<< Chapter < Page | Chapter >> Page > |
Before building a circuit to condition the signal, you will build a couple of simple op-amp circuits to get afeel for what to do.
The inverter is one of the simplest op-amp circuits. This circuit simply changes the sign of a signal. Theschematic diagram of an inverter is shown in Figure 6.
You should see that the output is an inverted version of the input.
The inverting gain circuit changes the sign of the signal and multiplies the amplitude. Increasing the amplitudeof a signal can be very important in distinguishing subtle signal characteristics. Quantization errors result when a signalcharacteristic is too small to be detected by a measurement system. (You will learn more about quantization errors in lecture, and onpages 249-250 in your text.)
With the amplification, the input offset of 800 mV has increased to an 8 V output.
Note: Using the data acquisition card to view the signal, you may saturate the ADC with the amplified signal. Allyou will be able to see is a flat line near +5 V or–5 V.
For the amplified signal to be read correctly, the 800 mV bias must be removed. A two step process will be used toremove the bias:
The result will be an 80 mV sine wave with zero mean.
Use the 10 k ohm trim potentiometer provided to build a voltage divider as shown below.
You will build a differential amplification circuit to subtract 800 mV from the sensor signal. A differentialamplifier is shown in Figure 8 below.
Notification Switch
Would you like to follow the 'Introduction to mechanical measurements' conversation and receive update notifications?