DocumentCode
1037673
Title
A novel fully differential biopotential amplifier with DC suppression
Author
Spinelli, Enrique Mario ; Martínez, Nolberto ; Mayosky, Miguel Angel ; Pallàs-Areny, Ramon
Author_Institution
Fac. de Ingenieria, Univ. Nacional de La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Volume
51
Issue
8
fYear
2004
Firstpage
1444
Lastpage
1448
Abstract
Fully differential amplifiers yield large differential gains and also high common mode rejection ratio (CMRR), provided they do not include any unmatched grounded component. In biopotential measurements, however, the admissible gain of amplification stages located before dc suppression is usually limited by electrode offset voltage, which can saturate amplifier outputs. The standard solution is to first convert the differential input voltage to a single-ended voltage and then implement any other required functions, such as dc suppression and dc level restoring. This approach, however, yields a limited CMRR and may result in a relatively large equivalent input noise. This paper describes a novel fully differential biopotential amplifier based on a fully differential dc-suppression circuit that does not rely on any matched passive components, yet provides large CMRR and fast recovery from dc level transients. The proposed solution is particularly convenient for low supply voltage systems. An example implementation, based on standard low-power op amps and a single 5-V power supply, accepts input offset voltages up to ±500 mV, yields a CMRR of 102dB at 50 Hz, and provides, in accordance with the AAMI EC38 standard, a reset behavior for recovering from overloads or artifacts.
Keywords
bioelectric potentials; biomedical electrodes; differential amplifiers; 102 dB; 5 V; 50 Hz; differential biopotential amplifier; electrode offset voltage; fully differential DC-suppression circuit; high common mode rejection ratio; large differential gains; single S-V power supply; standard low-power op amps; Active circuits; Capacitors; Circuit noise; Coupling circuits; Differential amplifiers; Electrodes; Gain measurement; Impedance; Operational amplifiers; Voltage; Amplifiers; Computer-Aided Design; Electrophysiology; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2004.827931
Filename
1315868
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