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Signal vs. Noise 
Every measurement is affected by processes not related 
to the measurement of interest. The magnitude of this 
noise, compared to the magnitude of the signal, directly 
determines one’s ability to make an accurate 
measurement.
Signal 
In all experiments, there is: 
Sample Response: the instrument’s response when the analyte is 
present. 
Blank Response: the instrument’s response when the analyte is 
absent. 
The Signal : the difference between the sample and the blank 
response. 
voltage 
output blank 
time sample sample 
blank 
signal
Background or Baseline 
Ideally, the blank response of an instrument would be exactly 0. 
Then the sample response would be equal to the signal. This is 
never the case, though it can often be adjusted to be close to 0. 
There is always a residual signal associated with an instrument’s 
blank response. This is called the background or the baseline. 
time 
output voltage 
blank 
sample sample 
blank 
signal 
baseline 
The baseline is subtracted from both the blank and the sample 
response.
Drift 
Ideally, the baseline response is constant in time. In such a case, 
a constant correction factor is easily subtracted from the blank 
and sample to correct the signal. Invariably, however, the 
baseline changes slowly with time. This is called drift. 
Sometimes the drift is linear in time, but often it is more complex 
and difficult to predict. 
time 
output voltage 
blank 
sample 
sample 
blank 
signal 
baseline 
We need to know the value of the baseline at the time we make a 
measurement.
Noise 
Noise is a random (or almost random) time-dependent change in 
the instrument’s output signal that is unrelated to the analyte 
response. These variations will tend to make the accurate 
measurement of sample, blank, and baseline response less 
certain. 
Noise arises from many sources (to be discussed soon). The 
frequency response can span the entire spectrum. We can treat 
noise as if it were a sine wave, or at least the sum of many 
(infinite?) sine waves. 
Measuring the intensity of the noise and comparing it to the signal 
is the key to determining the accuracy of a measurement and in 
specifying the smallest signal level one is able to measure 
(detection limit).
Peak-to-peak Noise 
One measure of the amplitude of a sine wave is the peak-to-peak 
amplitude (this is twice the amplitude which appears in the 
defining equation for a sine wave). 
4 
3 
2 
1 
0 
-1 
-2 
-3 
-4 
0 5 10 15 20 
V(peak-to-peak) 
or 
Vp-p 
Noise is usually specified by measuring the peak-to-peak maximum 
over a reasonable length of time (“reasonable” depends upon 
length of time needed to make a measurement).
Even though the noise is clearly not a perfect sine wave, we know 
it can be decomposed into a collection of sine waves and we can 
treat it mathematically as a sine wave. 
5 
4 
3 
2 
1 
0 
-1 
-2 
-3 
-4 
-5 
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 
Vp-p 
Peak-to-peak Noise
Average Noise 
Another way of measuring the intensity of noise might be the 
average noise. 
Naverage = 0 if noise is truly random. (Excursions above zero should 
balance excursions below zero over time). 
If not 0, then another signal must be present and we need to 
account for it. 
Naverage is not a useful measure of noise.
Root-Mean-Square Noise 
It was the plus and minus excursions averaging out that made 
Naverage not useful. 
Squaring the signal, makes everything positive. This can then be 
averaged meaningfully. Take the square root of that result to get 
back a value that can be related to the original signal. 
For a perfect sine wave, we can calculate its rms value. A 
theoretical analysis gives us that 
NRMS = 1 
2 2 
Np- p 
A quick estimate of the RMS noise is NRMS = 0.35 Np-p.
Signal-to-Noise Ratio 
Total signal level nor noise level determine an experiment’s ability 
to accurately detect an analyte. Rather it is the ratio of the two that 
is critical. The S/N Ratio. 
1.2 
1 
0.8 
0.6 
0.4 
0.2 
0 
0 2 4 6 8 
Np-p = 0.10 
S = 0.75 
Baseline = 0.25 
NRMS = 0.354 Np-p = 0.354 x 0.10 = 0.035 
S/N = 0.75/0.035 = 
21.4
Signal-to-Noise Ratio 
1.8 
1.6 
1.4 
1.2 
1 
0.8 
0.6 
0.4 
0.2 
0 
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 
Same signal level. Same baseline. S/N = 3.
