EE252 Module I Part1 10th Jan
EE252 Module I Part1 10th Jan
EE-252
(3-0-0-6)
Disclaimer: Some of the figures have been taken from various books, internet, PDFs etc. The instructor thanks all the authors
and acknowledged the respective inventors and creators of the documents
Analog Meters. 8L
Transducers 8L
instrumentation amplifier, filters, shielding and grounding; A/D and D/A converters
Digital meters; Analog and Digital oscilloscopes; Signal analyzers: wave, network, harmonic
distortion, spectrum and logic analyzers; Programmable logic controller; Virtual
instrumentation.
References
1. R. P. Areny and T. G. Webster, Sensors and Signal Conditioning. Wiley-
Interscience, 2012.
2. R. A. Witte, Electronic Test Instruments. Pearson Education, 2011.
3. C. F. Coombs, Electronic Instruments Handbook. McGraw-Hill, 2000.
4. B. G. Liptak, Instrument Engineers' Handbook: Process Measurement and
Analysis. CRC Press, 2012.
2. Minimum expectation from you is that you will not use earphones, headphones etc. in the class
➢measurement is the process by which one can convert physical parameters to meaningful numbers.
➢ The measuring process is one in which the property of an object or system under consideration is
compared to an accepted standard unit, a standard defined for that particular property.
(a) the standard used for comparison purposes must be accurately defined and should be
commonly accepted, and
(b) the apparatus used and the method adopted must be provable.
Direct and
Indirect
• In these methods, the. unknown quantity (also called the measurand) is directly compared
against standard
1. Absolute Instruments
2. Secondary Instruments
• It works by using a compass needle to compare a magnetic field generated by the unknown current to
• It gets its name from its operating principle, the tangent law of magnetism, which states that the
tangent of the angle a compass needle makes is proportional to the ratio of the strengths of the two
Active Instruments:
Null-Type and
Deflection-Type Instruments
• Therefore, for the operation of a null type of instrument, the following are required :
(a) the effect produced by the measured quantity;
(b) the opposing effect, whose value is accurately known. This is necessary in order to
determine the numerical value of the measured quantity accurately
(c) a detector, which detects the null conditions i.e., a device that indicates zero deflection
(balance conditions) when the effect produced by the measured quantity is equal to the
effect produced by the opposing quantity.
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Analogue and Digital Instruments
Indicating Instruments: Audio or visual indication of the magnitude of the physical quantity
measured
Instruments with a Signal Output: Used commonly as part of automatic control systems
Smart and Non-smart Instruments some of you might be interesting to read about those as well!
➢ many measurements are concerned with rapidly varying quantities and, therefore, for such
cases, the dynamic relations that exist between the output and the input must be examined
Static characteristics
1. Absolute Instruments
2. Secondary Instruments
◦ Accuracy of an instrument is a measure of how close the output reading of the instrument
is to the correct/true value
◦ Measurement uncertainty quantifies the departure of measured value from true value;
usually expressed as a percentage of Full-scale (f.s.) reading.
◦ This is the accuracy of the instrument only at one point on its scale.
◦ The specification of this accuracy does not give any information about the
accuracy at other points on the scale or
◦ in other words, does not give any information about the general accuracy of
the instrument.
Example ❖ the accuracy of a thermometer having a range of 500°C may be expressed as ± 0.5
percent of full-scale range.
❖ This means that the accuracy of the thermometer when the reading is 500°C is ±
0.5% which is negligible (± 2.5 ºC.),
❖ but when the reading is 25°C, the error is as high as (500/25) (±0.5) = 10 percent
❖The best way to conceive the idea of accuracy is to specify it in terms of the true value of
the quantity being measured, .
✓ A football player who keeps striking the same goalpost is precise but not accurate.
✓ Therefore, a football player can be accurate without being precise if he hits the ball all over the place
but still scores.
✓ A precise player will hit the ball to the same spot repeatedly, irrespective of whether he scores or
not.
✓ A precise and accurate football player will not only aim at a single spot but also score the goal.
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Precision is composed of two characteristics :
➢A Conformity and
◦ A quantity called precision index describes the spread, or dispersion of repeated
results about some central value.
◦ High precision means a tight cluster of repeated results while low precision
indicates a broad scattering of results.
▪ The more the significant figures, the greater the precision of measurement.
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▪Accuracy ▪Threshold
▪Precision ▪Resolution
▪Reproducibility ▪ Hysteresis
▪Repeatability ▪Dead-space
▪Tolerance
▪Range or span
▪Linearity
▪Sensitivity to measurement
▪Sensitivity to disturbance
❖ No drift means that with a given input the measured values do not vary
with time
✓Zero Drift
✓Zonal Drift
𝑆𝑐𝑎𝑙𝑒 𝑑𝑒𝑓𝑙𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛
𝑆𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖𝑡𝑖𝑣𝑖𝑡𝑦 =
𝑉𝑎𝑙𝑢𝑒 𝑜𝑓 𝑚𝑒𝑎𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑝𝑟𝑜𝑑𝑢𝑐𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑑𝑒𝑓𝑙𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛
10-01-2025 TERMINOLOGY 65
➢ Dead time is defined as the time required
by a measurement system to begin to
respond to a change in the measurand
➢ The voltmeter's internal resistance is in parallel with the resistance of the circuit, which
decreases the overall resistance.
➢ This results in the voltmeter reading a lower voltage than the actual value.
➢ they are in a state of rapid vibratory motion on account of temperature and thermal effects.