Application Note 23
April 1987
Micropower Circuits for Signal Conditioning
Jim Williams
Low power operation of electronic apparatus has become
increasingly desirable. Medical, remote data acquisition,
power monitoring and other applications are good candidates for battery driven, low power operation. Micropower
analog circuits for transducer-based signal conditioning
present a special class of problems. Although micropower
ICs are available, the interconnection of these devices to
form a functioning micropower circuit requires care. (See
Box Sections, “Some Guidelines for Micropower Design
and an Example” and “Parasitic Effects of Test Equipment
on Micropower Circuits.”) In particular, trade-offs between
signal levels and power dissipation become painful when
performance in the 10-bit to 12-bit area is desirable. Additionally, many transducers and analog signals produce +V inherently small outputs, making micropower requirements complicate an already difficult situation. Despite the
problems, design of such circuits is possible by combining
high performance micropower ICs with appropriate circuit
techniques.
Platinum RTD Signal Conditioner
Figure 1 shows a simple circuit for signal conditioning
a platinum RTD. Correction for the platinum sensor’s
nonlinear response is included. Accuracy is 0.25В°C over …