electroman2000
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I simulated it with Pspice. Indeed it oscillates. I don't understand why, even your explanation. Btw it clearly show the benning of oscillation; it oscillates at 500 Hz and has a min value of 0.5 V and max value of 2.65 V using a 5 Khz 0.5 V amplitude input sine wave.
I tryied to put a resistor of 50 Khom between the positive input of OP AMP and voltage divider, but nothing happeans.
I used this document as reference for single supply OP AMP
Ahhhh ok now I understand.
I tought I had explained my intentions in the OP. I try to explain better what I would do. I have a microphone that have a max output voltage of 0.355 V rms. I want filter the output upto 22 khz. For a better use of voltage range, I also would amplify this signal, of course under the max value supported by the microcontroller, 3.3 V.
Now, because the ADC doesn't take the negative value, I Want to add a costant value, Vcc/2, so the audio will produce a voltage variation ranging from 0 (min) to Vcc (max) and the voltage of silence is Vcc/2.
So the circuite that I have posted is a filter plus a gain. I found it in the link that I have posted.
with pull up resistor it works but not as expected. First, the wave isn't exactly a sine wave, but is a truncated sine wave (simil square wave at the peak). Second, the max peak is 2.8 V instead 3.3 V and the min peak is 0.28 V instead of 0, so the mean value is 1.26 instead of 1.65 V.It's so simple...
Place a pull-up resistor that connected to VDD/2 at the input of the ADC and drive this ADC through a proper high valued capacitor so signal swing will be around VDD+- output signal swing at OPAMP circuit.
Design a Audio OPAMP circuit that will have a gain around 5-7 with a filter as you desired..that's it..
yes, as I said in the data sheet the max output voltage of the mic is expressed in RMS, and it is 0.355 V rms. I calculated the peak voltage multiping this value for sqrt(2), obtaining 0.5 V peak.The max voltage of the mic is in RMS ?
I would have thought it would be expressed as Vp [peak voltage].
The calculation doesn't fit. Average for a symmetrical input voltage is 1.65V, which is also the expectable output bias without input signal (and for any input signal below output clipping).It has an average voltage of 1.25 V (max output 2.9 V, min 0.4 V
That's, excuse me, ridiculous. 741 would never work with 3.3 V supply and has huge saturation voltage for both positive- and negative-going output.For the simulation I used Pspice, OP AMP uA471, 5 kHz 0.5 V input sin wave.
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