Battery-powered amplifier has optical isolation

Maxim MAX406

Stephen Woodward

EDN

When you interconnect scientific instruments, especially older ones, you often need both gain and galvanic isolation for the analog interface functions. The amplifier in Figure 1 runs from 9 V batteries and fulfills both these requirements. The overall gain is 100, and the optical coupling withstands several kilovolts and offers greater than 1-GW isolation. The power consumption is proportional to the signal amplitude; current drain ranges from approximately 1 to 500 µA. This consumption rate yields greater than 1000 hours of battery life when signals are present and years of battery life in standby mode.

Battery-powered amplifier has optical isolation
Figure 1.

The input side of the amplifier uses the micropower op amp IC1. IC1 servos the drive applied to LED D1 such that the feedback that Q1 generates nulls the input voltage. A 50-mV full-scale input results in 133-µA current in Q1. The series connection of LEDs results in drive current identical to the current in D1/Q1 for the D2/Q2, D3/Q3, and D4/Q4 pairs. This matching, combined with the efficient intrachannel, coupled gain-tracking characteristic of the PS2501-4 optoisolator and the similar bias levels applied to all four phototransistors, yields less than 1% transfer-function nonlinearity.

With suitable adjustment of the SPAN potentiometer, a 50-mV input produces a net Q2, Q3, Q4 composite current of 500 µA and 5 V output voltage, ideal for direct input to a typical A/D converter. Note that operation of the optoisolator at such low current levels is unconventional and invites low coupled gain in the optical pairs. The high loop-gain feedback from IC1 overcomes this low gain and thereby ensures linear operation. The low speed of the anorexic MAX406 op amp limits frequency response to a less than blazing figure, but the circuit is nonetheless capable of operating at 1 kHz, a speed that's adequate for many applications.

Although the battery life expectancy is long, it is finite; so, you need a reliable criterion for battery replacement. The Batt Chk pushbutton provides this indication by inserting a 5.1 V zener diode, a 2 V green LED, and a current-limiting resistor in series across the input-side battery. Battery voltage lower than approximately 7 V fails to light the LED, thus giving notice that you'll soon need a fresh battery. You need test only the input-side battery, because calculations show a somewhat higher average current drain in the input side. You can, thus, take the input-side result as a conservative indicator for the state of both batteries. (DI #1878)

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