4.6 Post-Reading and Exercises
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Fig. 4.48: Circuit of a 2nd order RLC Bessel-filter (left) and associated frequency response by mag-
nitude and phase (right).
3.
What is a Helmholtz layer?
4.
Why is an electrode gel required at the junction between skin and electrode?
5.
For what reason does a amplifier for biosignals require a high input impedance?
6.
What is a common mode signal and what does common mode rejection mean?
7.
What does the signal-to-noise ratio describe and what is it used for?
8.
What is the magnitude and phase frequency response of a amplifier?
9.
What is the magnitude of the internal resistance of the body and that of the elec-
trodes?
10. What characteristics especially qualify an instrumentation amplifier for amplify-
ing biosignals?
11. Enter the instrumentation amplifier presented in subsection 4.1.2 into LTspice.
12. Check the frequency response of the measurement amplifier after the subtractor,
after the high-pass filter and at the circuit output in the frequency range 0.1 Hz to
10 kHz. To do this, apply an AC voltage of amplitude 1 mV between the two inputs,
and simulate the frequency range.
13. Which components of the measurement amplifier would have to be changed and
how, so that the high pass has a cutoff frequency of 1.6 Hz and the second low
pass has a cutoff frequency of 360 Hz?
14. Check the calculated gain of the measurement amplifier after the instrumentation
amplifier and at the circuit output.
15. Add a common mode signal source in the LTspice model.
16. At the circuit output of the instrumentation amplifier, calculate the ratio of the
useful signal to the common-mode signal when at the circuit input the amp-
litude of the useful signal is 100 μV and the common-mode signal is 1 V. For this
purpose, it should be taken into account that the operational amplifiers have a
common-mode rejection of 100 dB.