Winter Yu
By measuring changes in infrared and red light absorption in oxygenated or deoxygenated blood, a pulse oximeter clipped to a finger noninvasively monitors a person’s heart rate and blood oxygen saturation (SpO2). Normally, the oxygen saturation of a healthy person’s blood is in the 95% to 100% range. Measuring oxygen saturation using a pulse oximeter like the one shown in Figure 1 can help patients:
People who have had health conditions that affect blood oxygen levels such as heart failure or asthma may also use a pulse oximeter.
Usually, a photodiode measures the infrared and red light passing through the finger. The signal coming out of the photodiode sensor consists of a large DC component and a small AC component (AC is around 0.4% to 10% of DC), shown in Figure 2. The large DC component is a result of absorption by the lesser oxygen-bearing parts of body tissue and scattered light. The small AC component comprises light modulated by the oxygen-bearing parts, such as arteries, as well as noise from ambient light at 50/60 Hz. Both AC and DC components are necessary for SpO2 calculation. To meet the accuracy requirement, a signal conditioning circuit need to be designed to amplify the AC component with resolution increased, DC component and ambient light canceled. However, the signal level varies according to the health conditions of patients, and the position and thickness of the finger. The gain of amplifier need to be dynamically adjusted based on the range of signal to avoid signal saturation.
TI has a single-chip pulse oximeter solution based on the MSP430FR2355 microcontroller (MCU) and its built-in smart analog combos (SACs). As a featured peripheral of the MSP430FR2355, the SACs are configurable with software and enable you to perform analog signal conditioning for either the input or output path. Figure 3 illustrates SAC mode.
Acting as the host MCU in the system, the MSP430FR2355 can provide a true single-chip solution that effectively removes the need for an external amplifier and digital-to-analog converter (DAC), reducing system complexity and cost. Plus, you can configure each SAC module as an operational amplifier, programmable gain amplifier or 12-bit DAC. Figure 4 is a system block diagram of a pulse oximeter using an MSP430FR2355 MCU.
The sample pulse oximeter solution in Figure 4 illustrates four SAC modules:
Besides built-in smart analog combos, the low to 42nA standby current, small package, memory configuration and communication interface is very suitable for a low-cost pulse oximeter design.
Figure 5 lists the detailed MSP430FR2355 MCU’s on-chip analog and digital features.
The MSP430FR2355 is an ultra-low-power and low-cost 16-bit reduced instruction set computer MCU with many analog signal-chain peripherals. The four smart analog combs effectively remove the need for an external amplifier and digital-to-analog converter (DAC), reducing system complexity and cost. The low power and VQFN32 (4-mm-by-4-mm 32-pin) package is a good fit for a portable device such as a pulse oximeter. The MSP430 MCU along with the online software (https://www.ti.com/tool/MSPWARE) and hardware resources can help you design a pulse oximeter quickly.
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