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Instrumentation and Measurement Basics

This document summarizes key points from a lecture on instrumentation and measurements. It discusses different categories of instruments including active vs passive, analog vs digital, indicating vs signal output, and smart vs non-smart sensors. It also covers static characteristics of instruments such as accuracy, tolerance, precision, range, span, linearity, sensitivity, threshold, resolution, and sensitivity to disturbances. Examples are provided to illustrate concepts like error percentage calculations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views51 pages

Instrumentation and Measurement Basics

This document summarizes key points from a lecture on instrumentation and measurements. It discusses different categories of instruments including active vs passive, analog vs digital, indicating vs signal output, and smart vs non-smart sensors. It also covers static characteristics of instruments such as accuracy, tolerance, precision, range, span, linearity, sensitivity, threshold, resolution, and sensitivity to disturbances. Examples are provided to illustrate concepts like error percentage calculations.

Uploaded by

Noor UL Aaien
Copyright
© All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

MCT-335: Instrumentation and Measurements

Lecture #2

Lecture Notes by

Dr. Ayisha Nayyar


Assistant professor
MCE, UET, LHR.
Summary of the lecture #1

• Measurement system (Significance)


• History of Measurement
• Electronic Instrument system
• Stages of an Instrumentation system
• Main Components of I & M
• Areas of applications
Synergy between instrumentation and control
Types of Control Loop
Elements of Controlled system
Categorization of Instruments
• Active and passive instruments
• In passive instruments the output is entirely produced by the quantity being
measured.
• In active instruments the quantity being measured simply modulates the magnitude
of some external power source.
Categorization of Instruments
• Passive sensor • Active sensor
• Null-type and deflection-type instruments
• Pressure gauge shown in the previous category is an example of deflection-type
instrument.
• Certain manual changes have to be made such that the stimulation of the sensed
quantity is nullified.
Weights are added/
removed until datum is
achieved.
Categorization of Instruments

• In comparison null-type instruments are more accurate than deflection-


type, but require cumbersome procedure of adding removing weights (as in
this example).
• Deflection-type instruments are more useful on the field as they represent
the measured quantity directly.
• For calibration purposes, null-type instruments are used.
Analog & Digital Instruments
• Analogue and digital instruments
• An analogue instrument gives an output that varies continuously as the quantity
being measured changes.
• A digital instrument has an output that varies in discrete steps and so can only have a
finite number of values. It works on the principle of quantization. The quantization
is the process of converting the continuous input signal into a countable output
signal.
Example (Digital)
Categorization of Instruments
• Use of microprocessors/controllers have encouraged the inclusion of digital
sensors.
• Analog sensors can still be used with computers by using A/D converters
but this sometimes seriously damages the integrity of the sensed data and
induces time delays.
• Indicating instruments and instruments with a signal output
• Indicating instruments give an audio or visual indication of the magnitude of the
physical quantity measured.
• Instruments with signal output give an output in the form of a measurement signal
whose magnitude is proportional to the measured quantity.
Categorization of Instruments
• Indicating instruments normally includes all null-type instruments and
most passive ones.
• They may be analog (liquid-in-glass thermometer) or digital (digital
weighing scale) instruments.
• One major drawback with indicating devices is that human intervention is
required to read and record a measurement.
Categorization of Instruments
• Instruments that have a signal-type output are commonly used as part of
automatic control systems.
• They can also be found in measurement systems where the output
measurement signal is recorded in some way for later use.
Categorization of Instruments
• Smart and Non-smart Sensors
• Sensors and instrument packages that are microprocessor driven and include
features such as communication capability and on-board diagnostics that provide
information to a monitoring system and/or operator to increase operational
efficiency and reduce maintenance costs (Tom Griffiths, Product Manager,
Honeywell Industrial Measurement).
Categorization of Instruments
• At a minimum, a smart sensor is
made of a sensor, a microprocessor
and communication technology of
some kind.
• The computing resources must
be an integral part of the
physical design - a sensor that
just sends its data along for
remote processing is not
considered a smart sensor!!!
Static Characteristics of Instruments
• Characteristics related to the output of the instrument when the output has
settled to a certain steady-state value
• A thermometer having ± 0.5oC variation would suffice in a room
environment but not for monitoring some chemical reaction!!!
• When choosing an instrument certain considerations should be made:
• Accuracy
• Sensitivity
• Linearity
• Reaction to ambient temperature changes
• Etc.
Static Characteristics of Instruments
1. Accuracy (measurement uncertainty)
• Measure of how close the output reading of the instrument is to the correct value.
• Instead of accuracy, usually inaccuracy is quoted.
• For example, a pressure gauge of range 0–10 bar has a quoted inaccuracy of ± 1%
f.s. (± 1% of full-scale reading), then the maximum error to be expected in any
reading is 0.1 bar.
• What will be the percentage error if the same pressure gauge is reading a pressure
of 1 bar? If we were measuring pressures with expected values between 0 and 1
bar, we would not use an instrument with a range of 0–10 bar.
Static Characteristics of Instruments
2. Tolerance
The maximum error that is to be expected
in some value

• Sometimes the accuracy of


instruments is quoted as a tolerance
figure
• However correct use of tolerance is to
describes the maximum deviation of
a manufactured component from
some specified value.
Static Characteristics of Instruments
3. Precision (repeatability/reproducibility)

• An instrument’s degree of freedom from random errors


• Accuracy is completely different characteristic than precision!!!
• Low accuracy measurements from a high precision instrument are normally
caused by a bias in the measurements, which is removable by recalibration.
Static Characteristics of Instruments

• Precision (repeatability/reproducibility)
• Repeatability and reproducibility are alternative ways to express precision.
• Repeatability: The spread of output values for the same input being applied
in constant conditions.
• Reproducibility: The spread of output values for the same input being
applied in varying conditions.
4. Range & Span
Mind openers (Problems)
Mind openers (Problems)
Example 2: A pressure gauge with a range between 0 - 10 bar is found to have an error of ± 0.15 bar when
calibrated by the manufacturer. Calculate :
a. The error percentage of the gauge.
b. The error percentage when the reading obtained is 2.0 bar.

