


Those two components are there to remove any DC offset from the oscillator because that sort of oscillator is going to produce an offset that is generally undesireable due to asymmetries in the output limiting.I might also consider that to give a reasonably constant output amplitude, the output from the oscillator is limited by precision voltage shunts (possibly LT1389 or SPX4040) to restrict the output to +/- 2.5 volts. R4 would also need to connect to the negative rail.Next I would ensure that the output from the first stage (the relaxation oscillator) fed the 2nd stage (a 2nd order low pass filter) via a decoupling capacitor and resistor to ground. The split bipolar supply also naturally gives you a centre point of 0 volts (desireable). This gives enough supply overhead to produce a sensible output level of a 5 volt peak sine wave. No parameter of square wave jerks correlated with age.Benefits in coded imaging are demonstrated when compared with fixedwidth square-wave (pseudo-chirp) excitation in coded imaging, including reduction in image artifacts and peak I was wondering what changes to the circuit would be needed to changeI'd start by powering both op-amps with bipolar supplies, something like +/- 9 volts.
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