4.7 Article

Lossy Integrator Readout Circuit With Active Bias Point

Journal

IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL
Volume 21, Issue 22, Pages 25808-25817

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSEN.2021.3118045

Keywords

Resistors; Voltage; Sensors; Gain; Impedance; Capacitors; Cutoff frequency; Active feedback; charge amplifier; composite amplifier; lossy integrator; offset voltage

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Charge-generating sensors are extensively used in various fields to obtain information such as pressure, temperature, and acceleration by generating a charge proportional to the input quantity. To process the sensor output, a charge amplifier is typically used, and a composite charge amplifier has been introduced to address output offset issues.
The charge-generating sensors are widely used in many applications in consumer, automotive and medical electronics. They generate a charge proportional to the applied input quantity: pressure, temperature, acceleration, strain, light, etc. Usually, charge amplifiers are used to register such signals. The charge amplifier is an integrator that integrates the input current over time. In continuous-time signal processing, a parallel resistor is used to dissipate the energy stored on the integration capacitor, and such self-zeroed integrator circuits are known as lossy integrators. To achieve low-frequency operation, when a capacitor is in the picofarad range, a very high-ohmic resistor, in the range of gigaohms, must be used. Such a high-ohmic resistor increases the output offset voltage to an unacceptable level. To overcome the output offset problems, a composite charge amplifier has been recently introduced. This paper presents an innovative lossy integrator readout circuit which contains only one opamp in the feedback. The circuit can be easily adapted to the needed gain and cut-off frequency. Its operation is validated by experimental results. The sufficiently low high-pass cut-off frequency allows the circuit to be used for biosignal amplification. Heart and respiration rates can be easily recorded with piezoelectric sensors attached to the wrist or lung wall. The presented circuit can benefit many applications where charge-to-voltage conversion is needed.

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