SLAA843A August   2018  – March 2019 MSP430FR2512 , MSP430FR2512 , MSP430FR2522 , MSP430FR2522 , MSP430FR2532 , MSP430FR2532 , MSP430FR2533 , MSP430FR2533 , MSP430FR2632 , MSP430FR2632 , MSP430FR2633 , MSP430FR2633

 

  1.   Sensitivity, SNR, and design margin in capacitive touch applications
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Overview
      1. 1.1 Design Objectives
        1. 1.1.1 Reliability
        2. 1.1.2 Robustness
      2. 1.2 The Designer's Dilemma
    3. 2 Recommended Actions for Developers
      1. 2.1 Run SNR and Design Margin Tests
    4. 3 Terminology
      1. 3.1 Signal (S)
      2. 3.2 Noise (N)
      3. 3.3 Threshold (Sensitivity) (Th)
      4. 3.4 Design Margin
        1. 3.4.1 False Detection Margin (Min)
        2. 3.4.2 Detection Margin (Mout)
      5. 3.5 Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)
      6. 3.6 Advice
    5. 4 CapTIvate Device Performance
      1. 4.1 Minimum Recommended Values
      2. 4.2 CapTIvate Device SNR
    6. 5 Interpreting the Results
      1. 5.1 Interpreting the Advice
      2. 5.2 Check Other Results
    7. 6 Application of Terms
      1. 6.1 Count and Percent Change Analysis With 7.5-mm Overlay, Advice = POOR
      2. 6.2 Count and Percent Change Analysis With 1.5-mm Overlay, Advice = GOOD
      3. 6.3 Count and Percent Change Analysis (1.5-mm Overlay vs 7.5-mm Overlay)
      4. 6.4 Effect of Post-Processing and Sampling Rate
    8. 7 Summary
  2.   Revision History

Overview

Capacitive touch sensing is the process of periodically monitoring for changes in the capacitance of a sensing electrode over time and determining if those changes are due to a user's touch or some other non-touch phenomena. This process executes periodic capacitance-to-digital conversions to obtain digital values that represent the capacitance of the sensing electrode over time, and post processing algorithms interpret the measurement results and differentiate a true touch or proximity detection from long term drift and background noise.

It is important for the designer of a capacitive touch interface to understand the basic concepts of sensitivity, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and design margin and, more importantly, how to leverage these metrics to ensure that a capacitive touch solution is reliable and robust. This document provides an overview of these performance metrics as they relate to capacitive touch sensing, with a focus on providing a methodology to assess the reliability and robustness of a capacitive touch solution built using CapTIvate MCUs.