时间:2009-05-08 | 栏目:通信网络 | 点击:次
Abstract: A design example for a portable data acquisition system is offered that greatly simplifies the circuit design task. A reduction from seven components down to three components is accomplished with a design that has lower system cost, faster time-to-market, smaller size, better performance, and higher reliability.
The hardware design of a portable measurement system is more complicated than just choosing the right IC to meet the required electrical performance. There are many tradeoffs to be considered. Are there size constraints with board area or height? What does the total system cost, including the components, assembly, and final test, need to be? How important is time-to-market and have all the associated risks been identified? What is the product life cycle? In what environment will the product be used and what are the reliability requirements? At one extreme is a discrete design using readily available standard components and at the other extreme is a custom design using a single mixed-signal chip. The following will compare a discrete design to a design using the MAX1407.
Figure 1 shows the functional block diagram for a portable data acquisition system (DAS) using discrete components. The system includes power, analog, and digital circuitry. The power is derived from the batteries, with a power supply for a regulated output voltage. The battery voltage can be measured on demand with the A/D converter and there are reset circuits for the battery and the regulated output voltage. The analog includes the analog front end (AFE) circuitry (which may include D/A converters, opamps, and analog switches) to interface with an electrochemical sensor, a thermistor circuit to measure temperature, an A/D converter with an input multiplexer, and a voltage reference for use with the AFE, thermistor, and A/D converter. The digital circuitry includes a 32kHz oscillator, real-time clock (RTC), and a microcontroller (µC) including a high-frequency crystal, external interrupts for the user interface, internal memory, and possibly other peripherals, such as a liquid crystal display (LCD) bias and driver circuit to interface to an LCD. 
Figure 1. Portable system functional block diagram with discrete standard components.
The sensor shown in Figure 1 is an electrochemical type sensor configured in a counter configuration where the working electrode (WE) is biased via the FB1 pin. The external resistor between FB1 and OUT1 configures the force/sense D/A converter as a transimpedance amplifier to measure the current through the sensor. The reference electrode (RE) is biased via the FB2 pin, and the feedback loop is closed through the sensor impedance to the OUT2 pin to regulate a constant potential between WE and RE over varying sensor currents.
Figure 2 shows the functional block diagram for the same portable DAS using the MAX1407, simplifying the system design greatly. The MAX1407 contains all the circuitry required for the AFE, including the multiplexer, the A/D converter, and the voltage reference. It also has the ability to measure the battery and supply voltages. Also included are digital functions, including two reset circuits, a 32kHz oscillator with RTC, wake-up circuitry, power supply control, and a high-frequency clock output to drive the µC. In addition, all the blocks in the MAX1407 can be individually controlled and powered down via the serial interface. The sensor application shown is just one of the many ways this flexible AFE can be configured. 
Figure 2. Portable system functional block diagram using the MAX1407/14.
There are many benefits with using the MAX1407 (or with similar devices, such as the MAX1408, MAX1409, or MAX1414, if the system requirements are different). These are lower system cost, faster time-to-market, smaller size, better performance, and higher reliability. See Table 1.
Table 1. MAX1407/MAX1408/MAX1409/MAX1414 Selector Table
| Part Number | Total ADC Analog Inputs | ADC Auxilary Analog Inputs | ADC Data Ready Interrupt Signal | Differential Input Detection Threshold (mV) | Force/ Sense DACs | External Power Supply Control | 3-State Digital Output |
| MAX1407 | 8 DIFF | 4 | Yes | 0 | 2 | Yes | Yes |
| MAX1408 | 8 DIFF | 8 | Yes | 0 | 0 | Yes | Yes |
| MAX1409 | 4 DIFF | 1 | No | 0 | 1 | No | No |
| MAX1414 | 8 DIFF | 4 | Yes | 50 | 2 | Yes | Yes |
| Metric | MAX1407 (2-3 IC's) | DISCRETE (6-12 IC's) |
| Analog Performance | *** | ** |
| Reliability | *** | * |
| Small Size | *** | * |
| Time to Market | *** | ** |
| Ease of Spin-offs | *** | ** |
| System Cost | *** | * |
| Overall Rating | *** | ** |