Signal-to-Noise Ratio 
3.5 
3 
2.5 
2 
1.5 
1 
0.5 
0 
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 
In this experiment, the signal-to-noise is 1. Note how you could 
not make a reasonable measurement of the signal under these 
conditions.
Sources of Electrical 
Noise 
When sample is abundant, signal is high, background (baseline) is 
low, we hardly worry about noise. But at some point, every 
experiment needs to account for noise. Electrical noise can be 
divided into four principal sources: 
• Thermal Noise 
• Shot Noise 
• Flicker Noise 
• Interference
Thermal Noise 
Also known as white noise, Johnson noise, or Nyquist 
noise. 
Arises because the atoms of a solid state conductor are vibrating 
at all temperatures and they bump into conductors (electrons). 
This imposes a new, random motion on those conductors which 
generates noise. 
Vnoise,rms = 4 kB T RB 
Vnoise, rms is the RMS voltage of the noise 
kB is Boltzmann’s constant = 1.38 x 10-23 J K-1 (V2 s W-1 K-1) 
T is the temperature in kelvin 
R is the resistance in ohms 
B is the bandwidth response of the instrument in Hz (s-1)
Bandwidth 
Every instrument responds to rapid or slow signal changes 
differently. We specify the bandwidth or bandpass by referring to 
the range of frequencies over which it can effectively measure 
signals. Usually the bandwidth of an instrument can be adjusted 
by changing electronic filters. 
Center Frequency 
Bandwidth 
Frequency 
Power measured 
A simple, RC circuit acts like a low 
pass filter; it smooths (integrates) 
rapid changes. It allows slowly 
varying signals to pass unimpeded. 
The relationship between its time 
constant t = RC and its bandwidth 
B is just 
B ≈ 1/4t 
Other filters have other 
relationships.
Low Pass Filter 
A series RC circuit functions as a low pass filter, when taking the 
output voltage across the capacitor. Then ac signals at low 
frequency pass unattenuated. 
Low Pass Filter 
1 
0.9 
0.8 
0.7 
0.6 
0.5 
0.4 
0.3 
0.2 
0.1 
0 
1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000 
Frequency (Hz) 
Filter Attentuation Factor 
R 
C 
Vin 
Vout 
Vout 
Vin 
= XC 
R2 + X2 
C
High Pass Filter 
A series RC circuit functions as a high pass filter, when taking the 
output voltage across the resistor. Then ac signals at high 
frequency pass unattenuated. 
High Pass Filter 
1 
0.9 
0.8 
0.7 
0.6 
0.5 
0.4 
0.3 
0.2 
0.1 
0 
1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000 
Frequency (Hz) 
Filter Attenuation Factor 
R 
C 
Vin 
Vout 
Vout 
Vin 
= R 
R2 + X2 
C
Band Pass Filter 
Many more complex filters can be designed. The frequency 
response an be very complex. Here is a simple combination of a 
high pass and low pass filter, to produce a band pass filter. 
Band Pass Filter 
1 
0.9 
0.8 
0.7 
0.6 
0.5 
0.4 
0.3 
0.2 
0.1 
0 
1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000 
Frequency (Hz) 
Filter Attentuation Factor 
R1 = 70 kW 
C1 = 100 nF 
F1 = 23 Hz 
R2 = 5 kW 
C2 = 100 nF 
F2 = 318 Hz
Thermal Noise Reduction by Cooling 
A 10 kW resistor is used as a current-to-voltage converter. The 
voltage across it is amplified by an amplifier with a bandwidth of 15 
kHz. What is the rms noise voltage at 20 ˚C? at liquid nitrogen 
temperature (77 K)? at liquid helium temperature (4.2 K)? 
Vnoise,rms (T = 298K) = 4kB TRB 
= 4(1.38 ´10-23 )(298)(104 )(1.5 ´104 ) 
= 2.43 ´10-12 = 1.56 ´10-6 V = 1.56mV 
Vnoise,rms (T = 77K) = 0.80V 
Vnoise,rms (T = 4.2K) = 0.19V 
Cooling has dropped the noise originating in the resistor. We have 
(incorrectly) ignored noise in the amplifier itself.
Thermal Noise Reduction by 
Bandwidth 
Consider the previous resistor at room temperature. Pass the 
signal through a noiseless RC circuit (impossible, since the R in 
this new circuit will introduce noise, but lets pretend, O.K.?) which 
has a time constant of 0.1 s. What is the expected rms noise from 
this filtered signal? 
