renjan
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OK, but what are the specifications? should it sound an alarm or phone the police or flush a toilet or what? Or is supposed to be measuring distance or movement or something else? Maybe a speedometer? Or an altimeter for model helicopters? Or ultrasound imaging for medical scans? Give us a clue.this is an assignment given and i cant change it the specifications.
I doubt it. An ultrasonic transducer resonates at 40kHz.The transducer's range may be wide enough to pick up frequencies lower than 40 kHz. As long as you are experimenting, you might try 20 kHz.
It will not deliver as strong an amplitude, but you may get enough signal that you can amplify it through a 741 op amp, at whatever gain is available (based on its gain-bandwidth product).
Hee, hee. I peeked at the first one. It is horrible with many errors:Here is an assortment of ultrasonic transducers, and op amp circuits.
The circuit in post #10 has 5 errors that are explained in RED on it.the above circuit shown is it right ? can i go ahead with using the circuit.. looks like its giving an error :/
It is for a very specific application - it's part of an ultrasonic distance measuring system.this project is based upon a generic ultrasonic receiver its not based on a specific topic.
The datasheet for the transducer will show a recommended value for its load which is probably high enough that an inverting opamp with a low input impedance cannot be used. So the first opamp will be non-inverting and its input resistor to ground (or to a bias voltage) will be what the transducer requires.suggestions on how to do the calculations to get the values for the resistors ?
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