ENTC 4350 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ENTC 4350

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This may be used as the transducer for an electronic thermometer. ... Electronic Thermometer ... In the figure, temperature, T, is applied to the thermometer. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ENTC 4350


1
ENTC 4350
  • MEDICAL INSTRUMENTATION TRANSDUCERS
  • AND AMPLIFIERS

2
  • Although the measurement of physical parameters
    like force and pressure are rarely of medical
    interest in themselves, the determination of
    these parameters underlay a vast variety of
    medical techniques.
  • Cardiac
  • pulmonary function

3
  • To make a measurement, we must have something to
    measure.
  • Force and pressure are often difficult to measure
    directly and accurately.
  • We therefore measure these data indirectly by
    converting them into an electrical signal, which
    can be filtered, amplified, recorded, etc.

4
SIGNAL
TRANSDUCER
DETECTOR
AMPLIFIER
RECORDER
The figure shows the fundamental principles of
the process of measuring physical data by means
of electrical signals.
5
SIGNAL
TRANSDUCER
DETECTOR
AMPLIFIER
RECORDER
The transducer may be any device that converts
physical energy into an electrical signal.
6
SIGNAL
TRANSDUCER
DETECTOR
AMPLIFIER
RECORDER
The interface is simply whatever connects or lies
between the transducer and the patient.
7
SIGNAL
TRANSDUCER
DETECTOR
AMPLIFIER
RECORDER
The detector is any device used to pick out the
electrical signal we want to measure. Not all
transducers require a detector.
8
SIGNAL
TRANSDUCER
DETECTOR
AMPLIFIER
RECORDER
The amplifier amplifies the signal for the
recorder, and the recorder records or stores the
data.
9
  • In most cases, the function of the transducer is
    to convert a physiological parameter into a
    voltage that is large enough to be processed
    accurately by the electronic equipment.

10
  • Physiological parameters include
  • An extremely weak voltage,
  • A pressure,
  • A fluid flow rate,
  • A temperature,
  • A chemical concentration, or
  • An electrolyte level.

11
  • To perform this task, the transducer must be
    properly placed on the patient, as well as
    strategically placed into an electronic circuit,
    such as a Wheatstone bridge.
  • Trans

12
  • CONVERSION OF PHYSIOLOGICAL PARAMETERS
  • INTO VOLTAGES

13
  • Three of the most commonly measured physiological
    parameters in health care are
  • temperature,
  • blood pressure, and
  • weight.
  • All of these may be measured by means of a
    balanced structure, such as a scale.

14
Consider how a scale works.
  • Before the patient steps on it, the scale is in
    balance, and it reads zero.
  • Another way of saying this is that the scale
    pointer is on a null.
  • The patient on the scale throws it out of
    balance, causing a displacement of the pointer,
    which is calibrated in pounds.

15
  • In this case, the physiological parameter of
    weight is transformed to a displacement of a
    pointer.
  • Here, the transducer is the platform the patient
    stands on, and the structure of the balance is
    the arrangement of levers and springs in the
    scale.

16
  • Likewise, the physiological parameters of
    temperature and pressure are converted to a
    machine-measurable parametervoltageby a
    balanced structure.
  • In this case, it is a balanced circuit called a
    Wheatstone bridge.

17
  • Wheatstone Bridge

18
  • The Wheatstone bridge, which consists of four
    resistors arranged in a diamond shape and labeled
    R1, R1, R3, and Rx.
  • An excitation voltage, VE , is applied to two
    points of the diamond, and an output voltage,
    VOUT, is measured plus to minus from left to
    right across the other two points of the diamond.

19
  • The two resistors on the left, Rx and R1, form a
    voltage divider of the VE excitation.
  • This produces the plus-to-minus voltage drop from
    node A to ground, VA.

20
  • Likewise, the two resistors on the right, R2 and
    R3, form a voltage divider that creates the
    voltage drop from node B to ground, VB.

21
  • This circuit can be made balanced, in the
    simplest case, by making all four resistors the
    same value.
  • In this case, the voltage divider on the left
    creates the same voltage as that on the right,
    because they both have the same excitation
    voltage and the same resistor values.
  • Thus, VA equals VB .

22
  • The voltage difference between the two nodes is
    defined as the output voltage, VOUT, so
  • In this case, VOUT is zero, and the bridge is
    said to be at a null point in terms of its
    resistance values.
  • That is, the bridge is balanced.