B = 1/(0.1 x 4) = 2.5 
Vnoise,rms(T = 298K,B = 2.5s-1) 
= 4(1.38 ´10-23 )(298)(104 )(2.5) 
= 2.0 ´10-8 V = 20nV 
Noise reduction by filtering was much greater than by cooling, but we 
are now much more limited to the speed with which we can make a 
measurement and hence the rates of processes we can monitor.
Shot Noise 
Also known as quantum noise or Schottky noise. 
Arises because charge and energy are quantized. Electrons and 
photons leave sources and arrive at detectors as quanta; while the 
average flow rate may be constant, at a given instant there are 
more quanta arriving than at another instant. There is a slight 
fluctuation because of the quantum nature of things. 
Inoise,rms = 2 q Idc B 
q is the electron charge = 1.602 x 10-19 C 
Idc is the dc current flowing across the measurement interface 
B is again the measurement bandwidth in Hz
Shot Noise Reduction by Bandwidth 
What is the shot noise for a 1 amp dc current for a 15 kHz 
measurement bandwidth? What is it when the bandwidth is 
reduced to 2.5 Hz? 
Inoise,rms ( B = 15kHz) 
= 2(1.602 ´10-19)(1)(1.5 ´104 ) 
= 6.9 ´10-8A = 69nA 
Inoise,rms ( B = 2.5Hz) = 8.9 ´10-10 A = 890 pA 
Again a lower noise level comes at the expense of only being able to 
measure slow enough processes.
Flicker Noise 
Also known as 1/f noise or pink noise. 
Origins are uncertain. Depends upon material, design, nature of 
contacts, etc. Flicker noise is determined for every measurement 
device. It is recognized by its 1/f dependence. Most important at 
low frequencies (from dc to ~200 Hz). 
Long term drift in all instruments comes from flicker noise. 
Measurements taken above 1 kHz can neglect flicker noise. 
A narrow bandwidth makes flicker noise seem constant over that 
bandwidth and so it is indistinguishable from white noise.
Modulation 
Flicker noise, because of its 1/f behaviour, is particularly 
unforgiving when attempting to amplify dc signals. This is 
remedied by modulating the signal to a higher frequency, then 
amplifying, and demodulating. 
Noise with a frequency characteristic different from that for the 
modulation-demodulation process is averaged to zero. 
Two important solutions are: 
• Chopper Amplifier 
• Lock-in Amplifer
Chopper Amplifier 
An input dc signal is turned into a square wave by alternately 
grounding and connecting the input line. This square wave is 
amplified and then synchronously demodulated and filtered to give 
an amplified dc signal that avoids flicker noise. 
6 mV 
0 
6 mV 6 V 
3 V 1500 mV 
1000 x 
Amplifier 
input 
output 
Gain = 1500/6 = 250
Lock-in Amplifier 
More modern solution is to employ a lock-in amplifier. Can recover 
useful signal even when S/N < 1. Key components are: 
• Sine wave reference signal that also perturbs the system under 
investigation. 
• Phase Sensitive Detector, including a four-quadrant multiplier and 
phase shifter. 
Experimental 
System 
Sine wave 
Generator 
Four-Quadrant 
Multiplier 
Phase Shifter 
Integrator/Filter 
Lock-in 
Output
Interference 
Also known as environmental noise or electrical pickup. 
Broadcasting electric and magnetic fields. 
Line noise and harmonics (60 Hz, 120 Hz, 180 Hz, etc.) 
Electrical devices (elevators, air conditioners, motors) 
Broadcasting stations (radio, T.V.) 
Microphonics (mechanical vibrations coupled capacitively) 
Often observed in a narrow frequency with a large, fixed 
amplitude. 
Remediate by shielding, eliminate ground loops, rigidly fix all 
cables and detectors, isolate from temperature variations, 
compensating magnetic fields, etc.
Software Methods 
Computers have dramatically changed the way with which we deal 
with noise. Many of these can help “pull the signal out of the noise”. 
• Software “low pass filtering” 
• Ensemble averaging 
• Fourier Transform filtering
Software Low Pass 
Filtering 
An X-ray Photoelectron spectrum (XPS) of Au nanocrystals 
attached to a silicon surface by 3-mercaptopropyl-trimethoxysilane. 
