Electronic – Obtaining noise spectral density of OP-AMP from Peak to Peak voltage

driftintegratoroperational-amplifier

I'm in need of a low offset opamp for integrating purposes, I also need it to be very low noise since the output of the opamp will go into a 3000 V/V gain stage.

The opamp that seems to satisfy my needs for low noise for the 3000V/V dual stage is: AD797 while the one that satisfies my low drift requirement is this: LTC1151

However when looking the datasheet of the LTC1151, I could'nt find the noise voltage spectral density, instead theres a volts peak to peak figure of \$ 1.5 \mu V_{p-p} \$ from 0.1 to 10Hz.

So my logic is that to get the noise voltage density I just need to divide by two (to get the peak voltage) and then divide by \$ \sqrt{10 Hz} \$, but im getting \$ 237.2 nV/\sqrt{Hz}\$ that seems too high. Is there something wrong with my calculations? Or is the voltage so high because its a zero drift op-amp? Im also aware that the 0.1 to 10 Hz voltage spec is mostly due to 1/f noise and not white noise of the opamp.

Best Answer

Usually it's in a graph, for 0 to 10Hz i'd go with rougly \$\frac{50nV}{\sqrt{Hz}}\$

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