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Examples

ADXL50 Accelerometer

The ADXL50 accelerometer provides as its output a voltage level which varies in proportion to the amount of acceleration experienced along its sensitive axis. It is calibrated such that under no acceleration the output will be 1.8 volts. Furthermore, an acceleration of 50g (where 1g is the acceleration due to gravity) will cause a voltage swing of 1volt (ie. an acceleration of 50g would result in an output of either 2.8volts, or .8 volts depending upon the direction). In many cases this voltage swing would not be appropriate for a specific application, hence one must use a circuit which converts the output voltage into a more useful voltage range. For example, one might desire a more sensitive device which varied 1volt for every g of acceleration. Figure 39 depicts a circuit which accomplishes this task.

   figure827

Figure 39: Schematic of an op-amp circuit which converts the output voltage of the ADXL-50 to a range which is suitable for analog-digital conversion.

The output voltage of this circuit is given by:

displaymath2022

When no acceleration is applied to the device, the output voltage will be 1.8volts which makes the second term will be zero, and the output will be tex2html_wrap_inline2024 , the new zero-g output. The output voltage can be written as:

displaymath2026

where tex2html_wrap_inline2028 is the deviation of the output voltage from 1.8 volts. A 50g acceleration will result in tex2html_wrap_inline2030 of 1volt, which will be scaled by tex2html_wrap_inline2032 . In this way, we see that tex2html_wrap_inline2032 determines the sensitivity of the output, while the new zero-g output is determined by tex2html_wrap_inline2024 .



Tim Stilson
Thu Oct 17 11:25:23 PDT 1996