An instrumentation amplifier is a high-gain, DC-coupled amplifier with differential input, single-ended output, high input impedance and high common-mode rejection ratio, as well as low drift and low noise. Instrumentation amplifiers are compact devices commonly used to amplify weak signals that are submerged in strong interference and noise environments. Instrumentation amplifiers are not only common in instrumentation applications, but are also used in a wide variety of other systems from computers to automobiles. This seminar will focus on the basic principles, circuit structure and key technical specifications of instrumentation amplifiers, and focus on typical applications and solutions to common problems engineers apply when applying instrumentation amplifiers (including single-supply applications). In addition, ADI's representative instrumentation amplifiers will be briefly introduced.
I use Samsung K9F1G08, 128M, and now it is divided into 2 blocks. The front block is used to store EBoot, NK and other things, and the back block can be seen after the system starts up, and can also b
It is rare to see such a realistic article about Samsung from the perspective of a Chinese engineer! It is rare to see such a realistic article about Samsung from the perspective of a Chinese engineer
I received the board today. Some forum friends called it "big python". It was delivered by YTO Express. It is very thin and I thought it was big, but it is so mini. It is packed in anti-static bag and