SBAA532A February 2022 – March 2024 ADS1119 , ADS1120 , ADS1120-Q1 , ADS112C04 , ADS112U04 , ADS1130 , ADS1131 , ADS114S06 , ADS114S06B , ADS114S08 , ADS114S08B , ADS1158 , ADS1219 , ADS1220 , ADS122C04 , ADS122U04 , ADS1230 , ADS1231 , ADS1232 , ADS1234 , ADS1235 , ADS1235-Q1 , ADS124S06 , ADS124S08 , ADS1250 , ADS1251 , ADS1252 , ADS1253 , ADS1254 , ADS1255 , ADS1256 , ADS1257 , ADS1258 , ADS1258-EP , ADS1259 , ADS1259-Q1 , ADS125H01 , ADS125H02 , ADS1260 , ADS1260-Q1 , ADS1261 , ADS1261-Q1 , ADS1262 , ADS1263 , ADS127L01 , ADS130E08 , ADS131A02 , ADS131A04 , ADS131E04 , ADS131E06 , ADS131E08 , ADS131E08S , ADS131M02 , ADS131M03 , ADS131M04 , ADS131M06 , ADS131M08
The ideal bridge output should be 0 V with no applied load. However, a real bridge has a non-zero output with load applied. This error is an offset voltage that shifts the load response up or down, as shown in Figure 4-1.
Offset voltage may come from a variety of sources. Manufacturing tolerances can result in difference nominal resistances among the bridge elements. This leads to an inherent offset error even with no applied load, and is typically specified in the sensor data sheet (see the Zero Balance parameter in Table 4-1).
Parasitic thermocouples external to the sensor in the bridge connection may give a small offset voltage that varies with temperature. Moreover, ADC input bias currents reacting with the bridge lead resistance or any ADC input filtering resistances may also give a small offset voltage.
Regardless of the offset voltage source, there are ways to calibrate this error through simple zeroing of the offset voltage digitally or other active circuit techniques such as AC excitation.