XPS of Au-Nanocrystals on Silicon 
200 
150 
100 
50 
0 
70 80 90 100 110 
Binding Energy (eV) 
Counts 
1 scan; 0.5 eV step size 
Au 4f 
Si 2p 
S/N = 29 on Si peak at 100 eV.
Software Low Pass 
A 5 point moving average to smooth the data. 
XPS - 5 Point Moving Average 
200 
150 
100 
50 
0 
70 80 90 100 110 
Binding Energy (eV) 
Counts 
S/N = 53 on Si peak at 100 eV. 
Noise is decreased but so is 
peak amplitude. 
Filtering
Software Low Pass 
A weighted 5 point moving average: weighting factors are 1:2:3:2:1 
XPS - 5 point weighted moving average 
200 
150 
100 
50 
0 
70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 
Binding Energy (eV) 
Counts 
S/N = 57 on Si peak at 100 eV. 
Noise is decreased but so is 
peak amplitude but not by as 
much as for the non-weighted 
smoothing. 
Filtering
Software Low Pass 
Filtering 
A 5 point weighted moving average using Savitzky-Golay weighting 
factors for a quadratic fit. They are -3:12:17:12:-3 
5 point Savitzky-Golay 
200 
150 
100 
50 
0 
70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 
Binding Energy (eV) 
Counts 
S/N = 81 on Si peak at 100 eV. 
Best noise reduction without 
compromising peak intensity. 
A. Savitzky and M.J.E. Golay, Anal. Chem. 1964, 36, 1627.
Software Low Pass 
Filtering 
You can also do differentiation by choosing the right integers. Here 
is the first derivative using the weighting factors 1:-8:0:8:-1 
First derivative by S-G 
1000 
500 
0 
-500 
-1000 
70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 
Binding Energy (eV) 
D(counts)/d(eV) 
This can help to identify the peak position 
more accurately.
Ensemble Averaging 
Noise is randomly distributed but signal is not. If we do an 
experiment a second time, the signal appears in the same place, 
but the noise will be doing something different. If we add two runs 
together, the signal increases, but the noise tends to smooth itself 
out. Signal increases as N but noise increases as √N. Hence, the 
S/N increases as √N. 
XPS of Au nanocrystal on Silicon 
4000 
3000 
2000 
1000 
0 
70 80 90 100 110 
Binding Energy (eV) 
Counts 
16 scans, added together. S/N = 109 (about 4x that for the 1 scan spectrum).
Fourier Smoothing 
A Fourier transform can decompose a spectrum into the many 
sinusoidal contributions that make it up. Noise is generally high 
frequency; drift is low frequency; environmental noise is of specific, 
narrow frequencies. A Fourier transform, selective removal of 
offending frequency components, followed by an inverse Fourier 
transform, can significantly improve a spectrum’s appearance.
Time Domain with Noise 
and Interference 
The signal here is a 30 Hz sine wave, contaminated by a much 
higher frequency sine wave and white noise. 
Unfiltered Time Domain 
15 
10 
5 
0 
-5 
-10 
-15 
0 200 400 600 800 1000 
Time (ms) 
Amplitude
Unfiltered Spectrum 
A Fourier transform of the time domain provides a spectral 
decomposition of the frequency components, revealing the 
interfering signal (at 430 Hz) and the white noise. 
Unfiltered Spectrum 
1.4 
1.2 
1 
0.8 
0.6 
0.4 
0.2 
0 
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 
Frequency (Hz) 
Amplitude
Filtered Spectrum 
By convoluting the spectrum with a box-like multiplication function 
with the low frequency end of the spectrum, we effectively apply a 
low-pass filter. 
Filtered Spectrum 
1.2 
1 
0.8 
0.6 
0.4 
0.2 
0 
0 100 200 300 400 500 
Frequency (Hz) 
Amplitude
Filtered Time Domain 
An inverse Fourier transform takes the filtered spectrum and 
produces the filtered time domain data. It is not perfectly clean yet, 
because of the white noise present with in the selected filter 
bandwidth. 
Filtered Time Domain 
6 
4 
2 
0 
-2 
-4 
-6 
0 200 400 600 800 1000 
Time (msec) 
Amplitude

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Instrumental lecture 2

  • 1. Signal vs. Noise Every measurement is affected by processes not related to the measurement of interest. The magnitude of this noise, compared to the magnitude of the signal, directly determines one’s ability to make an accurate measurement.
