CH 3s
CH 3s
CH 3s
\
|
+
= ... Vc
R
R
Vb
R
R
Va
R
R
V
in
f
in
f
in
f
OUT
Va = 1V, Vb = 0.5V, Vc = -4V
Ra = 5K. Vb = 2K, Rc = 20K
Rf = 10K
Calculate Vout
Va = 1Vpp, Vb = 1Vdc
R1 = 2K, R2 = 5K
R3 = 10K
Draw the Va input and output waveforms in
relation to each other, label peak voltages
and indicate ground.
Comparator
Differential Amplifier
Ra = Rb; Rf = Rg
) V V ( V
a b OUT
=
a
f
R
R
Va = 1V, Vb = 1.02V
Ra = Rb = 1K
Rf = Rg = 100K
Calculate Vout
Common Mode Rejection Ration
Ratio of the amplified signal to the amplified noise.
Av
difference
is found mathematically : Rf/Ra
Av
common
is found by injecting the same signal into
both inputs and measuring the output.
A
vcommon
= Vout/Vin
Common
Difference
Av
Av
CMRR =
Common
Difference
Av
Av
log 20 CMRR =
Ra = Rb = 1K
Rf = Rg = 50K
1Vpp is injected into Va and Vb, Vout is
measured at 0.05V.
Calculate CMRR in dB
Instrumentation Amplifier
Amplifier with a very good CMRR.
Integrator Circuit
The output voltage is proportional to amount
of time a signal is present, or, the area
under a signal curve.
Integrated Curves
Differentiator Circuit
Output is proportional to the rate of change
of the input.
Differentiated Curves
Decibels
Method of describing gain on a logarithmic
scale.
dB Gain in a system is additive.
Ap log 10 Ap
db
=
Av log 20 Av
db
=
20
Av
db
10 Av =
Filter Curves
A 1
st
order filter has a voltage roll-off of:
6dB per octave
20dB per decade
A 2
nd
order filter has a roll-off of:
12dB per octave
40dB per decade
Voltage Thumb-rules:
6dB = voltage x 2
-6dB = voltage / 2
20dB = voltage x 10
-20dB = voltage / 10
Power Thumb-rules
3dB = power x 2
-3dB = power / 2
10dB = power x 10
-10dB = Power / 10
Low Pass Active Filter
High-Pass Active Filter
Vin = 5V
Rf = Ri = 10K
R = 1K
C = .47 uF
Calculate Fc.
Calculate Vout at Fc
Draw a Bode plot. Indicate the -3dB point.
What would the output be at 2Fc in dB and Volts?
What would the output be at 10Fc in dB and Volts?
What would the value of Xc be at Fc?
Trip point thresholds
Window Comparator
Current Loop
Transmission of a voltage over a long wire
run will cause attenuation due to wire
resistance.
By using current to carry the data, there will
no information loss (Kirchoffs Current Law).
Transmitter
Voltage-to-Current converter. Vout will
change to maintain current in the loop.
R
Vin
I
R
=
Vin = 0 to 10V
R = 250 ohms
Calculate I
out
for over the range of input.
Receiver
Current-to-Voltage Converter. The current
through R
REC
develops a voltage which is
sensed by the diff-amp without referencing
ground.
REC V
REC REC
V A Vout
IR V
=
=
- The cable has a resistance 1.588 ohms/1000 feet.
- Distance between the Driver and Receiver is 5000 feet.
- Rrec is 50 ohms.
- R5 and R6 are 5K.
- R7 and R8 are 50K
- The range of Vin is 0 to 10V
Size Rref to provide a driver current of 0-20mA
Calculate Vout for the full range of Vin.
If the driver has a maximum output of 15V, what would the
longest distance that could be transmitted?
Analog Switch
Blocks or passes an analog voltage acts
as a switch without the mechanical
problems Uses digital signals to control.
Analog Multiplexer
Multiple switches may be used to multiplex
analog voltages to a single ADC.
Sample-and-Hold
Capacitor charges to the current voltage
level.
Charge time must be taken into account.
T = 5RC.
Useful to hold rapidly changing signals for
analysis.
Earth grounds
Most circuits
have a ground
or common or
reference
voltage.
Many circuits
are also
connected to
earth ground to
prevent a
charge from
building up.
Earth ground should not be used for a return
because the earth is a poor conductor.
Ground-Loop
Source and Load
should not be
separately
grounded
because a
difference on
potential at each
ground-point will
create a ground-
loop of current
flow.
Best solution for
connecting to
earth-ground.
Isolation Circuits
Allow for 2 circuits to have different source
voltages and grounds.
Ground Isolation
Signal Isolation
Spike protection
Transformer Coupled
Good for modulated signals.
Slow-changing DC signals must be
modulated to magnetically couple the
transformers.
Digital Optocoupler
Provides isolation of TTL level voltages.
Also called opto-isolators.
Interfacing of high voltage, noisy systems to
a controller.
Signal travels in only one direction.
Optical Linear Signal Isolation
An LED and matched phototransistors are
used to provide optical isolation.
The feedback phototransistor provides
feedback due to non-linear response of the
LED.
Shielding
Changing magnetic fields, such as from AC
lines, machinery, or data lines can induce
voltage into other lines.
Shielding cannot block the magnet field
noise, but can draw it away from the signal
wire
Magnetic/electric fields can induce a voltage
into the shield, which will produce its own
electric field.
Grounding the shield will prevent a voltage
buildup.
Single-point grounds should be used to
prevent ground-loop problems.
Best choice is to use a Single-Point Ground
at the controller.
When a single point ground cannot be used,
an isolation circuit with individually grounds
should be used.