[Design View / Design Solution]
Filter Trims Ultra-Precision Voltage Reference
Use this bootstrapped filter design when trying to minimize the pink noise coming from your voltage reference.
Alfredo Saab,
Randall White
ED Online ID #19753
October 2, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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VOLTAGE REFERENCES GENERATE WIDEBAND
noise spectrums. For most semiconductor devices,
this spectrum usually has a wideband “white
noise” component with relatively constant power
density versus frequency, and a “pink noise”
or “1/f noise” component that grows with the
inverse of frequency.1,2 The pink noise component
rises up from the relatively flat white noise
level at a point somewhere between a few hundred
hertz and a kilohertz, and it increases 3 dB
per octave (approximately 10 dB per decade) in
the direction of decreasing frequency.
The frequency at which the 1/f noise 3-dB/
octave slope projection intersects the white
noise theoretical flat line projection is commonly
referred to as the 1/f corner frequency.
It typically occurs at a few hundred hertz for
bipolar technologies and around 1 kHz for CMOS
technologies.
The difference between white and pink noise
spectra, indicated by the different slopes (zero
for white noise and 3 dB/octave for pink), is
that the white noise can be described as having
constant energy/bandwidth. As an example, for
white noise, the same frequency slot (say, 1 kHz)
will have the same energy at 100 kHz than at 1
MHz. For pink noise, the same frequency-relative
slot (decade, octave) will maintain constant
energy through the whole range considered.
Both the 1/f corner frequency and the white
noise level depend heavily on the type and quality
of the manufacturing process.
The problems with pink noise appear mostly
in the measurement and control applications
requiring the highest grade of accuracy and precision.
Examples of such applications include calibration
sources, high-end digital voltmeters, and
the generation of ultra-precision magnetic fields.
In all of these applications, inherent noise
above the 1/f corner (and sometimes well below
it) is filtered out by the long time constants
derived from the acquisition time or from the
measurement integration time. It could also be
filtered out due to the slow time response of the
controlled elements (magnets).
However, measurement is, by definition, the
comparison with a standard or reference, and
controlling a physical quantity implies that it
needs to be measured first. The uncertainty
caused in the results of a measurement by the
reference’s noise appears directly (plus any
other added in the process) as uncertainty in the
measurement result. As such, the absolute limit
to the quality of any measurement or control is
the quality of the reference used.
It’s for the applications mentioned above
where the 1/f noise components of references
collide with the measurement quality—both in
the bandwidth of interest and with the level of
uncertainty required. That’s where the reduction
of those components can be of interest.
The higher-frequency components of a voltagereference
noise spectrum are easily removed by inserting a passive or active low-pass filter (normally an RC filter)
without affecting the reference-voltage accuracy or temperature
uncertainty. For the low-frequency components (those below 10 Hz),
it’s difficult to create a filter that can suppress several decades of
frequency below 10 Hz while maintaining the original quality of the
reference, which is the dc-output accuracy.
In all cases, the problem is the long time constant (RC product)
necessary to obtain a low corner frequency for the low-pass filter. A
large resistor value must be placed in the dc path of the reference,
and a large capacitor value placed in shunt with the output side of
the resistor.
High-value resistors introduce voltage-drop uncertainties that are
unacceptably large, even for the very small leakage current circulating
through the shunt capacitor. This current, though very low for capacitors
built with the best dielectrics, is measurable for the high-value
capacitors in question.
If you use active filters, almost any value of bias current from
the amplifiers can cause the same problem, and the noise-current
component of that bias current adds a considerable amount of voltage
noise when it circulates through the high resistance seen from
the inputs. And yet, the lowest-noise amplifiers are almost always
designed with bipolar technology, which has an appreciable input
bias current (in the nanoampere region).
In Figure 1, the circuit filters the low-frequency components of the
noise spectrum of a voltage reference without introducing significant
dc-offset voltage errors. The filter approximates a one-pole transfer
function with corner frequency at 10 MHz and produces a 22-dB
reduction in total integrated noise voltage from 0.1 to 10 Hz.
The Filter Circuit
The circuit shown in Figure 1 is a bootstrapped filter. Amplifier A1,
a high-precision chopper-stabilized CMOS type, is configured as an
inverting single-pole high-pass filter with gain of 100 at mid-band (set
by the ratio of R2/R3, as C1 approaches a short to common). It also
has a gain of unity at dc (because R2 and R1 are connected to the
same dc potential).
Continue to page 2
The position of the high-pass filter’s corner
pole is defined by the product R1C1
= 0.0053 Hz. The A1 output’s amplified
and phase-inverted voltage-reference noise is
applied through C2 to a cancellation divider
consisting of R4 and R5, with a dividing ratio
equal to the A1 ac gain. The cancellation
point is at the non-inverting input of A2. This
circuit scheme begins to work at frequencies
above the corner defined by the time-constant
C2(R5 + R4), which is about 0.016 Hz.
The cancellation scheme allows the use of
a second capacitor (C2), which significantly
reduces the dc influence of any drop across
the resistor of the first RC filter (R1) by breaking
the dc path. The drop across R1 is caused by the leakage current
through C1 and appears amplified at the output of A1.
