SBOA291A December   2018  – September 2024 OPA172 , OPA192 , TLV6741

 

  1.   1
  2.   2
  3.   Trademarks

Design Goals

Input pressure (Max) Output Voltage (Max) Supply Frequency Response Deviation
100dB SPL(2Pa) 1.228Vrms Vcc Vee At 20Hz At 20kHz
5V 0V –0.5dB –0.1dB

Design Description

This circuit uses an op amp in a transimpedance amplifier configuration to convert the output current from an electret capsule microphone into an output voltage. The common mode voltage of this circuit is constant and set to mid–supply eliminating any input–stage cross over distortion.

Design Notes

  1. Use the op amp in the linear output operating range, which is usually specified under the AOL test conditions.
  2. Use low–K capacitors (tantalum, C0G, and so forth) and thin film resistors help to decrease distortion.
  3. Use a battery to power this circuit to eliminate distortion caused by switching power supplies.
  4. Use low value resistors and low noise op amp to achieve high performance low noise designs.
  5. The voltage connected to R1 to bias the microphone does not have to match the supply voltage of the op amp. Using a larger microphone bias voltage allows for a larger value or R1 which decreases the noise gain of the op amp circuit while still maintaining normal operation of the microphone.
  6. Capacitor C1 should be large enough that its impedance is much less than resistor R1 at audio frequency. Pay attention to the signal polarity when using tantalum capacitors.

Design Steps

The following microphone is chosen as an example to design this circuit.

  1. Microphone parameter Value
    Sensitivity at 94dB SPL (1Pa) –35 ± 4dBV
    Current Consumption (Max) 0.5mA
    Impedance 2.2kΩ
    Standard Operating Voltage 2Vdc
  2. Convert the sensitivity to volts per Pascal.
    10 - 35 dB 20 = 17 .78 mV / Pa
  3. Convert volts per Pascal to current per Pascal.
    17.78mV / Pa 2.2kΩ = 8 .083 μA / Pa
  4. Max output current occurs at max sound pressure level of 2Pa.
    I Max = 2 Pa × 8 .083 μA / Pa = 16 .166 μA  
  5. Calculate the value of resistor R4 to set the gain
    R 4 = V max I max = 1. 228 V 16. 166 μA = 75 .961 k 75 k   ( Standard   value )
    The final signal gain is:
    Equation 1. G a i n = 20 × log V o u t V i n = 20 × log 16 . 166 μ A × 75 k Ω 2 V = - 4.347 d B
  6. Calculate the value for the bias resistor R1. In the following equation, Vmic is the standard operating voltage of the microphone
    R 1 = V cc - V mic I s = 5 V - 2 V 0.5 mA = 6 k 5 .9 k   ( Standard   value )
  7. Calculate the high frequency pole according to the allowed deviation at 20kHz. In the following equation, G_pole1 is the gain at frequency f.
    f p = f 1 G _ pole 1 2 - 1 = 20 kHz 1 10 -0.1 20 2 - 1 = 131 .044 kHz
  8. Calculate C3 based on the pole frequency calculated in 6.
    C 3 = 1 2 π × f p × R 4 = 1 2π×131.0 44 kHz×75kΩ = 16 .194 pF 15 pF   ( Standard   value )
  9. Calculate the corner frequency at low frequency according to the allowed deviation at 20Hz. In the following equation, G_pole2 is the gain contributed by each pole at frequency f respectively. There are two poles, so divided by two.
    f c = f × 1 G _ pole 2 2 - 1 = 20 Hz × 1 10 -0.5 / 2 20 2 - 1 = 4 .868 Hz
  10. Calculate the input capacitor C1 based on the cut off frequency calculated in 8.
    C 1 = 1 2 π × R 1 × f c = 1 2 π × 5.9kΩ × 4.868 Hz = 5 .541 μF 4 .7 μF   ( Standard   value )
  11. Assuming the output load R5 is 10kΩ, calculate the output capacitor C4 based on the cut off frequency calculated in 8.
    C 4 = 1 2 π × R 5 × f c = 1 2 π × 10 k × 4.868 Hz = 3 .269 μF 3 .3 μF   ( Standard   value )
  12. Set the amplifier input common mode voltage to mid–supply voltage. Select R2 and R3 as 100kΩ. The equivalent resistance equals to the parallel combination of the two resistors:
    R eq = R 2 R 3 = 100 k 100 k = 50 k
  13. Calculate the capacitor C2 to filter the power supply and resistor noise. Set the cutoff frequency to 1Hz.
C 2 = 1 2 π × ( R 2 | | R 3 ) × 1 Hz = 1 2 π × ( 100 k | | 100 k ) × 1 Hz = 3 .183 μF 3 .3 μ F   ( Standard   value )

Design Simulations

AC Simulation Results

Transient Simulation Results

The input voltage represents the SPL of an input signal to the microphone. A 2Vrms input signal represents 2 Pascal.

Noise Simulation Results

The following simulation results show 22.39µVrms of noise at 22kHz. The noise is measured at a bandwidth of 22kHz to represent the measured noise using an audio analyzer with the bandwidth set to 22kHz.

References

Texas Instruments, TIA Microphone Amplifier Circuit, SBOC526 simulation

Texas Instruments, TIPD181 Single-Supply, Electret Microphone Preamplifier, reference design

Design Featured Op Amp

TLV6741
Vss 1.8V to 5.5V
VinCM Vee to Vcc–1.2V
Vout Rail–to–rail
Vos 150µV
Iq 890µA/Ch
Ib 10pA
UGBW 10MHz
SR 4.75V/µs
#Channels 1
TLV6741

Design Alternate Op Amp

OPA172 OPA192
Vss 4.5V to 36V 4.5V to 36V
VinCM Vee–0.1V to Vcc–2V Vee–0.1V to Vcc+0.1V
Vout Rail–to–rail Rail–to–rail
Vos ±200µV ±5µV
Iq 1.6mA/Ch 1mA/Ch
Ib 8pA 5pA
UGBW 10MHz 10MHz
SR 10V/µs 20V/µs
#Channels 1, 2, and 4 1, 2, and 4
OPA172 OPA192