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X100 Microvolt DC Amplifier http://www.cappels.org/dproj/X100_Microvolt_amplifier/X100_Microvol...

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A X100 DC Amplifier With Microvolt Input Offset


This was designed to act as a preamp to extend the resolution of a DVM with 100 microvolt resolution
to 1 microvolt resolution.

/
Figure 1. This photo was taken just prior to changing the
10 uf capacitor on pin 5 of the ICL7660 to 330 uf.

Features
Gain is 100X DC
Battery powered -Change the battery when it gets down to 2.3 volts
Input range 1 uV to 25 mV
Offset Up to 10 uV depending on individual ICL7650
Over-voltage protected

Find updates at www.projects.cappels.org

Motivation

I was dissatisfied with my capability for adjusting the output offset voltage of an adjustable voltage reference
because the most sensitive scales on my digital voltmeters only went down to 100 microvolts in the last digit.
Having some ICL7650 chopper stabilized opamps that somebody gave to me some decades ago I decided to

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X100 Microvolt DC Amplifier http://www.cappels.org/dproj/X100_Microvolt_amplifier/X100_Microvol...

press one of them into use by making a preamp for my voltmeters.

Figure 2. A minimal X 100 DC amplifier.


The Circuit

The circuit is very straight forward. Since the amplifier's input and output was going to be working near
ground I was concerned that if I use a single supply opamp, noise clipping at ground would cause an offset of
the output when averaged by a digital voltmeter. That meant a negative power supply is necessary. An
ICL7660 positive to negative voltage converter handled that need well. The power supply is no more than a
3V button cell, the ICL7660 and some capacitors. Current drain with the particular parts I used was lower
than I expected, measuring only 1.03 milliamps. With the battery rated at 225 milliamp-hours, and that I will
not use this frequently, I should be able to use a single battery for nearly the shelf life of the battery.

The amplifier itself is configured as a classic non-inverting amplifier so as to have a high input impedance.
The reason for the funny values on the approximately 10:1 divider is because I could not find the 100k 1%
resistors I was sure I had bought and I don't have any 1.06k resistors. A more rational looking divider would
be 100K and 1.02K.That gets amplification of X100. so that 1 microvolt input is amplified to 100 microvolts
on the output.

The input circuit is composed of a single pole low pass filter at 3 kHz, this is not meant to be a noise filter but
is intended to slow any high voltage pulses that might be accidentally connected to the input, giving the
1N916 clipping diodes time to work. Note: in the case of electrostatic discharge measurement of pulse
risetime is limited by the test equipment. Since the full scale input voltage is 25 millivolts the diodes do not
measurably affect the linearity of the input signal.

A clamp signal on pin 9 of the ICL7650 helps the amplifier recover quickly from overloads. The two
capacitors connected to the ICL7650 pins labeled C1 and C2 Store the offset nulling values for the internal
main amplifier and the nulling amplifier.

There is about 5 millivolts of sawtooth from the power supply on the output of the one I made, and since the
amplifier is linear over its range of operation the noise is averaged out by the low pass input filter on the
digital voltmeter.

How Well Does It Work?

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X100 Microvolt DC Amplifier http://www.cappels.org/dproj/X100_Microvolt_amplifier/X100_Microvol...

It works fine. This one has an offset (output referred to input) of less than 1.0 microvolt, at least at the
moment.

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Contents ©2017 Richard Cappels All Rights Reserved. Find updates at www.projects.cappels.org

First posted in September, 2017

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