National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Autonomous Impedance Meter
Voda, Zbyšek ; Mrázek, Vojtěch (referee) ; Vašíček, Zdeněk (advisor)
This thesis deals with design of a smart embedded device for autonomous measurement of impedance optimized for measurement of biological materials. The goal is to create a device which provides a simple web interface which allows users to capture and further analyze measured data. The digital part is based on MT7688 SoC with WiFi capabilities. The analogue part utilizes a single-chip integrated solution AD5933 that is tightly coupled with a custom analogue frontend whose function is to modify the signal to avoid a potential damage of biological samples. The proposed device is able to either measure impedance for a single frequency or perform a frequency sweep across the whole range beginning at 50Hz and ending at 100 kHz. It supports common two-electrode probes as well as more precise four-electrode probes. The analogue frontend has been simulated using the SPICE simulator to avoid a potential design bug. The experimental evaluation shows that the achieved precision for the typical impedance of biological samples is better than 0.5%.
Autonomous Impedance Meter
Voda, Zbyšek ; Mrázek, Vojtěch (referee) ; Vašíček, Zdeněk (advisor)
This thesis deals with design of a smart embedded device for autonomous measurement of impedance optimized for measurement of biological materials. The goal is to create a device which provides a simple web interface which allows users to capture and further analyze measured data. The digital part is based on MT7688 SoC with WiFi capabilities. The analogue part utilizes a single-chip integrated solution AD5933 that is tightly coupled with a custom analogue frontend whose function is to modify the signal to avoid a potential damage of biological samples. The proposed device is able to either measure impedance for a single frequency or perform a frequency sweep across the whole range beginning at 50Hz and ending at 100 kHz. It supports common two-electrode probes as well as more precise four-electrode probes. The analogue frontend has been simulated using the SPICE simulator to avoid a potential design bug. The experimental evaluation shows that the achieved precision for the typical impedance of biological samples is better than 0.5%.

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