  • 2. Signal In all experiments, there is: Sample Response: the instrument’s response when the analyte is present. Blank Response: the instrument’s response when the analyte is absent. The Signal : the difference between the sample and the blank response. voltage output blank time sample sample blank signal
  • 3. Background or Baseline Ideally, the blank response of an instrument would be exactly 0. Then the sample response would be equal to the signal. This is never the case, though it can often be adjusted to be close to 0. There is always a residual signal associated with an instrument’s blank response. This is called the background or the baseline. time output voltage blank sample sample blank signal baseline The baseline is subtracted from both the blank and the sample response.
  • 4. Drift Ideally, the baseline response is constant in time. In such a case, a constant correction factor is easily subtracted from the blank and sample to correct the signal. Invariably, however, the baseline changes slowly with time. This is called drift. Sometimes the drift is linear in time, but often it is more complex and difficult to predict. time output voltage blank sample sample blank signal baseline We need to know the value of the baseline at the time we make a measurement.
  • 5. Noise Noise is a random (or almost random) time-dependent change in the instrument’s output signal that is unrelated to the analyte response. These variations will tend to make the accurate measurement of sample, blank, and baseline response less certain. Noise arises from many sources (to be discussed soon). The frequency response can span the entire spectrum. We can treat noise as if it were a sine wave, or at least the sum of many (infinite?) sine waves. Measuring the intensity of the noise and comparing it to the signal is the key to determining the accuracy of a measurement and in specifying the smallest signal level one is able to measure (detection limit).
  • 6. Peak-to-peak Noise One measure of the amplitude of a sine wave is the peak-to-peak amplitude (this is twice the amplitude which appears in the defining equation for a sine wave). 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 0 5 10 15 20 V(peak-to-peak) or Vp-p Noise is usually specified by measuring the peak-to-peak maximum over a reasonable length of time (“reasonable” depends upon length of time needed to make a measurement).
  • 7. Even though the noise is clearly not a perfect sine wave, we know it can be decomposed into a collection of sine waves and we can treat it mathematically as a sine wave. 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Vp-p Peak-to-peak Noise
  • 8. Average Noise Another way of measuring the intensity of noise might be the average noise. Naverage = 0 if noise is truly random. (Excursions above zero should balance excursions below zero over time). If not 0, then another signal must be present and we need to account for it. Naverage is not a useful measure of noise.
  • 9. Root-Mean-Square Noise It was the plus and minus excursions averaging out that made Naverage not useful. Squaring the signal, makes everything positive. This can then be averaged meaningfully. Take the square root of that result to get back a value that can be related to the original signal. For a perfect sine wave, we can calculate its rms value. A theoretical analysis gives us that NRMS = 1 2 2 Np- p A quick estimate of the RMS noise is NRMS = 0.35 Np-p.
  • 10. Signal-to-Noise Ratio Total signal level nor noise level determine an experiment’s ability to accurately detect an analyte. Rather it is the ratio of the two that is critical. The S/N Ratio. 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 2 4 6 8 Np-p = 0.10 S = 0.75 Baseline = 0.25 NRMS = 0.354 Np-p = 0.354 x 0.10 = 0.035 S/N = 0.75/0.035 = 21.4
  • 11. Signal-to-Noise Ratio 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Same signal level. Same baseline. S/N = 3.
  • 12. Signal-to-Noise Ratio 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 In this experiment, the signal-to-noise is 1. Note how you could not make a reasonable measurement of the signal under these conditions.
  • 13. Sources of Electrical Noise When sample is abundant, signal is high, background (baseline) is low, we hardly worry about noise. But at some point, every experiment needs to account for noise. Electrical noise can be divided into four principal sources: • Thermal Noise • Shot Noise • Flicker Noise • Interference
  • 14. Thermal Noise Also known as white noise, Johnson noise, or Nyquist noise. Arises because the atoms of a solid state conductor are vibrating at all temperatures and they bump into conductors (electrons). This imposes a new, random motion on those conductors which generates noise. Vnoise,rms = 4 kB T RB Vnoise, rms is the RMS voltage of the noise kB is Boltzmann’s constant = 1.38 x 10-23 J K-1 (V2 s W-1 K-1) T is the temperature in kelvin R is the resistance in ohms B is the bandwidth response of the instrument in Hz (s-1)
  • 15. Bandwidth Every instrument responds to rapid or slow signal changes differently. We specify the bandwidth or bandpass by referring to the range of frequencies over which it can effectively measure signals. Usually the bandwidth of an instrument can be adjusted by changing electronic filters. Center Frequency Bandwidth Frequency Power measured A simple, RC circuit acts like a low pass filter; it smooths (integrates) rapid changes. It allows slowly varying signals to pass unimpeded. The relationship between its time constant t = RC and its bandwidth B is just B ≈ 1/4t Other filters have other relationships.
