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RST Engineering wrote:
Roy ... I've been playing around (ahem, excuse me, heuristically engineering) with zener noise sources for a while using the same spectrum analyzer trick and as yet I haven't been able to make the noise as "flat" across the passband as I'd like. I've tried varying the bias, the voltage, and a few other tricks, but as yet, no joy. Can you shed some light on what you've found to make the noise power/voltage fairly level across the band? Jim Some are very noisy. The noisiest I've seen have been ones in the 12 - 15 volt range when biased at considerably less than a mA. I've used one, followed by a 50 ohm amplifier "pill" IC, as a broadband noise source to see filter responses with a spectrum analyzer. The noise is easily visible well up into the UHF region. But all zeners generate some noise, so you have to use appropriate filtering in sensitive applications. In my experience, though, band gap references can be even noisier than a typical zener. Roy Lewallen, W7EL What I did for some project which needed equal amplitude uncorrelated noise,is amplify the zener noise with a wide band video opamp,with high pass and lowpass filtering. Used the low pass as input for a zero cross detector, delayed the zerocrossing 10 microseconds,and used that for clock to a circulating bit in a shift register. each parallel output of that register controlled a sample/hold opamp,sampling the highpass signal. Voila!! 8 audio frequency, non-correlated noise sources. The zerocrossing clock was made this way,to avoid detectable clock tones int the output.(2 to 20 microsec between crossings) the 10 microsecond delay was used to get a voltage at the sample and hold opamp which was not correlated to the zerocrossing. If you need only one signal ,leave out the shift register, and just use a 10 and a 1 microsec. oneshot for the s/h opamp clock. The application? A wind and engine noise generator for a car simulator. |
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