| Literature DB >> 30567398 |
Ladislav Polak1, Roman Sotner2, Jiri Petrzela3, Jan Jerabek4.
Abstract
This paper presents a simple relaxation generator, suitable for a sensor interface, operating as a transducer of capacitance to frequency/period. The proposed circuit employs a current feedback operational amplifier, fabricated in I3T25 0.35 μ m ON Semiconductor CMOS process, and four passive elements including a grounded capacitor (the sensed parameter). It offers a low-impedance voltage output of the generated square wave. Additional frequency to DC voltage converter offers output information in the form of voltage. The experimental capacitance variation from 6.8 nF to 100 nF yields voltage change in the range from 21 mV to 106 mV with error below 5% and sensitivity 0.912 mV/nF evaluated over the full range of change. These values are in good agreement with simulation results obtained from the Mathcad model of frequency to DC voltage transducer passive circuit.Entities:
Keywords: capacity measurement; capacity sensor interface; current feedback operational amplifier; relaxation generator; square wave generator
Year: 2018 PMID: 30567398 PMCID: PMC6308982 DOI: 10.3390/s18124488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Comparison of analog continuous-time operating capacitive sensor interfaces from recent literature (our work is indicated with bold fonts).
| References | Number of Active Elements | Type of Active Elements | Principle of Operation | Number of Elements (Grounded/Floating) | Type of Parameter Elements | Waveform at | Range of Sensed Parameter | Number of Decades | Range of Read Parameter | Verification (Real Implementation of Active Device) | Integrated Solution of the Whole System | Supply Voltage | Error | Sensitivity = |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Differential methods | ||||||||||||||
| [ | (b) | (b) | (b) | 6 (4/2) | Absolute | - | - | M (CMOS) | Yes | 2.5 V | ±1.5% | 1.33 × 10 | ||
| [ | 4 | CCII | I | 5 (2/3) | Relative | - | - | 2 V→11 V | M (4×AD844) | No | ±10 V | <3% | 7.54 × 10 | |
| [ | 4 | CCII | I | 5 (2/3) | Relative | - | - | 0.4 V→2 V | S (CMOS) | partially | ±1.65 V | <0.23% | 1.44 × 10 | |
| [ | 4 | MLT, OA | II | 8 (3/5) | Relative | - | - | M (AD844, AD633, | No | N/A | ±0.8% | N/A | ||
| Square waveform generating circuit-based methods | ||||||||||||||
| [ | 1 | CCII | III | 3 (2/1) | Cap | E | 100 pF→700 pF | <1 | 441 kHz→346 kHz | M (AD844) | No | ±10 V | N/A | 1.6 × 10 |
| [ | 3 | CCII | III | 6 (5/1) | Cap | T | 500 pF→5 | 4 | 150 kHz→15 Hz | B (CMOS, 3×AD844) | No | ±6 V | N/A | 3 × 10 |
| [ | 1 | DO-DVCC | III | 3 (3/0) | Cap | T | 125 pF→10 nF | <2 | 800 kHz→10 kHz | M (5×AD844) | No | ±10 V | N/A | 8 × 10 |
| [ | 1 | DVCC | III | 3 (2/1) | Cap | E | 1 nF→1 | 3 | 10 kHz→10 Hz | M (3×AD844) | No | ±15 V | N/A | 1 × 10 |
| [ | 2 | CCII | III | 5 (4/1) | Cap | T | 10 nF→20 | <4 | 410 kHz→260 Hz | M (2×AD844) | No | N/A | N/A | 2.1 × 10 |
| [ | 2 | CCII | III | 5 (1/4) | Cap | T | 0.5 nF→10 | <5 | 263 kHz→25 Hz | M (2×AD844) | No | (±5–±15) V | <5% | 2.6 × 10 |
| [ | 1 | CCII | III | 4 (1/3) | Cap | E | 100 pF→5.5 | <5 | 6.9 kHz→0.14 Hz | M (AD844) | No | N/A | ≤±10% | 1.3 × 10 |
| [ | 1 | CCII | III | 4 (1/3) | Cap | E | 22 pF→5.5 | <6 | 232 kHz→1 Hz | S (CMOS) | partially | ±1.2 V | ≤±10% | 4.2 × 10 |
| [ | 2 | CCII | III | 4 (3/1) | Cap | T | 500 pF→200 nF | <3 | 39 kHz→98 Hz | M (2×AD844) | No | ±9 V | <7% | 2 × 10 |
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| III | 4 (2/2) | Cap | E |
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| M | partially |
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| III | 10 (5/5) | Cap | E |
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| M (CMOS CCCII, | partially |
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Notes: I—differential measurement (C→V), II—bridge balancing (differential measurement of capacity values; C→V), III—generator (C→f), IV—charging and discharging of C and reference capacity and pulse width evaluation, V—period-modulated method, VI—comparison of phases of digitally controlled oscillator and oscillator influenced by capacitance, VII—see discussion in Ref. [29], T—triangular, E—exponential, M—measured, S—simulated, B—both CCII—current conveyor of second generation, CCCII—current controlled current conveyor of second generation, CCII—current conveyor of second generation, CFOA—current feedback operational amplifier, DO-DVCC—differential output—DVCC, DVCC—differential voltage current conveyor of second generation, ENOB—effective number of bits, MLT—multiplier, OA—operational amplifier; external sine wave source required; 3 active devices (transconductance stage, differential and summing current amplifier, switches, buffer, additional DC current sources), sensed difference of switched DC bias currents; 2 capacitors are required; including diodes (Note that column “number of passive elements” includes C); supply voltage is not mentioned in the text, but results indicates ±(10–15 V); simulated/measured only at cell level (layout prepared for active device but not shown for fully integrated system).
