• Channels
Part Inventory
Go
 
powered by:

 
  • Quick Poll
What Social Networking site do you use the most?



VOTE VIEW RESULTS
Previous Polls

Premium Content

New Signal Chain Technical Papers from Texas Instruments:

 

 

 

Sense Small Capacitance Changes Over A Wide Range


Hans Krobath

September 20, 2004

Print
Reprints Comment Subscribe

With this simple circuit connected to a serial port, small capacitance deviations on the order of 0.01 pF can be easily sensed over a wide range of several hundred picofarads (see the figure). Using an RC oscillator such as a TLC555 and an eight-pin Atmel ATtiny12-8 microprocessor, the period of multiple oscillator cycles--which is directly proportional to capacitance--can be sensed. Applications include displacement measurement and liquid-level sensing.

The 555 oscillator's frequency is given as F = 1.44/(R1 + 2R2)C, where C is the sum of the IC's internal capacitance (or its equivalent), C1, and the CX to be sensed. The RISC-based microprocessor operates at an instruction rate of 8 MIPS and counts the number of crystal-oscillator clocks between a fixed number of 555 output pulses. This count is formatted and transmitted as three serial 8-bit binary bytes at each RS-232 DTR transition. The three-byte count is given as:

Co = 0.693NM(R1 + 2R2)C

where:

N = fixed number of 555 clock pulses (synchronized to the negative edge)

M = MCU crystal-oscillator frequency

R1 = resistance from VCC to pin 7 of the TLC555

R2 = resistance from pin 7 to pin 6 and 2 of the TLC555

and

C = CX + C1 + CI

where:

CX = capacitance to be sensed

C1 = fixed value

CI = TLC555 internal equivalent capacitance

The circuit shown allows up to 14 measurements per second for CX values of 0 to 300 pF and can indicate changes of 0.01 pF throughout this range. Due to the circuit's low current requirement, it can be powered by unused RS-232 signals as shown.

DESIGN BRIEFS WANTED
We'll pay you $100 for every Design Brief that we publish. You can submit your ideas for Design Briefs via:
E-mail: dbs@penton.com
Postal mail:
Design Briefs Editor
Electronic Design
45 Eisenhower Dr., 5th Floor
Paramus, NJ 07562
Go to www.elecdesign.com for our submission guidelines.

Average (0 Ratings):

Subscribe
Subscribe to Electronic Design and start receiving more articles like this one
Filed Under:

Check for price and availability on Source ESB:

Go
powered by  
  • Emily Towers
    3 months ago
    Nov 06, 2011

    This looks really cool!

    The link to the figure is broken :(

You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here
Acceptable Use Policy

Sponsored Links