Introduction To Sensors PDF
Introduction To Sensors PDF
Types of Applications of Measurement Instrumentation Generalized Configurations and Functional Descriptions of Measuring Instruments
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Control Effector
Controlled Variable
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Require only pencil, paper, computers, etc. Extensive laboratory facilities are not required. No time delay engendered in building models, assembling and checking instrumentation, and gathering data.
Note
The distinction among monitoring, control, and analysis functions is not clear-cut; the category decided on may depend somewhat on your point of view and the apparent looseness of the classification should not cause any difficulty. It is now extremely common for engineers to include in the design of a machine or process, as dedicated components, computers of various sizes. Computers are important, but the computer component of many machines and processes is often not the critical system element in terms of either technical or economic factors. Rather, components external to the computer, the actuators and sensors, are more often the limiting factors in the system design.
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By concentrating on these functions and the various physical devices available for accomplishing them, we develop our ability to synthesize new combinations of elements leading to new and useful instruments.
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Measured Medium
Measured Quantity
All the basic functions necessary for a description of any instrument
Data Storage / Playback Elem ent
Data
Observer
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Variable-Conversion Element
It may be necessary to convert the output signal of the primary sensing element to another more suitable variable while preserving the information content of the original signal. This element performs this function.
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Variable-Manipulation Element
An instrument may require that a signal represented by some physical variable be manipulated in some way. By manipulation we mean specifically a change in numerical value according to some definite rule but a preservation of the physical nature of the variable. This element performs such a function.
Data-Transmission Element
When functional elements of an instrument are actually physically separated, it becomes necessary to transmit the data from one to another. This element performs this function.
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Data-Presentation Element
If the information about the measured quantity is to be communicated to a human being for monitoring, control, or analysis purposes, it must be put into a form recognizable by one of the human senses. This element performs this translation function.
Note
A given instrument may involve the basic functions in any number, combination, or order. A given physical component may serve several of the basic functions.
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Pressure Gage
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Can you recognize the basic functions necessary to the successful operation of this instrument?
Galvanometer
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In digital devices, it is simply the presence (logical 1) or absence (logical 0) of a voltage within some wide range that matters; the precise value of the signal is of no consequence.
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Digital devices are very tolerant of noise voltages and need not be individually very accurate, even though the overall system can be extremely accurate. When combined analog/digital systems are used (often the case in measurement systems), the digital portions need not limit system accuracy; these limitations generally are associated with analog portions and/or the analog/digital conversion devices. Since most measurement and control apparatus is of an analog nature, it is necessary to have both A/D converters and D/A converters, which serve as translators that enable the computer to communicate with the outside analog world.
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Interfering Inputs
These are quantities to which the instrument is unintentionally sensitive.
FD and FI are input-output relations, i.e., the mathematical operations necessary to obtain the output from the input. They represent different concepts depending on the particular input-output characteristic being described, e.g., a constant, a mathematical function, a differential equation, a statistical distribution function.
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Modifying Inputs
These are quantities that cause a change in the input-output relations for the desired and interfering inputs, i.e., they cause a change in FD and/or FI. FM,I and FM,D represent the specific manner in which iM affects FI and FD, respectively.
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R g = ( GF ) R g
(R
Ra
g
+ Ra )
Electric-resistance, Strain-gage Setup Desired Input: strain Interfering Inputs: 60 Hz field, temperature Modifying Inputs: temperature, battery voltage
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U-Tube Manometer for Differential Pressure Measurement Desired Inputs: p1 and p2 Interfering Inputs: acceleration, tilt angle Modifying Inputs: temperature, gravitational force, tilt angle
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If modifying inputs iM1 and iM2 exist, they can cause changes in KMo and KSp that lead to errors in the relation between ei and xo. These errors are in direct proportion to the changes in KMo and KSp. Consider a closed-loop system. Here xo is measured by a feedback device which produces a voltage eo proportional to xo. This voltage is subtracted from the input voltage ei, and the difference is applied to an amplifier which drives the motor and thereby the spring to produce xo: xo = K Am K Mo K Sp 1 + K Am K Mo K Sp K Fb ei
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Suppose we design KAm to be very large (a high-gain system) so that KAmKMoKSpKFb >> 1. Then 1 xo ei K Fb The effects of variations in KAm, KSp, and KMo ( as a result of modifying inputs iM1, iM2, and iM3) on the relation between ei and output xo have been made negligible. We now require that KFb stay constant (unaffected by iM4) in order to maintain constant inputoutput calibration.
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Examples of Filtering
Strain-gage Circuit
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Pressure gage modified by the insertion of a flow restriction (e.g., needle valve) between the source of the pressure and the piston chamber. Pulsations in air pressure may be smoothed by the pneumatic filtering effect of the flow restriction and associated volume.
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high-pass filter
Chopped Radiometer
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The intentionally introduced input is designed so that the signals oI1 and oI2 are essentially equal, but act in opposite sense; thus the net contribution oI1 oI2 to the output is essentially zero. This method might actually be considered as a variation on the method of calculated output corrections. However, the calculation and application of the correction are achieved automatically owing to the structure of the system, rather than by numerical calculation by a human operator.
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Millivoltmeter
Millivoltmeter is basically a current-sensitive device whose scale can be calibrated in voltage as long as the total circuit resistance is constant. Ambient temperature is a modifying input here.
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Rate Gyroscope
To control unwanted oscillations, the gimbal rotation is damped by the shearing action of a viscous fluid in a narrow damping gap. The damping effect varies with the viscosity of the fluid and the thickness of the damping gap. Ambient temperature is a modifying input.
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