ICL7650/ICL7650B/ICL7653/ICL7653B
Chopper-Stabilized Op Amps
_______________________________________________________________________________________ 7
Nulling Capacitor Connection
Separate pins are provided for C
RETN
and CLAMP in
the ICL7650. If you do not need the clamp feature,
order the ICL7653; this device only offers the C
RETN
pin
and will produce slightly lower noise and improved AC
common-mode rejection. If you need to use the clamp
feature, order the ICL7650 and connect the external
capacitors to V-. To prevent load-current IR drops and
other extraneous signals from being injected into the
capacitors, use a separate PC board trace to connect
the capacitor commons directly to the V- pin. The out-
side foil of the capacitors should be connected to the
low-impedance side of the null storage circuit, V- or
C
RETN
. This will act as an ESD voltage shield.
Clock Operation
The ICL7650’s internal oscillator generates a 200Hz fre-
quency, which is available at the CLK OUT pin. The
device can also be operated with an external clock, if
desired. An internal pull-up permits the INT/EXT pin to
be left open for normal operation. However, the internal
clock must be disabled and INT/EXT must be tied to V-
if an external clock is used. An external clock signal
may then be applied to the EXT CLK IN pin. The duty
cycle of the external clock is not critical at low frequen-
cies. However, a 50% to 80% positive duty cycle is pre-
ferred for frequencies above 500Hz, since the
capacitors are charged only when EXT CLK IN is high.
This ensures that any transients have time to settle
before the capacitors are turned off. The external clock
should swing between ground and V+ for power sup-
plies up to ±6V, and between V+ and (V+ - 6V) for
higher supply voltages.
To avoid a capacitor imbalance during overload, use a
strobe signal. Neither capacitor will be charged if a
strobe signal is connected to EXT CLK IN so that it is
low while the overload signal is being applied to the
amplifier. A typical amplifier will drift less than 10µVs
since the leakage of the capacitor pins is quite low at
room temperature. Relatively long measurements may
be made with little change in offset.
Applications Information
Device Selection
In applications that require lowest noise, Maxim’s
ICL7652 may be preferred over the ICL7650/ICL7653.
The ICL7650/ICL7653 offer a higher gain-bandwidth
product and lower input bias currents, while the
ICL7652 reduces noise by using larger input FETs.
These larger FETs, however, increase the leakage at
the ICL7652’s external null pins. Therefore, the
ICL7650/ICL7653 can operate to a higher temperature
with 0.1µF capacitors before the clock ripple (due to
leakage at the null capacitor pins) becomes excessive
and 1µF external capacitors are required.
Output Stage/Load Driving
The ICL7650/ICL7653 somewhat resemble a transcon-
ductance amplifier whose open-loop gain is proportional
to load resistance. This behavior is apparent when loads
are less than the high-impedance stage (approximately
18k for one output circuit). The open-loop gain, for
example, will be 17dB lower with a 1k load than with a
10k load. This lower gain is of little consequence if the
amplifier is used strictly for DC since the DC gain is typi-
cally greater than 120dB, even with a 1k load. For
wideband applications, however, the best frequency
response will be achieved with a load resistor of 10k or
higher. The result will be a smooth 6dB per octave
response from 0.1Hz to 2MHz, with phase shifts of less
than 10° in the transition region where the main amplifier
takes over from the null amplifier.
Component Selection
C
EXTA
and C
EXTB
, the two required capacitors, have
optimum values depending on the clock or chopping
frequency. The correct value is 0.1µF for the preset
internal clock. When using an external clock, scale this
component value in proportion to the relationship
between the chopping frequency and the nulling time
constant. A low-leakage ceramic capacitor may prove
suitable for many applications; however, a high-quality
film-type capacitor (such as mylar) is preferred. For
lowest settling time at initial turn-on, use capacitors with
low dielectric absorption (such as polypropylene
types). With low-dielectric-absorption capacitors, the
ICL7650/ICL7653 will settle to 1µV offset in 100ms, but
several seconds may be required if ceramic capacitors
are used.
Thermoelectric Effects
Thermoelectric effects developed in thermocouple
junctions of dissimilar materials (metals, alloys, silicon,
etc.) ultimately limit precision DC measurements.
Unless all junctions are at the same temperature, ther-
moelectric voltages (typically around 10µV/°C, but up
to hundreds of µV/°C for some materials) will be gener-
ated. In order to realize the extremely low offset volt-
ages that the chopper amplifier can provide, take
special precautions to avoid temperature gradients. To
eliminate air movement, enclose all components (par-
ticularly those caused by power-dissipating elements in
the system). Minimize power-supply voltages and
power dissipation, and use low-thermoelectric-coeffi-
cient connections where possible. It is advisable to
separate the device surrounding heat-dissipating ele-
ments, and to use high-impedance loads.
ICL7650/ICL7650B/ICL7653/ICL7653B
Chopper-Stabilized Op Amps
8 _______________________________________________________________________________________
Input Guarding
Low-leakage, high-impedance CMOS inputs allow the
ICL7650/ICL7653 to measure high-impedance sources.
Stray leakage paths can decrease input resistance and
increase input currents unless inputs are guarded.
