Hearing your muscles- ELEC 240 final lab

The final project in our sophomore electrical engineering lab ELEC 240 had to do with building an electrocardiogram, and connecting the circuit to a speaker to “hear your muscles”.

It was a pretty cool and involved project, putting together everything we had learned throughout the semester.

Naturally, I had to build a PCB for this with Surface mount parts and see how small I could make it.

Below is the circuit which we were given. I adapted the parts on Eagle and made the circuit drawings.

The circuit works by taking a differential signal of your muscles into an instrumental amplifier, and amplifying it through 3 stages, with reference to Vdd/2. The signal is finally outputted through a audio amplifier to a speaker. You attach leads to your arm, and when you flex, you are able to hear the circuit.

 

Breadboarded circuit

below is the first revision of the board:

 

Bioelectrical Signals rev 1.0

I had the board produced by seeed studios, and I soldered it together and showed it off for our final lab.

 

A couple weeks after the lab was done with, I had the itch that I could have made the board smaller. I had found out about a new PCB manufacturer, JLCPCB, which produced PCB boards for $2 (with shipping included, no joke). So I made this board as small as I could and spun it once again.

In total, this has been the smallest board I have ever made, even going for thinner thickness than normal.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the end, all the revisions worked! The biggest challenge was finding a 200 uF 0805 capacitor. They dont exist, so I just used a couple of 10 uF in parallel to acheive this.

Published by: Manuel

Hi, I'm Manuel Pacheco. I'm studying Electrical Engineering at Rice University, class of 2020. I'm interested in renewable energy technology and sustainability, as well as electric vehicle mobility and transportation.

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