Instrumentation and other opamps tend to increase the offset when the input resistance is high as well as the gain. I do not see why you use the two 1 MOhm resistors at the input. To filter any RF, using 10 kOhms is enough, and put a 10 nF capacitor across the input lines. You can also divide each resistor in two 5 kOhms and connect the capacitor at this half-way.
I guess, every analog guy will be asking this at first sight. The MAX4208 has a small common input headroom of 0.1 V below negative rail, it shouldn't be completely absorbed by the bias current voltage drop across input resistors. But it will be by any unexpected common mode signal.Also, you are using this op amp with a single supply voltage, but you are incorrectly DC biassing the input ports to ground with those 10 M resistors. You probably need to bias the inputs to +2.5 V thru a divider, or run the op amp off of a dual DC supply.
Hi everybody,
Concerning the 1 Mohm resistance, I cannot reduce this resistance because of the application. Indeed, it should be even higher!
In fact, these two resistances are two parallel, 15 cm long resistive lines, whose resistance is distributed along the line. They behave as a resistive transmission line, with a small intrinsic capacitance between the lines. The lines act as a low pass filter with a cutoff frequency of some kHz. No capacitor between the lines is then needed for rectification.
Therefore, the circuit must work with this high impedance. So the question would be: is the offset inherent to the high gain, high impedance source setting? Nothing can be done to reduce or get rid of the offset?
If that's so, I guess that one solution would be to use two cascaded amps with lower gain setting, as suggested by jiripolivka.
Concerning the inputs bias, I bias the input ports to ground as the input coming from the detector will always be positive. Also, this gives a greater output dynamic range (0-5V instead of 0-2,5V). However I'm not at all an expert in op amps (I think it's obvious :sadand don't know if it would be necessary to bias the inputs to the mid supply. Anyway, if I do so, will this modification affect or improve the offset problem?
With the high gain, the floating "long" line to the dipole and dipole itself calls for the offset problem. As the others advised, the easiest solution may be to connect a 1 MOhm potentiometer between Vcc and ground, and pull the both (or at least one) input pin to ~ Vcc/2. If you still see an offset, adjust the ~ Vcc/2 to get rid of it.
As the line from the dipole-/detector to opamp is so long, it will almost certainly pick up some static and RF signal from around (even light adds up), and can cause the offset. Did you tested the dipole detector alone with an oscilloscope? Maybe you will be shocked what you can see! Then no wonder you have an offset at the high gain!
no, you "limit" the input swing to +/-2.5V. The output swing will be from Vref to Vcc - something.it reduces a lot the output swing of my circuit: as the input is always positive, the output would only swing between 0 and 2.5 V, instead of 0 to 5 V. Am I rigth?
no, you "limit" the input swing to +/-2.5V. The output swing will be from Vref to Vcc - something.
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