Boards must be thoroughly cleaned with TCE or alcohol
and blown dry with compressed air. The board should
be coated with epoxy or silicone after cleaning to pre-
vent contamination.
Leakage currents may cause trouble even with properly
cleaned and coated boards, particularly since the input
pins are adjacent to pins that are at supply potentials.
Leakage can be significantly reduced by using guard-
ing to decrease the voltage difference between inputs
and adjacent metal runs. Use a 10-lead pin circle, with
the leads of the device formed so that the holes adja-
cent to the inputs are empty when it is inserted in the
board to accomplish input guarding of the 8-pin TO-99
package. A conductive ring surrounding the inputs, the
“guard,” is connected to a low-impedance point that is
approximately the same voltage as the inputs. The
guard then absorbs the leakage current from the high-
voltage pins. Typical guard connections are shown in
Figure 3.
OUTPUT
INVERTING AMPLIFIER
FOLLOWER
INPUT
R2
R1
R3*
R3*
OUTPUT
INPUT
USE R3 TO COMPENSATE FOR LARGE
SOURCE RESISTANCES, OR FOR CLAMP
OPERATION (FIGURE 5).
*
NONINVERTING AMPLIFIER
R3*
OUTPUT
INPUT
R2
R1
NOTE:
SHOULD BE LOW IMPEDANCE FOR
OPTIMUM GUARDING.
R1 R2
R1 + R2
BOTTOM VIEW
BOARD LAYOUT FOR INPUT GUARDING
WITH TO-99 PACKAGE.
1
V+
V-
GUARD
INPUTS
OUTPUT
EXTERNAL
CAPACITORS
EXTERNAL
CAPACITORS
87
6
5
4
3
2
Figure 3. Input Guard Connection
The 14-pin DIP configuration has been specifically
designed to ease input guarding. The pins adjacent to
the inputs are not used.
Pin Compatibility
The ICL7653’s pinout generally corresponds to that of
industry-standard 8-pin devices such as the LM741 or
LM101. However, its external null storage capacitors
are connected to pins 1 and 8; whereas most op amps
leave these pins open or use them for offset null or
compensation capacitors.
The OP05 and OP07 op amps can be converted for
ICL7650/ICL7653 operation. This can be accomplished
by removing the offset null potentiometer, which is con-
nected from pins 1 and 8 to V+, and replacing it with
two capacitors connected from pins 1 and 8 to V-. For
LM108 devices, the compensation capacitor is
replaced by the external nulling capacitors. Pin 5 is the
output clamp connection on the ICL7650/ICL7653. By
removing any circuit connections from this pin, the
LM101/LM748/LM709 devices can undergo a similar
conversion.
Typical Applications
Figure 4 shows the ICL7650/ICL7653 automatically
nulling the offset voltage of a high-speed amplifier. The
ICL7650/ICL7653 continuously monitor the voltage at
the amplifier’s inverting input, integrate the error, and
drive the amplifier’s noninverting input to correct for the
offset voltage detected at the inverting input. The cir-
cuit’s DC offset characteristics are determined by the
ICL7650/ICL7653, and its AC performance is deter-
mined by the high-speed amplifier. While this circuit
continuously and automatically adjusts the amplifier’s
offset to less than 5µV, it does not correct for errors
caused by the input bias current, so the value of resis-
tor R
F
should be as low as is practical. This technique
can be used with any op amp that is configured as an
inverting amplifier.
Figures 5 and 6 illustrate basic inverting and noninvert-
ing amplifier circuits. Both figures show an output
clamping circuit being used to enhance overload
recovery performance. Supply voltage (±8V max) and
output drive capability (10k load for full swing) are the
only limitations to consider when replacing other op
amps with the ICL7650/ICL7653. Use a simple booster
circuit to overcome these limitations (Figure 7). This
enables the full output capabilities of the LM118 (or any
other standard device) to be combined with the input
capabilities of the ICL7650/ICL7653. Observe the loop
gain stability carefully when the feedback network is
added, particularly when a slower amplifier such as the
LM741 is used.
A lower voltage supply is required when mixing the
ICL7650/ICL7653 with circuits that operate at ±15V sup-
plies. One approach is to use a highly efficient voltage
divider. This is illustrated in Figure 8, where the ICL7660
voltage converter is used to convert +15V to +7.5V.
ICL7650/ICL7650B/ICL7653/ICL7653B
Chopper-Stabilized Op Amps
_______________________________________________________________________________________ 9
HIGH-
SPEED
AMP
0.1µF
47 10k
100k
R
F
ICL7650
ICL7653
V
OUT
R
IN
ICL7650
OUTPUT
(R1 || R2) 100k
FOR FULL CLAMP EFFECT
INPUT
C
R
C
CLAMP
0.1µF 0.1µF
R2
R1
1k
NOTE: R1 || R2
INDICATES THE
PARALLEL COMBINATION OF
R1 || R2.
Figure 4. Nulling a High-Speed Amplifier
Figure 5. Inverting Amplifier with Optional Clamp

ICL7650BCSD

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Maxim Integrated
Description:
IC OPAMP CHOPPER/STABLE 14-SOIC
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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