The SSP1492, designed for high-volume, battery-powered, consumer, and commercial applications, is a monolithic IC device that
works directly with resistive, capacitive, inductive, voltage, and pulsed sensor elements
As the world becomes increasingly networked, digital, and mobile, there is a corresponding need for sensor signal-conditioning
and signal-processing products that are smart, inexpensive, and easy to use, and that can reduce the development time of the
devices they go into.
Because there has been no standard sensor application development environment and processing circuitry, sensor end users have
had to become experts in the specific sensor technology they wish to use and start from scratch in developing solutions for
each new application. Needless to say, this situation has been a hindrance. Developing ASICs for sensors is a moving target
of cost vs. performance over time. Customers have come to expect increased functionality at lower costs. Sensor manufacturers
and product developers have wrestled with these demands in the past, but can no longer afford to dedicate large amounts of
time and resources to this non-core activity. Instead, they are turning to companies that make it their sole focus. To better
understand what one such company has to offer, let's review the classical signal conditioning approach.
Classical Signal Conditioning
Figure 1. Instrumentation amplifier with external gain resistor applied to a bridge-based sensor
The most widely used sensor signal-conditioning technique is to combine an instrumentation amplifier (in amp) and an A/D converter
(ADC), as shown in Figure 1. In contrast to a general-purpose operational amplifier (op amp), the in amp is characterized by low drift, common-mode rejection,
and high input impedance. In amps have a balanced differential input, meaning that the output voltage is proportional to the
difference between the input voltages. The differential inputs are compatible with sensors that are balanced, such as bridge-based
sensors, or unbalanced, where the sensor is single-ended with a ground return.
Hi, I want information about signal conditioning technique in Analog Inductive proximity sensor . How linearity is acheived in this type of sensor Regards, vdd