23
  • This bridge can be made unbalanced by changing
    the value of Rx .
  • If Rx is caused to increase, the voltage divider
    on the left will cause VA to decrease in value.
  • Because the divider on the right is undisturbed,
    VB will remain the same.

24
  • Thus, VA becomes less than VB and VOUT becomes a
    negative voltage.

25
  • On the other hand, if Rx is caused to decrease
    from its null value, VOUT will become a positive
    voltage drop from node A to node B.
  • As an exercise, prove that to yourself by
    studying the figure.

26
  • You have learned the case where the bridge is
    balanced because all resistors have the same
    value.
  • In fact, the bridge can be balanced for any
    number of resistor value combinations given by
    the formula

27
  • This equation is called the null condition for
    the bridge.
  • If Rx is increased above the value given by this
    equation, VOUT will leave zero and be a negative
    voltage.
  • And if Rx is decreased from its null value, VOUT
    will become positive.

28
Thermistor
  • A thermistor is a transducer that makes it
    possible to convert the physiological parameter
    of temperature into a voltage.
  • A thermistor may be constructed of a cube of
    material, about 0.1 inch on a side, embedded in
    glass whose electrical resistance varies with its
    temperature.
  • Almost all electrical conductors exhibit this
    property to some degree.

29
  • For example, if copper is heated, the atoms will
    vibrate harder, making it more difficult for free
    electrons to get past without a collision.
  • This increases its resistance.
  • Thus, copper has a positive temperature
    coefficient, because an increase in temperature
    causes an increase in resistance.

30
  • Some metals act similarly, but in the opposite
    direction.
  • For example, an increase in temperature in a
    semiconducting metal like silicon will break more
    electrons free from their crystal bonds and
    increase the number of free electrons, so that an
    increase in temperature will decrease the
    resistance.
  • Because of this, silicon is said to have a
    negative temperature coefficient.

31
  • Commonly used thermistor elements are made from
    oxides of nickel, copper, or aluminum.
  • This gives the thermistor elements a relatively
    high temperature coefficient.

32
Temperature Transducer
  • A thermistor mounted in a Wheatstone bridge can
    function as the transducer that converts body
    temperature to a voltage.
  • This may be used as the transducer for an
    electronic thermometer.
  • Its advantage over the traditional mercury
    thermometer is its fast response time and ease of
    reading, not to mention the fact that mercury
    from a broken thermometer is a hazardous
    material.

33
  • In a blood donor screening, for example, reducing
    the three minutes it takes to do a temperature
    with a mercury thermometer becomes important.
  • On the other hand, the electronic thermometer is
    more complicated, bulkier, and may not last as
    long as the mercury thermometer.

34
Pressure Transducer
  • Blood pressure is most commonly measured with an
    air cuff and stethoscope using a device called a
    sphygmomanometer.
  • This is the noninvasive test given in a blood
    donor screening.

35
  • For intensive care situations, however, it may be
    necessary to use an invasive procedure.
  • Here, the focus is on how the physiological
    parameter of pressure is transformed into a
    voltage.

36
  • A commonly used pressure transducer is shown.
  • The dome on the top may be filled with a saline
    solution that articulates to a catheter, as in
    the heart to measure the blood pressure in a
    ventricle.
  • The other fluid coupling connection is blocked
    off.

37
  • Changes in blood pressure propagate through the
    catheter and cause small displacements in the
    diaphragm.
  • These displacements move a plunger to which are
    connected four wires, called strain gauges.

38
  • With each displacement, two of these wires
    lengthen and the other two get shorter.
  • Lengthening the wire increases its resistance,
    while shortening the wire decreases its
    resistance by the same amount.

39
  • Lengthening a wire causes it to increase in
    resistance both because it gets longer and
    because its cross-sectional area reduces.
  • These high resistance wires are arranged in the
    form of a Wheatstone bridge.

40
  • In the figure, each of the strain gauge wires is
    represented by a resistor, R, plus a change in
    resistance, DR, imposed by changes in pressure on
    the diaphragm.
  • Notice on the left branch of the bridge that a
    positive DR increases the upper resistance and
    decreases the lower resistance.

41
  • Thus, VA would decrease.
  • Because of the change in sign of the DRs on the
    right branch, VB would go in the opposite
    direction and increase.
  • The net result is that VOUT, defined as plus to
    minus from node A to node B, would be a negative
    voltage.

42
  • If the pressure on the diaphragm changes to the
    opposite direction, VOUT would become a positive
    voltage.
  • Thus, you have a mechanism that converts the
    pressure changes into voltage changes.
  • This voltage could be used to drive electrical
    meters and monitoring equipment.

