Measure small currents without adding resistive insertion loss
Floating current to voltage converter can be inserted in-line with no voltage drop and no need for a ground reference.
Maciej Kokot, Gdansk University of Technology, Gdansk, Poland; Edited by Martin Rowe and Fran Granville -- EDN, July 28, 2011
In most cases, you measure current
by converting it into a proportional
voltage and then measuring the
voltage. Figure 1 shows two typical
methods of making the conversion. In
one method, you insert a probing resistor,
RP, in series with the current path and
use differential amplifier IC1 to measure
the resulting voltage drop (Figure 1a).
A second method is a widely known
operational amplifier current-to-voltage
converter in which inverted IC1’s output
sinks the incoming current through the
feedback resistor (Figure 1b).In the first method, the same current that flows into one node flows from the second node, but a significant voltage drop occurs across probing resistor RP. In the second method, the voltage drop is on the order of tens of microvolts to millivolts, depending on IC1’s quality, but the measured current flows only into the sensing node with no return to the circuit. You can measure only currents flowing to ground.
| Read More Design Ideas |
In Figure 2, input current I flows
through R1 into the output of IC2, which
reduces its voltage by the amount of IR1
relative to the input node. That voltage
equals the voltage mean of the op amp’s
outputs, which R3 and R4 set at the op
amp’s inverting inputs. Consequently, the output of IC1 must rise to a voltage
of IR2 relative to the inverting inputs
and the equal-voltage noninverting
input node of IC2. IC1 sources this current,
which returns through R2 to the
circuit under test. R1=R2, so the output
current is the same as the input current.
Because the op amp’s outputs maintain
their inputs at equal voltages, the circuit
under test has virtually no resistance.The circuit in Figure 2 has the advantages but not the drawbacks of those in Figure 1. The current that flows into the first node flows from the other node, and the voltage drop is almost zero; the maximum is twice the input offset voltages. You can use this circuit in a circuit under test without changing the voltage and current flows.
Talkback
-
This is a late comment but...
I have several op amp books/references and have not seen this circuit in any of them. As suggested, I searched TI’s web site for handbooks of Operational Amplifiers. There are only two publications containing the words “Handbook of Operational Amplifiers and one is on active RC networks. I looked through both and did not find this circuit. I expanded my search and still found nothing on the TI site. It would really be nice to have a complete reference for this circuit. It’s a great circuit and I am wondering what others I am missing out on!
Ross - 2012-3-1 14:23:45 PST -
Using of classic circuits is great, but if you would like to publish them, needs to satisfy 2 criteria:
1. use it as a reference
2. Offer yours own contribution in solving some issues.
In this case it was done nothing. There are wrong equations for Fig.2 and Fig.3 also. The author at least should show how he wants to solve a problem with protection of inputs of Op Amps for Fig.2 and Fig.3.
Vladimir Doubovis - 2011-24-8 17:31:26 PDT -
Ken, the issue is not that we are geniuses. The issues that the circuit a classic textbook circuit.
This means, it is not a secret or magic as you seem to imply. No genius required. It is out in the open for any student thoroughly studying his subject.
But more important, the author from Gdansk University of Technology should know that one should cites his sources in a publication.
Markus Lerter - 2011-15-8 10:10:40 PDT -
Maybe the author assumed that not all the readers are as brilliant or experienced as you all seem to be, rather they might still be students and will see these circuit ideas for the first time.
Ken Regan - 2011-11-8 12:10:52 PDT -
This circuit construction is ingenious. I thank all the respondents for citing the original disclosure and analysis. Of course the limits of the op-amp performance, voltage supply limits, bandwidth and slew rate, which the author does not caution but it is nice to view a novel design, however unoriginal, but not universally know in a trade journal.
Dave Wuchinich - 2011-5-8 16:06:47 PDT






















