keystoneclimber
Electrical
- Nov 26, 2003
- 7
Hello all,
I have a signal, of which the integral represents a process variable. (Fig. 1 of references.pdf) I designed a gated integrator (Fig. 2) to isolate the usable portion of the signal. I then sample this output with an ADC and scale appropriately. This works well, however the input signal can be bi-directional (Fig. 3) and the circuit doesn't support this. My first thought was to simply make everything bipolar. As it turns out though, my task of selecting an appropriate and reasonably priced ADC is much simpler if the output remains unipolar. My next thought was to apply both a DC offset to the input signal and an appropriate bias to the integrator. The idea was to get an output similar to the simulated signal in Fig. 4. I'm not sure if this is even possible. Typical non-gated integrators produce a triangle wave output from a square wave input. The gated variety produce a sawtooth wave. Here in lies the problem with my concept. Resetting the gate on the integrator sends the output to the bias point. I've yet to be able to figure out a way to send the output below the bias point. Maybe I have tunnel vision and am too focused on a single approach to the problem. I was wondering if anyone can provide some insight as to alternative solutions?
Brandon
I have a signal, of which the integral represents a process variable. (Fig. 1 of references.pdf) I designed a gated integrator (Fig. 2) to isolate the usable portion of the signal. I then sample this output with an ADC and scale appropriately. This works well, however the input signal can be bi-directional (Fig. 3) and the circuit doesn't support this. My first thought was to simply make everything bipolar. As it turns out though, my task of selecting an appropriate and reasonably priced ADC is much simpler if the output remains unipolar. My next thought was to apply both a DC offset to the input signal and an appropriate bias to the integrator. The idea was to get an output similar to the simulated signal in Fig. 4. I'm not sure if this is even possible. Typical non-gated integrators produce a triangle wave output from a square wave input. The gated variety produce a sawtooth wave. Here in lies the problem with my concept. Resetting the gate on the integrator sends the output to the bias point. I've yet to be able to figure out a way to send the output below the bias point. Maybe I have tunnel vision and am too focused on a single approach to the problem. I was wondering if anyone can provide some insight as to alternative solutions?
Brandon