Hey Everyone,
I've been asked to perform a shorted input noise measurement on a current transducer I designed. At home, I have a Rigol DS1054Z. It only have mV resolution. Suppose the noise I'd like to measure is in the order of uV, I'm thinking I need a preamplifier.
My thought process was the following:
1) I want to measure noise of this current transducer, it could be uV range.
2) My scope has mV resolution
3) What is the noise floor of my scope, if it's higher than the noise of the current transducer, then this won't work
4) Design a preamplifer such that the noise floor of the scope is below the current transducer, by amplifying the signal.
Is this the correct thinking? I'm thinking that I need a 1000X gain preamplifier, such that 1uV = 1mV. I should then be able to resolve any noise from the current transducer card. I shorted the input of my oscilloscope, and then performed an FFT to measure the noise floor, it's worse nearing DC:
At DC, it's ~-86dBV, so that's 0.05mV of noise? I'm assuming that means that, without a preamp, any signals below 0.05mV will be hidden in the noise? Plus, since the smallest volts per division I can go is 1mV/div, it's going to be hard to measure anything in the order of 0.1mV?
So, my preamp needs to have a noise floor less than -86dBV, AND amplify the input around 1000 times, so that it would be useful for the Rigol? Is that the right thinking? Unfortunatly, whilst writing this, it's been decided to use a eval board (specifically this one
https://www.mouser.co.uk/ProductDetail/Texas-Instruments/LMH6629SDEVAL-NOPB?qs=7lkVKPoqpbZbNcznfTrd9g== ) instead, but I still want to design my own, if you haven't guessed yet, I really don't know a lot about noise and measuring it.