In this month’s post on our sister blog, the “Precision Hub” on Planet Analog, I share a recent question I got from a customer in the Precision Amplifier Forum here in the TI E2E™ Community.

His circuit used an op amp to amplify the output of a microphone at very low frequencies. He used a large (47uF) AC coupling capacitor and a high input resistance (100kΩ) to achieve a low corner frequency for his measurements.

Unfortunately, a significant amount of DC offset was appearing at the output of the op amp – almost a volt!

What could cause this?

Check out my full post, “Plug that leak: Look out for capacitor leakage!,” on Planet Analog to find out.

Anonymous
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  • John;

    Wouldn't a more straightforward approach be to simply use a good FET op amp such as an OPA134 or a low noise CMOS type and take advantage of its very low input bias current to increase R2 by an order of magnitude or two? If R2 is 1M then C1 needs to be 4.7uF; if R2 is 10M, then C1 can be 470nF. These values can be achieved with a much smaller film capacitor or even a ceramic type.

    Since the voltage is low, a ceramic type is not out of the question even for a 4.7uF. This appears to be an electret microphone, which has a high output level so noise is not a serious concern. Electrolytic capacitors have poor distortion characteristics anyway-- see Walter Jung's work on characterizing distortion of capacitors for audio applications.

    Regards, Neil

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  • John;

    Wouldn't a more straightforward approach be to simply use a good FET op amp such as an OPA134 or a low noise CMOS type and take advantage of its very low input bias current to increase R2 by an order of magnitude or two? If R2 is 1M then C1 needs to be 4.7uF; if R2 is 10M, then C1 can be 470nF. These values can be achieved with a much smaller film capacitor or even a ceramic type.

    Since the voltage is low, a ceramic type is not out of the question even for a 4.7uF. This appears to be an electret microphone, which has a high output level so noise is not a serious concern. Electrolytic capacitors have poor distortion characteristics anyway-- see Walter Jung's work on characterizing distortion of capacitors for audio applications.

    Regards, Neil

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