I have a respiration belt that is basically a piezo electric sensor embedded into an elasticated belt that you put around your chest. As you breath, the belt stretches and this produces a small voltage from the piezo electric (of the order of a few tens of millivolts). I've been trying to put together a circuit that will amplify the signal to somewhere in the region of 0 - 5V that can be connected to a USB powered board that will let me read the signal programatically.
I tried a circuit with a simple op-amp (MC3407) which worked, but was rather noisy and unstable. So I tried out a instrumental amplifier (INA126) in the hope that it would work better. My current circuit is attached. The 5K pot is used to adjust the gain, the 500K pot is used as a voltage divider to offset the signal. Ideally it would set the baseline to 2.5V. The 5V power comes from my USB board and the output goes back to the board. Some research on this suggested that I should pass the voltage divider through an op-amp setup as a buffer in order to have a high impedance reference for the instrument amp.
I think this circuit is a little more stable than the op-amp circuit, but it still is more noisy and less stable than I'd like. I'm also finding it very difficult to get a good magnitude of signal centered around 2.5V since adjust either pot seems to have an effect on the other. I also see drift in the baseline. For example, a particularly deep breath might spike the signal and then normal breathing after that takes several seconds to settle back to where it was.
Does anybody have any tips, comments or suggests on what I might do to make this work better?
For reference: INA126, MC34071
I tried a circuit with a simple op-amp (MC3407) which worked, but was rather noisy and unstable. So I tried out a instrumental amplifier (INA126) in the hope that it would work better. My current circuit is attached. The 5K pot is used to adjust the gain, the 500K pot is used as a voltage divider to offset the signal. Ideally it would set the baseline to 2.5V. The 5V power comes from my USB board and the output goes back to the board. Some research on this suggested that I should pass the voltage divider through an op-amp setup as a buffer in order to have a high impedance reference for the instrument amp.
I think this circuit is a little more stable than the op-amp circuit, but it still is more noisy and less stable than I'd like. I'm also finding it very difficult to get a good magnitude of signal centered around 2.5V since adjust either pot seems to have an effect on the other. I also see drift in the baseline. For example, a particularly deep breath might spike the signal and then normal breathing after that takes several seconds to settle back to where it was.
Does anybody have any tips, comments or suggests on what I might do to make this work better?
For reference: INA126, MC34071