43
Pressure Transducer Sensitivity
  • In general, the sensitivity of a pressure
    transducer, SV, is defined as the change in
    output voltage per volt of excitation per
    millimeter of mercury of applied pressure
    (V/V/mmHg).
  • A typical commercially available pressure
    transducer has a sensitivity ranging from 5
    mV/V/mmHg to 40 mV/V/mmHg, depending upon the
    manufacturer and model.

44
  • Some disposable pressure transducers work on the
    same electrical principle just described.
  • The manufacturing process for these transducers
    is inexpensive enough that the unit can be
    disposed of rather than put through an expensive
    sterilization process.
  • In fact, in some cases, trying to sterilize a
    disposable unit can damage it and make it
    inaccurate.

45
VOLTAGE AMPLIFIERS
  • Amplifiers are as old as history.
  • A lever with a fulcrum for prying up stone is a
    force amplifier.

46
  • A force down on one side of the lever will cause
    a larger force going in the opposite direction to
    be exerted on the other side of the lever.
  • The closer the fulcrum is to what is being pried
    up, the larger that force will be.

47
  • Notice that the output force is in the opposite
    direction from the input force.
  • This is an example of an inverting amplifier.

48
  • A pressure amplifier is illustrated.
  • It consists of two disks attached to either end
    of a rod.

49
  • If a pressure is exerted on the larger disk in
    the direction shown in the figure, the smaller
    disk will exert a larger pressure in the same
    direction.
  • For example, if PIN on the disk on the left is 1
    pound per square foot on a 1-square-foot area,
    the rod will transmit that 1 pound to the smaller
    disk at a pressure of 1 pound per square inch.
  • This converts to a pressure of 144 pounds per
    square foot.

50
  • This, therefore, is an example of a pressure
    amplifier with a gain of 144.
  • In this case, the output pressure, POUT is in the
    same direction as PIN.
  • This is an example of a noninverting amplifier.

51
  • The tympanic membrane and the oval window of the
    inner ear form a pressure amplifier of this type.

52
Differential Amplifier
  • The surface potentials that are measured on the
    body for medical diagnosis, such as
  • The electrocardiogram (ECG),
  • The electroencephalogram (EEG), and
  • The electromyogram (EMG),
  • are all difference potentials.

53
  • A difference potential is that voltage measured
    between two sites on the body.
  • For example, the EGG measured between two wrists
    is a difference potential.

54
  • The amplifier for measuring difference potentials
    is called a differential amplifier.
  • To make a differential amplifier, electronic
    transistors are arranged in the form of a
    Wheatstone bridge.

55
  • A differential amplifier, often abbreviated as
    diff amp, is an electronic amplifier in which the
    output voltage is proportional to the difference
    between two input voltages.
  • Diff amps are particularly useful for measuring
    biopotentials, because many biopotentials of
    clinical and medical diagnostic significance
    consist of the difference in voltage on two body
    sites.

56
  • The EEG is the difference in surface potential
    between two skull sites.
  • Likewise, the EMG records the difference between
    two potentials measured on a muscle.
  • The diff amp is ideal for measuring these
    difference potentials and is often used in
    medical instrumentation.

57
  • The ideal diff amp is an elegant and powerful
    concept.
  • It helps explain a large number of medical
    instrumentation principles.

58
  • A diff amp is defined as an electronic amplifier
    in which the output voltage, VOUT, is
    proportional to the difference between the two
    input voltages, V1 and V2.
  • This definition can be written mathematically as
  • where AD is the gain of the amplifier.

59
  • The diff amp is illustrated.
  • V1 measured from minus to ground from the upper
    input node, is the inverting input voltage.
  • V2 measured to ground from the lower input node,
    is the noninverting input voltage.

60
  • The gain, AD, is the ratio of the output voltage
    to the difference between the two input voltages.
  • It is a dimensionless number.

61
  • This will be considered an ideal diff amp when
    the resistance at each input node is very large
    (more than 40 megohms).
  • This means that essentially zero current will
    flow into either of the input nodes.

62
  • Another implication is that attaching the input
    leads of the diff amp to another circuit will not
    disturb that circuit in any way.
  • In measuring body surface potentials, for
    example, this would imply that attaching the
    amplifier to the sites measured would not
  • Distort those voltages,
  • Introduce artifacts, or
  • Attenuate them.

63
  • In other words, the ideal diff amp is invisible
    to the parameter it measures.
  • In the ideal diff amp, the VOUT measured to
    ground is given by
  • and the output resistance approaches zero.