  • 16. Low Pass Filter A series RC circuit functions as a low pass filter, when taking the output voltage across the capacitor. Then ac signals at low frequency pass unattenuated. Low Pass Filter 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000 Frequency (Hz) Filter Attentuation Factor R C Vin Vout Vout Vin = XC R2 + X2 C
  • 17. High Pass Filter A series RC circuit functions as a high pass filter, when taking the output voltage across the resistor. Then ac signals at high frequency pass unattenuated. High Pass Filter 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000 Frequency (Hz) Filter Attenuation Factor R C Vin Vout Vout Vin = R R2 + X2 C
  • 18. Band Pass Filter Many more complex filters can be designed. The frequency response an be very complex. Here is a simple combination of a high pass and low pass filter, to produce a band pass filter. Band Pass Filter 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000 Frequency (Hz) Filter Attentuation Factor R1 = 70 kW C1 = 100 nF F1 = 23 Hz R2 = 5 kW C2 = 100 nF F2 = 318 Hz
  • 19. Thermal Noise Reduction by Cooling A 10 kW resistor is used as a current-to-voltage converter. The voltage across it is amplified by an amplifier with a bandwidth of 15 kHz. What is the rms noise voltage at 20 ˚C? at liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K)? at liquid helium temperature (4.2 K)? Vnoise,rms (T = 298K) = 4kB TRB = 4(1.38 ´10-23 )(298)(104 )(1.5 ´104 ) = 2.43 ´10-12 = 1.56 ´10-6 V = 1.56mV Vnoise,rms (T = 77K) = 0.80V Vnoise,rms (T = 4.2K) = 0.19V Cooling has dropped the noise originating in the resistor. We have (incorrectly) ignored noise in the amplifier itself.
  • 20. Thermal Noise Reduction by Bandwidth Consider the previous resistor at room temperature. Pass the signal through a noiseless RC circuit (impossible, since the R in this new circuit will introduce noise, but lets pretend, O.K.?) which has a time constant of 0.1 s. What is the expected rms noise from this filtered signal? B = 1/(0.1 x 4) = 2.5 Vnoise,rms(T = 298K,B = 2.5s-1) = 4(1.38 ´10-23 )(298)(104 )(2.5) = 2.0 ´10-8 V = 20nV Noise reduction by filtering was much greater than by cooling, but we are now much more limited to the speed with which we can make a measurement and hence the rates of processes we can monitor.
  • 21. Shot Noise Also known as quantum noise or Schottky noise. Arises because charge and energy are quantized. Electrons and photons leave sources and arrive at detectors as quanta; while the average flow rate may be constant, at a given instant there are more quanta arriving than at another instant. There is a slight fluctuation because of the quantum nature of things. Inoise,rms = 2 q Idc B q is the electron charge = 1.602 x 10-19 C Idc is the dc current flowing across the measurement interface B is again the measurement bandwidth in Hz
  • 22. Shot Noise Reduction by Bandwidth What is the shot noise for a 1 amp dc current for a 15 kHz measurement bandwidth? What is it when the bandwidth is reduced to 2.5 Hz? Inoise,rms ( B = 15kHz) = 2(1.602 ´10-19)(1)(1.5 ´104 ) = 6.9 ´10-8A = 69nA Inoise,rms ( B = 2.5Hz) = 8.9 ´10-10 A = 890 pA Again a lower noise level comes at the expense of only being able to measure slow enough processes.
