I am doing research on characterising damage in composites by looking at non-linearity of acoustic waves. Basically I pass two frequencies, a high and low frequency through a composite sample and based on the amount of non-linear wave interactions observed determine the severity of damage in the sample. Specifically, I am interested in the detection of side bands around the high frequency carrier caused by MECHANICAL wave mixing and intermodulation with the low frequency wave. The goal is to then relate this to the amount of damage present in the specimen.
This makes sense to me.
Since I an interested in detecting mechanical non-linearity the front end to my piezo transducers must be of high fidelity so that I can be sure any non-linearity is a result of mechanical rather than electrical interactions. Since the piezo's are mounted to conductive substrate (one terminal of the piezo electrically connected) quite alot of common mode noise is picked up hence the need for differential measurement.
I do not know how much non-linearity to expect from mechanical deformation but I would expect it to be higher than non-linearity from the electronics.
In some testing configurations a gain of up 500x is required to measure very small excitations. I would be very happy with 100x however.
I am partial to using the AD825x series because I am using labview and a micro to remotely set gain levels. At the time I did not realise that these were unsuitable for use with a high impedance source.
500 kHz is not all that fast but imbalance in instrumentation amplifiers can limit common mode rejection at high frequencies.
I would look at buffering the low impedance instrumentation amplifier inputs which will be required for good AC performance with a high input impedance low gain differential preamplifier. Higher performance could be achieved with discrete JFET inputs but I doubt that will be necessary.
Low noise is going to be important so look for fast JFET or MOSFET input amplifiers with a low voltage noise specification. These will also be the ones with high bandwidth and low distortion.
Distortion to support 16 bits at 500 kHz requires cutting edge circuit design. 12 bits is more realistic if you want to keep things simple.