64
  • This means that the load placed on the output of
    the amplifier will not change the value of the
    output, VOUT.

65
  • In the previous equation, notice that when the
    input voltages, V1 and V2, are the same (or
    common-mode), the output voltage is zero.
  • This is what is meant when a diff amp is said to
    reject common-mode voltage.
  • In other words, the output due to a common-mode
    voltage at the inputs is zero in an ideal diff
    amp.

66
Common-Mode Voltage Interference
  • The importance of diff amps is heightened by the
    fact that one of the major tasks in monitoring,
    diagnosing, and making measurements on medical
    patients is the measurement of difference
    potentials that occur in the body
  • That is, the EGG, EEG, or EMG.

67
  • They are all measured as differences between
    sites on the surface of the body.
  • In each case, the instrument for doing this is
    the diff amp.

68
  • The situation in making a difference measure-ment
    on the body is shown.
  • This illustrates the basic problem of such a
    measurement in the hospital environmentpower
    line, 60-cycle interference.

69
  • In such an environment, where thousands of pieces
    of electrical equipment are in use, the power
    requirements are high.
  • Inevitably, patients are in close proximity to
    power buses through stray capacity between them
    and their bodies, which are essentially
    conductors.

70
  • The amount of capacity is in the order of 10 pF
    (10 x 1012 farad).
  • This value varies widely with the situation, but
    it should give you a feeling for how much
    capacity is involved.
  • This capacity couples a current into the patient
    and generates a voltage on the input terminals V1
    and V2 in the previous figure.

71
  • The value of the voltages is the same on both
    terminals because the body is all one conductor.
  • Therefore, the voltages are common-mode voltages.

72
  • A common-mode voltage is one that has the same
    value over the entire surface of the body.
  • The value of the voltages is about 2 volts at 60
    cycles.

73
  • You can measure these voltages on an oscilloscope
    by simply holding onto the conducting end of the
    input lead.
  • They are much larger in size than the body
    potential voltages of an EGG, which is about 1
    mV.

74
  • Because they are common-mode voltages fed to a
    diff amp, the diff amp output due to them is
    ideally zero.
  • However, the output due to the EGG will be
    whatever its difference value is at the input
    multiplied by the gain, AD.
  • That is, the diff amp rejects the common-mode
    60-cycle voltage, but it passes the difference
    potentials under test.

75
  • Real world diff amps are not ideal, so they do
    not perfectly reject common-mode voltage
    interference.
  • For them, the common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR)
    is defined as the ratio of the VOUT due to a
    voltage when presented to the amplifier as a
    common-mode signal to the VOUT due to the same
    signal presented as a difference voltage.

76
  • This CMRR is often given in decibels (dB) and
    would have a value in excess of 100 dB in a
    useful diff amp.

77
Electronic Thermometer
  • A simple example of how the diff amp is used in a
    medical instrument is as a component of an
    electronic thermometer.
  • The temperature transducer defined previously can
    be used along with a diff amp to make such a
    thermometer.

78
  • A block diagram of the thermometer is shown.

79
  • In order to have an understanding ot this device,
    or any medical instrument for that matter, it is
    important to be able to follow the information
    variables through the device, beginning with the
    physiological parameter under test and ending
    with the output display data.
  • In the figure, temperature, T, is applied to the
    thermometer.

80
  • The temperature changes the resistance in the
    thermistors in the bridge.
  • This determines the value of the voltage
    difference between nodes (connections) A and B.
  • These nodes are wired to the diff amp, the output
    of which is proportional to the difference
    voltage.
  • That voltage then drives the display on the scale
    where a number corresponding to the temperature
    appears.

81
Pressure Monitor
  • A pressure monitor uses a diff amp in a similar
    fashion.
  • In both cases, it responds to the voltage
    developed across the output of a Wheatstone
    bridge and drives a display.

82
  • The elements of a pressure monitor are shown.

83
  • The path of the information variables of
    pressure, P, and voltage through the instrument
    is as follows
  • The pressure from the fluid catheter in the blood
    vessel is exerted on the pressure-sensitive
    resistors in the Wheatstone bridge.
  • The difference voltage from nodes A to B that
    results is wired to the diff amp, which produces
    a voltage output proportional to it.
  • The output from the diff amp drives the display
    unit, which gives a reading of the pressure.

84
  • An actual monitor in use in the hospital would
    have many other features to ensure reliability,
    ease of use, accuracy, safety, and convenience.
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