I believe you know that +/- 35V is no voltage range for a standard OP.
So you have essentially these options:
- use an expensive high voltage OP
- design a discrete buffer amplifier
- use a passive voltage divider, similar to an oscilloscope input
Hi,
I wonder why you want to use a 20 bit ADC, but your goal is to achieve 1mV accuracy.
A 16 bit ADC is sufficient, and usually cheaper.
You should say what the purpose of the circuit is...what is the input? Should it be a handheld device with just two cables?
Or is it installed inside a device an has fixed connections to something.
Also you should give an input frequency range...
Ask yourself how much money you want to spend, or what resolution, accuracy or precision you really need.
Some calculations:
Let's say you use an 10M input resistor fed to an inverting Opamp with 470k feedback, plus Vref/2 offset curcuit. All single ended.
10M and 1mV....if you really need that DC accuracy, then select an Opamp with less than 35uV input offset voltage and less than 100pA input bias current.
And all resistors and the Refrence should be tolerated to 0.003%.
In my eyes this often makes no sense. The cost for these devices is too high.
I'd go for low drift opamps and low drift reference and resistors. The expected overall drift should not exceed your max tolerable errors.
All the remaining gain and offset errors can easily cancelled with software.
Decide what accuracy you really need, and decide what accuracy is "nice to have".
Klaus
Basically yes, but you need a much better OP for 1 mV input referred accuracy.Would this circuit work?
Basically yes, but you need a much better OP for 1 mV input referred accuracy.
Voltage divider ratio is about 20:1, so something like 50 µV would be appropriate. Static offsets can be removed by adjustment, but at least the offset drift should be lower.
Hi,
Yes, the circuit is o.k.
Instead of one resistor to 1.5V, i'd go for two identical 470k, one to Gnd, the other to VREF of the ADC.
AND use two identical paralleled 470k as feedback. In total you need 4 x 470k resistors.
With the four identical resistors you decrease thermal drifts drastically.
Klaus
Obviously, the OP common mode voltage range must be satisfied. The positive input terminal is restricted to about +/- 30V. If you want increased common mode range, you need higher OP supply voltages or a larger input attenuation ratio.How would this circuit behave with common mode voltage outside the power supply range?
Yes, something like this.Perhaps this would be a more suitable opamp (OPA376)
Arrays often are no precision resistors.That's quite helpful, I can use a 4x array
Hi,
Arrays often are no precision resistors.
But you still need "low drift", otherwise you will see gain errors. (They change their value referenced to the 5M resistors).
Klaus
Hi,
AD8551 or AD8571 are chopper with 3V RR.
I´m curious where one needs +-35V and an accuracy of 1mV. (for sure there will be applications)
I´ve seen such specifications, but in the end the very most of them are just "nice to have".
Even if one needs it. How can you ensure the calibration (linearity over voltage, time and temperature).
With a temperature compensation you need to calculate/compensate both offset and gain. For linearity compensation you additionally need a lookup table.
Klaus
0.0004% from what?drift over a few hours after the initial 10 minute warm up is 0.0004%
HI,
Fluke87V voltage measurement accuracy: ±(0,05 %+1)
--> even if it had an +/-35V range this means +/- 17.5mV.. you need a reference measurement tool 20 times better than FLUKE87.
0.0004% from what?
If i calculate right, then 100ppm is 0.01% this i per klevin or per degree celsius.
15..30°C (don´t you expect any internal heating, or just somebody holds it in his hands, or the sun shines through a window...?)
means 15 x 0.01% = 0.15%
multiplied with the range of +/- 35V this gives: +/-52.5mV. Far away from your desired 1mV.
Klaus
this is in the range of thermocouple effects. Hard to avoid.only drifted 10uV over a few hour period from 2.54611 to 2.54612Vdc.
This accuracy should be possible with reasonable effort.So <35mV error @35V would be acceptable,
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