The gain/attenuation factor of 100 used for the cancellation lets
you insert a large-valued resistor of 1 MO (R5) to determine the time
constant of the second RC product (R5C2). As a result, this time
constant is determined by a resistor that’s not in series with the dc
“signal” path. The cancellation-divider resistor in series with that path
(R4) is only 10 kO, which is small enough to make drops due to C2
leakage currents negligible.
The second chopper-stabilized amplifier (A2) buffers the load
from the divider impedance seen from A2’s non-inverting input. For
frequencies below the corner defined as 1/2p[C2(R5 + R4)], that
impedance approaches a maximum of 10 kO at dc.
Filter Performance
The dc-insertion offset is 0.35 µV at room temperature, and the
total change from –30°C to 80°C is 0.150
µV (Fig. 2). At dc, the temperature-dependent
uncertainty added by the filter per °C is two
to three orders of magnitude lower than the
temperature coefficient of available bandgap
and buried-Zener voltage references.
The filter’s frequency response is taken
with a white noise source whose power
spectral density (PSD) is flat at an approximate
level of 5 µV/vHz and with no 1/f
components down to a few millihertz (Fig.
3). This source level is defined as 0 dB. The
lower curve is the output in dB of the second
amplifier (A2), referred to the noise applied
at the filter input.
Figure 4 shows the circuit response to a 4-V
source suddenly connected at the input. Settling
time to the ppm level requires several minutes,
which is consistent with the behavior of ultraprecision
circuits. Experimental results observed
for several Maxim references are presented as
the obtained noise reduction plotted against the
datasheet noise value for each one (Fig. 5). Also
shown are the noise-reduction values obtained
by computer simulation, when the filter simulation
is fed with datasheet noise values for each
reference. Agreement with the experimental data
is reasonable.
Uncertainty Sources
The dc uncertainty sources include voltage
drops across the resistor in the signal path,
caused by capacitor leakage and amplifier bias
currents, and changes in the amplifier offset voltages.
This design handles capacitor leakage by
choosing the best capacitor type available.
Similarly, the selection of CMOS amplifiers
minimizes the influence of amplifier input current
on the dc uncertainties and on the noise induced
by input current. CMOS chopper-stabilized amplifiers
almost eliminate offset-voltage drift and
its change with temperature, as well as the 1/f
noise components otherwise introduced by the
op amps.
Included among ac uncertainty sources are
noise introduced by the amplifiers themselves,
and the mismatch of amplifier gain with the
resistor ratio of the cancelling divider. The filter’s
output-referred noise is approximately twice the input-referred noise of a single operational amplifier
of the type used.
The Components
The critical capacitors C1 and C2, polypropylene-
film-dielectric types made by Cornell Dubilier
(type 935C1W10K), are specified to have a minimum
RC time constant of 30,000 seconds. For a
10-µF capacitance, that value yields a worst-case
leakage resistance of 3000 MO.
The two op amps (MAX4238) are CMOS chopper-
stabilized devices, a requirement imposed by
the need for zero bias current. For this application,
the essential chopper-stabilized-amplifier
parameters include a noise spectrum free of the
1/f component, an extremely low voltage offset
and voltage-offset temperature coefficient, and
low wideband noise.
Because A1 and A2 are chopper-stabilized
amplifiers, the circuit output contains switching
noise at the chopper frequency, distributed from
10 kHz to 15 kHz. These high-frequency components
are far removed from the frequencies
of interest (<10 Hz). They can be easily filtered
if the need arises and are negligible for most
applications that require the stability of the reference
types discussed here. All resistors are 1%
metal-film, low-noise types.
Methods
The accurate measurement of low-frequency
noise requires care and specialized test fixtures.
Because the noise being measured is often
lower than the noise floor of available test equipment
(the low-frequency noise floor in particular),
several low-frequency amplifiers were developed
to boost the signals to measurable levels. Lowfrequency
noise measurements are usually specified
for a specific signal bandwidth, such as the
industry-standard band from 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz.
The noise source used for the frequencyresponse
curves also included a MAX4238,
amplifying its own noise, in a configuration
using low-value resistors. Figure 6 shows the
schematic for this noise source.3 The source
works based on the principle that the 1/f internal
noise components of a chopper stabilized op
amp are aliased out to an out-of-interest, much
higher frequency region. The noise spectrum at
the output of the source is used to test the filter
performance (Fig. 7).
All voltages (including noise) were measured
with a high-end 8.5-digit DMM (HP3458A). For
each noise test, multiple 4096-point measurements
were taken over a 10-second interval (i.e.,
a sampling rate of 409.6Hz). The FFT of each
4096-point measurement series was computed
and then divided by the sample rate to obtain
a value normalized to a 1-Hz bandwidth. These
values were averaged to reduce the uncertainty
of data points in the resulting plot.
References:
1. Motchenbacher, C.D. & Connelly, J.A., Low-Noise
Electronic System Design, John Wiley & Sons, 1993
2. Pallas-Areny, Ramon & Webster, John G., Sensors
and Signal Conditioning, John Wiley & Sons, 1991
3. Saab, A.H., Randall, R., “White Noise Generator with
no Flicker Noise Component,” EDN, March 20, 2008
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