Crash Sensors  Car Navigation systems  Elevator Controls  Shock or Vibration  Machine Monitoring  Control of Shaker Tables  ADI Accelerometer Fullscale g-Range: ± 2g to ± 100g  ADI Accelerometer Frequency Range: DC to 10kHz
  • 26. ADXL-family Micro-machined Accelerometers AT REST CS1 CS2 APPLIED ACCELERATION CENTER PLATE TETHER BEAM CS1 CS1 = CS2 < CS2 FIXED OUTER PLATES DENOTES ANCHOR
  • 27. Using an Accelerometer to Measure Tilt +90° X X 1g  Acceleration 0° –90° +1g Acceleration = 1g × sin  0g  –90° 0° +90° –1g
  • 28. Gyro Axes of Rotational Sensitivity
  • 30. Displacement due to the Coriolis Effect
  • 32. High Impedance Sensors  Photodiodes  Piezoelectric Sensors  Accelerometers  Hydrophones  Humidity Monitors  pH Monitors  Chemical Sensors  Smoke Detectors  Charge Coupled Devices and Contact Image Sensors for Imaging
  • 33. Photodiode Equivalent Circuit INCIDENT LIGHT PHOTO RSH(T) CURRENT CJ IDEAL DIODE 100k - 100G NOTE: RSH HALVES EVERY 10 C TEMPERATURE RISE
  • 34. Current-to-voltage Converter (Simplified) R = 1000M ISC = 30pA (0.001 fc) _ VOUT = 30mV + Sensitivity: 1mV / pA
  • 35. Preamplifier DC Offset Errors 1000M R2 IB ~ _ OFFSET VOS RTO R1 IB + R3 DC NOISE GAIN = 1 + R2 R1 IB DOUBLES EVERY 10 C TEMPERATURE RISE R1 = 1000M @ 25 C (DIODE SHUNT RESISTANCE) R1 HALVES EVERY 10 C TEMPERATURE RISE R3 CANCELLATION RESISTOR NOT EFFECTIVE
  • 36. Sensor Resistances Used In Bridge Circuits Span A Wide Dynamic Range  Strain Gages 120, 350, 3500  Weigh-Scale Load Cells 350 - 3500  Pressure Sensors 350 - 3500  Relative Humidity 100k - 10M  Resistance Temperature Devices (RTDs) 100 , 1000  Thermistors 100 - 10M
  • 37. Wheatstone Bridge Produces An Output Null When The Ratios Of Sidearm Resistances Match VB THE WHEATSTONE BRIDGE: R4 R3  R1 R2  VO  VB     R1 + R4 R2 + R3  VO AT BALANCE, R1 R2 VO = 0 if  R4 R3 R1 R2
  • 38. Output Voltage Sensitivity And Linearity Of Constant Current Drive Bridge Configurations Differs According To The Number Of Active Elements IB IB IB IB R R R+R R R RR R+R RR VO VO VO VO R R+R R R+R R R+R RR R+R R VO: IBR R IB R IB R IB R 4 R + 2 2 4 Linearity 0.25%/% 0 0 0 Error: (A) Single-Element (B) Two-Element (C) Two-Element (D) All-Element Varying Varying (1) Varying (2) Varying
  • 39. A Generally Preferred Method Of Bridge Amplification Employs An Instrumentation Amplifier For Stable Gain And High CMR VB OPTIONAL RATIOMETRIC OUTPUT VREF = VB +VS R R R  VB VOUT = R GAIN 4 R + RG 2 IN AMP REF VOUT + R R+R -VS* * SEE TEXT REGARDING SINGLE-SUPPLY OPERATION
  • 40. Upcoming webcasts  Converter Simulation: Beyond the Eval Board  January 19th at 3:00 p.m. (ET)  RF Detectors  February 16th at Noon (ET)  Challenges in Embedded Design for real-time systems  March 16th at Noon (ET) www.analog.com/webcast
  • 41. Fundamentals Webcasts 2011  January Introduction and Fundamentals of Sensors  February The Op Amp  March Beyond the Op Amp  April Converters, Part 1, Understanding Sampled Data Systems  May Converters, Part 2, Digital-to-Analog Converters  June Converters, Part 3, Analog-to-Digital Converters  July Powering your circuit  August RF: Making your circuit mobile  September Fundamentals of DSP/Embedded System design  October Challenges in Industrial Design  November Tips and Tricks for laying out your PC board  December Final Exam, Ask Analog Devices www.analog.com/webcast

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. As you probably know, our first challenge is that light, sound, weight, speed, temperature, even smell are analog, or continuous wave forms. That’s okay for us analog human beings, but a lousy format for electronic devices.It gets worse, because those real world analog signals aren’t electronic, either.That means we have two challenges: One is to capture the physical attributes and signals from the real world – these analog signals, and Two, convert them to electronic signals that we can manipulate…
  2. How we do that is what we’ll be covering in this 12-part course. In the coming months we’ll go through each stage of the basic signal chain, from amplifiers to data converters – those components that convert the analog electronic signal into a digital stream – then to the heart of many modern circuits, the digital processor. We’ll also cover what is needed to power today’s circuits, how to make them portable, and how to lay them out .So let’s go back to the beginning of the circuit and address the first task of turning that analog, non electrical signal into an analog electrical one. How do we do that?
  3. By employing sensors. Sensors are devices that respond to changes in these analog, non-electronic signals – temperature, speed, weight, pressure, and so on and turn them into electronic analog signals. Those signals can be in many different forms.
  4. As you can see, for the measurement of different kinds of analog real-world signals, different sensors provide different outputs. In all cases, we have achieved goal number one – capturing that signal so we can move it down the signal chain.
  5. Let’s look at one example of a sensor. The Thermocouple is a device made of dissimilar metals welded at one end, which generate a voltage that increases with temperature. The output, as we just saw, is a varying voltage. Like any electronic device and like any sensor, it has its benefits and its problems, most important to our goal is that the output of this device is very low level – which means the signal can be below the ambient noise level of the circuit – which in turn means we cannot discriminate it from the noise.
  6. Which means we need to take that low-level, fragile signal and perform Sensor Signal Conditioning. In this critical step we will:Amplify the signal to a noise-resistant levelLower the source impedanceLinearize (sometimes but not always)FilterProtectionThe result is a signal clean enough to be sent to the converter for digitizing. Without this critical stage data conversion would be inaccurate, rendering the entire circuit useless. It’s that important.
  7. A series of thermocouple amplifiers is available from Analog Devices so you can find the right accuracy and operating temperature range for your needs. These products use very little power, less than 1mW, and are in a small MSOP package. Two of the important things to look at when using a thermocouple amplifier are the initial accuracy and the temperature range where the amplifier is accurate. This is the temperature of the board that the amplifier is on, not the temperature of the thermocouple itself.
  8. Before Dave takes any questions, I want to remind you that every month Analog Devices presents a webcast on a current Hot Topic in designing with Semiconductors. A week from today at 3pm, on January 19th, we’ll present a webcast on software simulation for data converters. Next month we’ll be presenting a webcast on the use of RF Detectors and in March on Embedded Design. Registration will be available shortly for both at www.analog.com slash webcast, where you can also access our library of archived webcasts that you can view anytime, on demand.