EE33080 1 Introduction Basics 2021
EE33080 1 Introduction Basics 2021
Phone: 071-8649622
Email: [email protected]
COURSE INFORMATION
• COURSE MATERIAL
- Electronic handouts (major parts, summary)
- Suggested reading (Books, Web sites)
- Class notes (dictated or otherwise)
- Examples done in class
- Problems solved in tutorials, Lab experiments
- Additional reading (Library, Internet)
COURSE INFORMATION
• TEXT BOOKS
• Electrical Measurements & Measuring Instruments, Dr. Rajendra Prasad,
Khanna Publishers
• Schaum’s Outline -Electrical machines and Electro-mechanics, 2nd Edition,
Syed A Nasar, McGraw Hill, ISBN 007 0459940
• Electrical Machinery and Transformers 3rd Edition, Bhag S, Huseyin R,
Hiziroglu, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-513890-0
• Electric Motors and Drives – fundamentals, types and applications. 3rd
Edition, Austin Hughes, Elsevier Publishers, ISBN 007 0459940
• S. Umans, A. Fitzgerald and C. Kingsley, Electric Machinery, 6th ed. New
Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill.
• C. B. Gray, Electrical machines and drive systems. USA: Longman Scientific
and Technical, 1989.
• W. Leonhard, Control of Electrical Drives, 3rd ed. Berlin, Heidelberg:
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2001.
• Extracts from other texts and documents will be used in presentations and
notes
What are some of the measurements we do ?
Mass (kg)
Temperature (0C)
What do you
prefer most ?
Why ?
Purpose and definitions
• The purpose of a measurement system is to
link the observer to a process in order to gain
more information of the process.
• Process: A system which generates information,
e.g. a chemical reactor, a car, a human heart, or
a weather system.
• Observer: A person (or another system) that
needs the information, e.g. a plant operator, a
driver (or engine control system), or a nurse.
• Measurement system: A system that measures
information carrying quantities, processes
them, and presents them to the observer.
Process Measurement system Observer
INFORMATION
Why Measure?
• Human capabilities alone cannot provide
sufficient information for a detail
understanding of the processes we interact
with.
Reading is based on the deflected position of Reading is based on the null position of the
the instrument instrument
Classification of Instruments
• Analogue and Digital instruments
1. Analog Instruments
The signals of an analog unit vary in a continuous fashion
and can take on infinite number of values in a given range.
Fuel gauge, ammeter and voltmeters, speedometer fall in
this category.
2. Digital Instruments
Signals varying in discrete steps and taking on a finite
number of different values in a given range are digital
signals and the corresponding instruments are of digital
type. Digital instruments can store the result
electronically, for future purposes. A digital multimeter is
an example of a digital instrument.
Static Characteristics of Instruments
and Measurement Systems
• Applications that involve measurement of
quantities that are either constant or varies
very slowly with time are known as static
measurements, and instrument characteristics
that affect such measurements are called
static characteristics.
• ACCURACY:
It is the closeness of an instrument reading to the
true value of the quantity being measured.
• In practice, it is more usual to quote the inaccuracy figure
rather than the accuracy figure for an instrument.
Inaccuracy is the extent to which a reading might be wrong,
and is often quoted as a percentage of the full-scale.
𝑥𝑚 −𝑥𝑎
𝐴𝑐𝑐𝑢𝑟𝑎𝑐𝑦 = 1 − 𝑥𝑎 × 100%
xm = Measured value xa = Actual (should be) value
• Expressed as:
Absolute value (± 10 C)
Percentage of reading (± 0.5 %)
Percentage of full-scale reading (<1% FSR)
• Precision: Ability of an instrument to reproduce a
certain reading for a fixed quantity under the same
conditions (repeatability / reproducibility).
• If a large number of readings are taken of the same
quantity by a high precision instrument, then the
spread of readings will be very small.
𝑥𝑚 −𝑋ത
𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑐𝑖𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛 = 1 − 𝑋ത
× 100%
X = Mean value
0 5
Length meter m
Mass kilogram kg
Time second s
Electric current ampere A
Thermodynamic
Temperature
kelvin K
ACTUAL = a. READING + b
Standard Reading
12
y = 1.0048x - 0.0133
10
Linear
8
6 Series1
Linear (Series1)
4
0
0 5 10 15
60
50
40
Non Linear →
30 Series1
Poly. (Series1)
y = 0.386x2 - 9.1547x + 78.359
20
10
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
Example problem:
A certain meter has a full scale range from 0 to 100, with a
resolution of 0.5. It is also known that there is an initial error of
+1.5 in the meter. The meter accuracy is indicated as +/- 1%.
If this meter is used to measure a parameter at a true value of
95.2, what is the possible range of values you may get as the
meter reading (provide the maximum and minimum possible
readings you expect for an actual value of 95.2)? (97.5 or 98, 95.5)
Part II:
If the same meter provides a reading of 85.5, what is the
range within which the actual value may lie ?