Composite instrumentation amplifier for biopotentials
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Springer Nature in Annals of Biomedical Engineering
- Vol. 18 (3), 251-262
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02368441
Abstract
We present the design of an instrumentation biopotential amplifier that, (a) combines the ac coupling and high input impedance of an ac-coupled buffer with the CMRR of a simple differential amplifier or a monolithic instrumentation amplifier, (b) improves the CMRR by using a potentiometer without requiring either precision resistors or high-CMRR op amps, (c) illustrates how to calculate the CMRR for differential-input stages for either differential output or single-ended output. With our approach, for the 741 op amp, the CMRR of the differential stage exceeds 126 dB at 10 Hz and 106 dB at 100 Hz, which is higher than the 90 dB of the op amp alone. This is because a potentiometer permits mismatch of the resistor ratio, which compensates for the low CMRR of the op amp. Use of the LF355 op amp, which has a wider bandwidth, yields a CMRR of 126 dB at both 10 and 100 Hz. If the second stage is an instrumentation amplifier then no adjustment is necessary. Mismatch of passive components in the bootstrapped input buffer stage decreases the CMRR from 126 dB to 112 dB at 60 Hz and decreases it further at lower frequencies, but that is not a problem for the usual power-line interference.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- An improved buffer for bioelectric signalsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1989
- Interference-rejection characteristics of biopotential amplifiers: a comparative analysisIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1988
- Low-power, low-noise instrumentation amplifier for physiological signalsMedical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 1984
- A low noise isolated amplifier system for electrophysiological measurements: basic considerations and designMedical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 1984
- Digital automatic circuit for over-range correctionMedical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 1982
- Extracellular amplifier with bootstrapped input stage results in high common-mode rejectionMedical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 1981
- 60-Hz Interference in ElectrocardiographyIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1973
- Common-Mode Rejection Ratio-Two DefinitionsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1970