  • 23. Flicker Noise Also known as 1/f noise or pink noise. Origins are uncertain. Depends upon material, design, nature of contacts, etc. Flicker noise is determined for every measurement device. It is recognized by its 1/f dependence. Most important at low frequencies (from dc to ~200 Hz). Long term drift in all instruments comes from flicker noise. Measurements taken above 1 kHz can neglect flicker noise. A narrow bandwidth makes flicker noise seem constant over that bandwidth and so it is indistinguishable from white noise.
  • 24. Modulation Flicker noise, because of its 1/f behaviour, is particularly unforgiving when attempting to amplify dc signals. This is remedied by modulating the signal to a higher frequency, then amplifying, and demodulating. Noise with a frequency characteristic different from that for the modulation-demodulation process is averaged to zero. Two important solutions are: • Chopper Amplifier • Lock-in Amplifer
  • 25. Chopper Amplifier An input dc signal is turned into a square wave by alternately grounding and connecting the input line. This square wave is amplified and then synchronously demodulated and filtered to give an amplified dc signal that avoids flicker noise. 6 mV 0 6 mV 6 V 3 V 1500 mV 1000 x Amplifier input output Gain = 1500/6 = 250
  • 26. Lock-in Amplifier More modern solution is to employ a lock-in amplifier. Can recover useful signal even when S/N < 1. Key components are: • Sine wave reference signal that also perturbs the system under investigation. • Phase Sensitive Detector, including a four-quadrant multiplier and phase shifter. Experimental System Sine wave Generator Four-Quadrant Multiplier Phase Shifter Integrator/Filter Lock-in Output
  • 27. Interference Also known as environmental noise or electrical pickup. Broadcasting electric and magnetic fields. Line noise and harmonics (60 Hz, 120 Hz, 180 Hz, etc.) Electrical devices (elevators, air conditioners, motors) Broadcasting stations (radio, T.V.) Microphonics (mechanical vibrations coupled capacitively) Often observed in a narrow frequency with a large, fixed amplitude. Remediate by shielding, eliminate ground loops, rigidly fix all cables and detectors, isolate from temperature variations, compensating magnetic fields, etc.
  • 28. Software Methods Computers have dramatically changed the way with which we deal with noise. Many of these can help “pull the signal out of the noise”. • Software “low pass filtering” • Ensemble averaging • Fourier Transform filtering
  • 29. Software Low Pass Filtering An X-ray Photoelectron spectrum (XPS) of Au nanocrystals attached to a silicon surface by 3-mercaptopropyl-trimethoxysilane. XPS of Au-Nanocrystals on Silicon 200 150 100 50 0 70 80 90 100 110 Binding Energy (eV) Counts 1 scan; 0.5 eV step size Au 4f Si 2p S/N = 29 on Si peak at 100 eV.
  • 30. Software Low Pass A 5 point moving average to smooth the data. XPS - 5 Point Moving Average 200 150 100 50 0 70 80 90 100 110 Binding Energy (eV) Counts S/N = 53 on Si peak at 100 eV. Noise is decreased but so is peak amplitude. Filtering
  • 31. Software Low Pass A weighted 5 point moving average: weighting factors are 1:2:3:2:1 XPS - 5 point weighted moving average 200 150 100 50 0 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 Binding Energy (eV) Counts S/N = 57 on Si peak at 100 eV. Noise is decreased but so is peak amplitude but not by as much as for the non-weighted smoothing. Filtering
  • 32. Software Low Pass Filtering A 5 point weighted moving average using Savitzky-Golay weighting factors for a quadratic fit. They are -3:12:17:12:-3 5 point Savitzky-Golay 200 150 100 50 0 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 Binding Energy (eV) Counts S/N = 81 on Si peak at 100 eV. Best noise reduction without compromising peak intensity. A. Savitzky and M.J.E. Golay, Anal. Chem. 1964, 36, 1627.
  • 33. Software Low Pass Filtering You can also do differentiation by choosing the right integers. Here is the first derivative using the weighting factors 1:-8:0:8:-1 First derivative by S-G 1000 500 0 -500 -1000 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 Binding Energy (eV) D(counts)/d(eV) This can help to identify the peak position more accurately.
  • 34. Ensemble Averaging Noise is randomly distributed but signal is not. If we do an experiment a second time, the signal appears in the same place, but the noise will be doing something different. If we add two runs together, the signal increases, but the noise tends to smooth itself out. Signal increases as N but noise increases as √N. Hence, the S/N increases as √N. XPS of Au nanocrystal on Silicon 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 70 80 90 100 110 Binding Energy (eV) Counts 16 scans, added together. S/N = 109 (about 4x that for the 1 scan spectrum).
