A
Anonymous
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The test conditions are:
Pulse repetition frequency: 5000 Hz
Main delay: 20 usec
Analog Secondary delay: 100 usec after start of main sample
Digital Secondary delay: 96 usec after start of main sample
Analog integration window: 20 usec
Digital sample: two A-D samples at each point, 8 usec apart
Integrating 4 times as many samples as usual
I am near the limits of what this microprocessor chip can do. I can probably get the number of samples higher if I work at it, but not a lot higher. To get some idea of what the results would be if I could get a lot more samples, I changed how many A-D samples the integrator adds together to get each filter sample. I increased it by a factor of 4. Since the number of A-D samples I am taking per second has not changes this means the filter sample rate has dropped from 30 to 7.5. This rate is too slow for a reasonable search sweep rate, but it might be useable for pinpointing where you are not moving the coil very fast.
All the gains from the previous post are the same except the integrator gain. The integrator gain has increased by a factor of 4 to 1280. If you multiply all the gains together you get the total system gain from amplifier input to integrator output (450 * .31 * 1.64 * 1280 * 1.22 = 357,000).
The system gain has increased by a factor of 4 so based on yesterday's sensitivity numbers a penny at 8 inches from the coil should give about 800 mV at the output. What I actually measure today is closer to 700 mV. There is a bit of slop in these numbers. At 9 inches the output is about 400 mV, and at 10 inches it is a bit over 200 mV. It is hard to make accurate measurements because with the system gain higher the noise has also gone up. But the noise has not gone up as much as the target signal. Today the noise is about 200 to 400 mV. So I will say the 400 mV target signal at 9 inches is the smallest that can be detected under these test conditions.
Dividing 400 mV by the system gain of 357,000 gives 1.1 uV at the input to the amplifier. This is close to the sensitivity of the analog PI board, but the analog PI gets that performance at a normal sweep speed while this digital PI can only do that at a very slow sweep speed.
Robert
Pulse repetition frequency: 5000 Hz
Main delay: 20 usec
Analog Secondary delay: 100 usec after start of main sample
Digital Secondary delay: 96 usec after start of main sample
Analog integration window: 20 usec
Digital sample: two A-D samples at each point, 8 usec apart
Integrating 4 times as many samples as usual
I am near the limits of what this microprocessor chip can do. I can probably get the number of samples higher if I work at it, but not a lot higher. To get some idea of what the results would be if I could get a lot more samples, I changed how many A-D samples the integrator adds together to get each filter sample. I increased it by a factor of 4. Since the number of A-D samples I am taking per second has not changes this means the filter sample rate has dropped from 30 to 7.5. This rate is too slow for a reasonable search sweep rate, but it might be useable for pinpointing where you are not moving the coil very fast.
All the gains from the previous post are the same except the integrator gain. The integrator gain has increased by a factor of 4 to 1280. If you multiply all the gains together you get the total system gain from amplifier input to integrator output (450 * .31 * 1.64 * 1280 * 1.22 = 357,000).
The system gain has increased by a factor of 4 so based on yesterday's sensitivity numbers a penny at 8 inches from the coil should give about 800 mV at the output. What I actually measure today is closer to 700 mV. There is a bit of slop in these numbers. At 9 inches the output is about 400 mV, and at 10 inches it is a bit over 200 mV. It is hard to make accurate measurements because with the system gain higher the noise has also gone up. But the noise has not gone up as much as the target signal. Today the noise is about 200 to 400 mV. So I will say the 400 mV target signal at 9 inches is the smallest that can be detected under these test conditions.
Dividing 400 mV by the system gain of 357,000 gives 1.1 uV at the input to the amplifier. This is close to the sensitivity of the analog PI board, but the analog PI gets that performance at a normal sweep speed while this digital PI can only do that at a very slow sweep speed.
Robert