Electronic – Op amp to supply current to 3 thermistors and an ADC voltage reference input

bufferthermistorvoltage-reference

I have 3 thermistors in parallel that I need to measure.
These thermistors will be fast changing – think up to 100C in under 1 second.

I want to do this ratiometric measurement, so I want to supply the ADC reference from the same voltage which the thermistors are excited by.

Is it OK to do this using 1 opamp follower from the voltage reference? The LT1499 says it can supply up to 30mA, and there will be lets say max 2.5mA for each thermistor when it heats up (total 7.5mA), and a few 100um for the ADC reference pin.

Is this a normal technique? It would mean I can use just a quad package of opamps (+3 for buffering the thermistor output to the ADC input channels)

These thermistors are fast moving temperature, so will go from 10k to 500 Ohm in under 1 second, and with the current needed to maintain the 2.5V going up 20x accordingly. So this is effectively a variable load for the op amp? and I may have to put some 10n or 100n caps in parallel with the thermistors

Schematic

Best Answer

Well, you have 800 ohm in series with each thermistor so, at the minimum thermistor resistance, the op-amp output sees 3 parallel resistors of 1300 ohms = 433.33 ohms and, if as you imply, the reference voltage is 2.5 volts then, the total current to be supplied by the op-amp output is 5.8 mA. I don't think this will be a problem to most op-amps providing that the 2.5 volts isn't close to their lowest output voltage when the negative supply is at GND.

The LT1499 can supply that.