Publication:
Reducing Measurement Time in Direct Interface Circuits for Resistive Sensor Readout.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2020-05-02

Authors

Hidalgo-López, José A
Sánchez-Durán, José A
Oballe-Peinado, Óscar

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Direct Interface Circuits (DICs) carry out resistive sensor readings using a resistance-to-time-to-digital conversion without the need for analog-to-digital converters. The main advantage of this approach is the simplicity involved in designing a DIC, which only requires some additional resistors and a capacitor in order to perform the conversion. The main drawback is the time needed for this conversion, which is given by the sum of up to three capacitor charge times and their associated discharge times. This article presents a modification of the most widely used estimation method in a resistive DIC, which is known as the Two-Point Calibration Method (TPCM), in which a single additional programmable digital device pin in the DIC and one extra measurement in each discharge cycle, made without slowing down the cycle, allow charge times to be reduced more than 20-fold to values around 2 µs. The new method designed to achieve this reduction only penalizes relative errors with a small increase of between 0.2% and 0.3% for most values in the tested resistance range.

Description

MeSH Terms

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

calibration methods, direct interface circuits, error analysis, interface sensor, resistive sensor, time-based measurement

Citation