SBOA097B June   2004  – May 2015 INA132 , INA146 , INA152 , OPA2205 , OPA2277 , OPA277 , OPA301 , OPA335 , OPA364 , OPA4205 , OPA725 , TLV2341

 

  1.   High-Voltage Signal Conditioning for Low-Voltage ADCs
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Introduction
    3. 2 Circuit 1: The Modular Approach
    4. 3 Circuit 2: Single-Supply/Single-Port Approach
    5. 4 Circuit 3: Difference Amp Approach
    6. 5 Circuit 4: Differential Input with INA146
    7. 6 Circuit 5: Differential Input Modular
    8. 7 Voltage References and Ranges
    9. 8 References
  2.   Revision History

Introduction

Analog front-end designers are often confronted with the challenge of coupling high-voltage bipolar signals to ADCs that operate on low-voltage single supplies. Traditional single-part, high-voltage converters are becoming obsolete, although many applications continue to use high-voltage bipolar analog signals. Modern data converters are designed on small geometry processes because of advanced digital capabilities, higher yields, and overall lower costs. Op amps, on the other hand, are designed on large geometry processes to withstand higher internal voltages and allow precise control of internal elements. Modern op amps offer several outstanding features, such as rail-to-rail I/O, a wide input common-mode voltage range, linear transfer functions, low power consumption and low-voltage operation. By using discrete op amps and data converters, designers can optimize circuit performance by using the proper part and avoiding expensive, compromised, single-part solutions.