Example 3: Two pressure gauges (pressure gauge A and B) have a full scale accuracy of ± 5%. Sensor A has a
range of 0-1 bar and Sensor B 0-10 bar. Which gauge is more suitable to be used if the reading is 0.9 bar?

Example 4: A temperature sensor has a span of 20-250°C. A measurement results in a value of 55°C for the
temperature. Specify the error if the accuracy is (a) ±0.5% FS, (b)±0.75% span, and (c)±0.8% of reading.
What is the possible temperature in each case.
5. Linearity

• It is normally desirable that the


output reading of an instrument
is linearly proportional to the
quantity being measured

• Non-linearity is usually expressed


as a percentage of full-scale
reading.
6. Sensitivity of measurement
Measure of the change in
instrument output that occurs
when the quantity being
measured changes by a given
amount.

• For example, a pressure of 2 bar


produces a deflection of 10
degrees in a pressure transducer,
the sensitivity of the instrument is
5 degrees/bar.
6. Sensitivity of measurement
7. Threshold
• When the reading of an input is increased from zero, the input reading will
reach a certain value before change occurs in the output.
• The minimum limit of the input reading is ‘threshold’.

• If the input to an instrument is gradually increased from zero, the input will
have to reach a certain minimum level before the change in the instrument
output reading is of a large enough magnitude to be detectable
• For example, car’s speedometer normally have a threshold of 15 km/h
• Sometimes absolute value is quoted instead of %age of full-scale readings.
8. Resolution

• When an instrument is showing a particular output reading, there is a lower


limit on the magnitude of the change in the input that produces an
observable change in the instrument output
• It depends on the divisions of the scale also!!!
• It is the smallest observable change in the output.
• For example, car’s speed can be estimated nearest to 5 km/h by observing
the speedometer.
8. Resolution
9. Sensitivity to disturbance
• All calibrations and specifications of an instrument are only valid under
controlled conditions of temperature, pressure etc.
• As ambient conditions change, certain static characteristics change, and the
sensitivity to disturbance is a measure of the magnitude of this change.
• Such environmental changes affect
instruments in two main ways,
known as zero drift (bias) and
sensitivity drift.
9. Sensitivity to disturbance
• Zero drift or bias describes the effect where the zero reading of an
instrument is modified by a change in ambient conditions.
• This induces a constant error over the full
range of measurement, but is mostly
rectifiable through re-calibration.
• Typically zero-drift coefficient related to
all environmental factors are given in the
data sheet.
9. Sensitivity to disturbance
• Sensitivity drift (also known as scale factor drift) defines the amount by
which an instrument’s sensitivity of measurement varies as ambient
conditions change
For easy way of understanding
Sensitivity Drift: It is the zero-drift in
the sensitivity of measurements!!!
10. Hysteresis Effects
• If the input to the instrument
is steadily increased from a
negative value, the output
reading varies in the manner
shown in curve (a).
• If the input variable is then
steadily decreased, the output
varies in the manner shown
in curve (b).
• Hysteresis is commonly
observed in instruments
having springs and/or
electrical coils etc.
11. Dead Space
• Dead Space
• The range of different input values over which there is no change in output
value.
• Backlash in gears is a typical cause of dead space.
Interpretation

• Explains the behavior system of


instruments system when the input
signal is changed.
• Depends on a few standard input
signals such as ‘step input’, ‘ramp
input’ and ‘sine-wave input’.
Interpretation
Interpretation
Interpretation
• Behavior between the time a measured quantity changes value and the time
when the instrument output attains a steady value in response
• In any linear, time-invariant measuring system, the following general
relation can be written between input and output for time t > 0:

Where qi is the measured


quantity, q0 is the output
reading, ‘a’ and ‘b’ are
constants
Interpretation
• We will consider only special cases that encompasses almost all types of
instruments. So we will work with simplified version of the equation shown
in the last slide.
• Zero-Order Instrument
• Suppose that only step changes in the input are allowed, then all b’s except b0 will
become zero.
• Also suppose all a’s are zero except a0.

• K = sensitivity of measurement = b0/a0


Interpretation

• Any system behaving in this


fashion is called zero-order system.
• Output immediately moves to its
final value when input is
applied/changed.
• Potentiometer is a good example
of such a system.
First-Order Instruments
Example:
• The liquid-in-glass thermometer is a
good example of a first order instrument.
• It is well known that, if a thermometer at
room temperature is plunged into
boiling water, the liquid column does not
rise instantaneously to a level indicating
100°C, but instead approaches a reading
indicating 100°C in a manner similar to
that shown in the figure on the previous
slide.
• A large number of instruments belong
to this first-order class.
• This time lag must be carefully dealt
with in context of control systems.
Second-Order Instruments
Second-Order Instruments
Necessity of calibration
• An instrument only conforms to stated static and dynamic patterns of
behaviour after it has been calibrated
• During use, however, its behaviour will gradually diverge from the stated
specification for a variety of reasons.
• Hence it will be necessary to recalibrate the instrument to the standard
specifications
• Such calibration requires adjustment of each output value so that it matches
the output of another (safely kept) instrument whose specifications are
accurately known.
References
• Measurement and Instrumentation Principles,
3rd Edition, by Alan S Morris
• Chapter 2 (Section 2.1, 2.2, 2.3 & 2.4)

And some MORE……………

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