Noway2
Electrical
- Apr 15, 2005
- 789
I have been looking at ADC chips, and it appears that a lot of them can accept differential or pseudo differential signals that are centered about Vref / 2.
What I have been trying to figure out, is what would be the best method to generate the one half voltage reference. While it would be possible to use two reference sources, the tolerances could go in opposite directions, which would be less than ideal. If, however, one had a reference and one that was exactly 1/2 of it, at least one form of error could be removed.
The problem I see with using a resistor divider is that even with .1% resistors the result is only accurate to .2% which is about 5x worse than the voltage reference, which is .04% or about 2 LSB. I did see that Maxim makes a form of matched eepot with four resistors, which they call a precision attenuator and the claim that it is accurate to .025%.
I also searched for matched resistors, R2R ladders and all the varients of these terms that I could think of trying to find a resistor network that had a matched accuracy, pretty much to no avail.
I was wondering if anyone has had experience designing this type of reference voltage and if so, what would you suggest?
One possibility I have considered, is to use a resistor divider with an eepot connected by a large resistor and then tweaking the eepot to bring the converted output to half scale. This is a technique I used in the first prototype, and it worked satisfactorilly, but I wonder if there is a better alternative.
What I have been trying to figure out, is what would be the best method to generate the one half voltage reference. While it would be possible to use two reference sources, the tolerances could go in opposite directions, which would be less than ideal. If, however, one had a reference and one that was exactly 1/2 of it, at least one form of error could be removed.
The problem I see with using a resistor divider is that even with .1% resistors the result is only accurate to .2% which is about 5x worse than the voltage reference, which is .04% or about 2 LSB. I did see that Maxim makes a form of matched eepot with four resistors, which they call a precision attenuator and the claim that it is accurate to .025%.
I also searched for matched resistors, R2R ladders and all the varients of these terms that I could think of trying to find a resistor network that had a matched accuracy, pretty much to no avail.
I was wondering if anyone has had experience designing this type of reference voltage and if so, what would you suggest?
One possibility I have considered, is to use a resistor divider with an eepot connected by a large resistor and then tweaking the eepot to bring the converted output to half scale. This is a technique I used in the first prototype, and it worked satisfactorilly, but I wonder if there is a better alternative.