  • 35. Fourier Smoothing A Fourier transform can decompose a spectrum into the many sinusoidal contributions that make it up. Noise is generally high frequency; drift is low frequency; environmental noise is of specific, narrow frequencies. A Fourier transform, selective removal of offending frequency components, followed by an inverse Fourier transform, can significantly improve a spectrum’s appearance.
  • 36. Time Domain with Noise and Interference The signal here is a 30 Hz sine wave, contaminated by a much higher frequency sine wave and white noise. Unfiltered Time Domain 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 0 200 400 600 800 1000 Time (ms) Amplitude
  • 37. Unfiltered Spectrum A Fourier transform of the time domain provides a spectral decomposition of the frequency components, revealing the interfering signal (at 430 Hz) and the white noise. Unfiltered Spectrum 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 Frequency (Hz) Amplitude
  • 38. Filtered Spectrum By convoluting the spectrum with a box-like multiplication function with the low frequency end of the spectrum, we effectively apply a low-pass filter. Filtered Spectrum 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 Frequency (Hz) Amplitude
  • 39. Filtered Time Domain An inverse Fourier transform takes the filtered spectrum and produces the filtered time domain data. It is not perfectly clean yet, because of the white noise present with in the selected filter bandwidth. Filtered Time Domain 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 0 200 400 600 800 1000 Time (msec) Amplitude

Editor's Notes

  • #10: The RMS value of a signal is more significant than its p-p value because it is a number which more directly relates to the power that an ac signal can deliver when compared to a dc signal. It more completely accounts for that portion of the time when the signal is lower than the p-p value.
  • #11: To calculate the S/N present in a given measurement, take the average signal value and divide it by the average noise value. You can determine the average noise, by using the RMS value, taken from a measurement of the peak-to-peak noise. This gives us an easy approach to making a measurement of the S/N.
  • #13: In the first lecture, we identified the limiting functionality of a given experimental process in terms of its limit of detection and its limit of quantitation. These were chosen as being characterized by a certain signal level above the baseline: limit of detection was 3 times the standard deviation and the limit of quantitation was 10 times. Where is the S/N in this story? It is contained in the magnitude of the standard deviation. An experiment with a larger S/N will have a correspondingly smaller standard deviation and hence a lower limit of detection and quantitation.
  • #15: Thermal noise is present equally at all frequencies; this is why it is called white noise - it contains all frequencies in its spectrum. The name of Johnson noise comes the individual who first measured it and Nyquist noise from the person who derived the equation. Note that we can lower the thermal noise in a systems by cooling it (reducting its temperature), decreasing the resistance, and be narrowing the bandwidth.
  • #16: An electrical device can only allows a certain range of frequencies to pass through it effectively, just like an optical filter does to light. Often the red, Gaussian-like shape is that which is measured (send in a periodically varying signal and measure the response. Then send the signal with the same signal level but with a different frequency. Measure the response. Continue until the entire spectrum is measured.) Often we can effectively approximate the response as a box function such as that shown in orange. One desires to have a bandwidth as narrow as is compatible with the experiment. Signal outside the bandwidth is integrated and smoothed so that it becomes part of the instrumental baseline. An increasing baseline can become a problem if its becomes large compared to the signal. Also, the bandwidth must be large enough to accurately measure signal changes over all possible frequencies that the changes may come at. Adjusting the bandwidth is a common activity of all instrumental measurements.
  • #21: The more we filter, the more we shift signal from into the integrated background (baseline). As long as the process of interest still operates within this bandwidth, then we can still make a successful measurement.
  • #22: Note that the only way to decrease the shot noise is to decrease the bandwidth of the measurement. Note how thermal noise affects the voltage and shot noise affects the current.
  • #24: It is called pink noise because, while it is present at all frequencies, its intensity drops off as the reciprocal of the frequency. This means that it is more significant at low frequencies (long wavelengths) which is the red end of the visible spectrum. So, since it has longer wavelengths present, the metaphor “sees” more red than just the white and hence the name “pink”.
  • #33: This process is easy to do with any spreadsheet program
  • #39: The inset box is the full range amplified to reveal the details and how the signal level drops off ffrom the filtering.