Figure 1Principle of the capacity measurement.
Figure 2Principle of the proposed comparator.
Figure 3The complete circuitry of the proposed capacity to voltage sensing interface (readout).
Figure 4Time diagram of transient responses for analysis of the generator operation.
Figure 5(a) The complete CMOS topology of CFOA; layouts of CFOA cells (on a single IC package) fabricated in I3T25 process: (b) current controlled current conveyor of second generation (CCCII) and (c) voltage buffer; and (d) the realized and measured prototype of readout (CFOA and f→V converter).
Figure 6Features of the proposed generator: (a) f versus C; (b) output levels versus f.
Figure 7Comparison of the V versus C curves (theory, Mathcad simulations, measurements).
Figure 8Difference (error) between experimental data and expectation: (a) f value (theory versus measurement); (b) V value (Mathcad simulation versus measurement).
Figure 9Comparison of the (a) f versus C and (b) V versus C for 5 different IC packages (including CFOA device).
Figure 10(a) Dependence of absolute f dispersion on C and (b) dependence of relative f dispersion on C caused by fabrication deviation for 5 different IC packages (including CFOA device).
Figure 11(a) Dependence of absolute V dispersion on C and (b) dependence of relative V dispersion on C caused by fabrication deviation for 5 different IC packages (including CFOA device).
Figure 12Snapshots of the time domain behavior of the proposed design: (a) C = 100 nF (f = 4.84 kHz, V = 21 mV); (b) C = 10 nF (f = 43.3 kHz, V = 78 mV); (c) C = 100 pF (f = 1 566 kHz, V = 296 mV).
Comparison of the obtained results—Mathcad simulations and measurements.
| Error (m versus i) | Error (m versus s) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4.70 | 100.0 | 89.3 |
| 1.70 | 3.08 | 170 | 150 | 134 |
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| 5.60 | 83.9 | 74.8 |
| 1.72 | 3.04 | 143 | 125 | 114 |
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| 6.80 | 69.1 | 65.0 |
| 1.70 | 3.06 | 118 | 110 | 106 |
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| 8.20 | 57.3 | 52.5 |
| 1.70 | 3.08 | 97 | 92 | 90 |
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| 10.0 | 47.0 | 43.3 |
| 1.70 | 3.06 | 79 | 80 | 78 |
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| 15.0 | 31.3 | 32.1 |
| 1.66 | 3.06 | 53 | 60 | 62 |
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| 22.0 | 21.4 | 21.4 |
| 1.68 | 3.04 | 36 | 43 | 45 |
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| 33.0 | 14.2 | 14.7 |
| 1.66 | 3.06 | 24 | 34 | 34 | 0.0 |
| 47.0 | 10.0 | 10.1 |
| 1.66 | 3.04 | 17 | 26 | 27 |
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| 68.0 | 6.9 | 7.0 |
| 1.64 | 3.06 | 12 | 22 | 21 |
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| 100.0 | 4.7 | 4.8 |
| 1.64 | 3.04 | 8 | 20 | 21 |
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| 470.0 | 1.0 | 1.1 |
| 1.60 | 3.06 | 2 | 17 | 19 |
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Notes: i—ideal/expected, s—simulation, m—measurement.