Pink (Flicker) Noise Generator Circuit
Pink (Flicker) Noise Generator Circuit
  
Here’s a design circuit for a
 flicker noise generator, an implementation of flicker noise analog 
modeling presented in NBS technical note #604, “Efficient Numerical and 
Analog Modeling of Flicker Noise Processes” by J.A. Barnes and Stephen 
Jarvis, Jr. With the component values shown the schematic diagram, the
 circuit will give a 1/f noise slope from below 1Hz to over 4KHz. A 
TLC2272 op-amp is used for this circuit, but any low noise op-amps will 
work. This is the figure of the circuit; 

 
  
The op-amp must be a low noise type because the noise generation come from a high value resistor
 generating about 50nV noise. Use an op-amp with noise voltage less than
 15 nV/root-Hz and noise current less than 0.1 pA/root-Hz, an 
easy-to-find feature in many low-noise modern op-amp devices. To 
simplify the construction, the capacitor
 values is slightly different from the calculated values described in 
the paper, and a bias circuit is provided to allow the use of polarized 
electrolytic capacitor.
 Because the electrolytic capacitor has poor tolerance, it should be 
chosen carefully for best performance. Compared to circuit utilizing 
deode zener, reverse-biased transistor,
 or other noisy devices, this circuit give more predictable and 
repeatable output level.  If we tap the output of the first op-amp 
through a 100uF capacitor (like as seen in the second op-amp), a precise
 5uV/root-Hz white noise will be there as an excellent signal source
 for audio noise measurement calibration. At the second op-amp, this 
white noise is filtered to give a flicker noise (pink noise) frequency 
spectrum, since the pink noise is a subset of white noise in the 
frequency domain. [Circuit diagram source: techlib.com] 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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ReplyDeleteThis is the work of Charles Wenzel. Lifted right from techlib.com
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