Types of Instruments: Direct Instruments Indirect Instruments
Types of Instruments: Direct Instruments Indirect Instruments
Introduction
1. Types of Instruments
Direct Instruments
Indirect Instruments
Direct Measurement
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Indirect Measurement
2. Measuring Instruments
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1. Automatic Instruments
This type of instruments do not require the manual
assistance for their functioning
E.g. the temperature measurement by mercury-in-
glass thermometer is automatic
2. Manual Instruments
This instruments requires manual assistance for their
functioning
e.g. the measurement of temperature by a resistance
thermometer incorporating; Wheatstone bridge in
its circuit is manual in operation as it needs an operator
for obtaining the null position.
2. Power operated
Requires external power supply for their functioning
So instruments require same auxiliary source of power
such as compound air, electricity, hydraulic supply for
these operations and hence are called externally
powered instruments (or) passive instruments.
Example:
L.V.D.T (Linear Variable Differential Transducer)
Strain gauge load cell
Resistance thermometer
Self contained remote indicator.
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1. Self –contained
Have all of its parts enclosed in one physical
assembly. e.g. Mercury thermometer
2. Some instruments have different elements
contained in different physical assemblies by
data transmission elements e.g. RTD
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Accuracy
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Overall Accuracy
Instruments composed of Primary, Secondary,
Manipulation etc.
Overall accuracy is expressed by overall accuracy is
expressed by combining individual accuracies of
different elements.
For pressure swing thermometer
Accuracy of bulb-capillary system is ±0.5 %
Accuracy of bourdon gauge as ±1%
Overall accuracy can be expressed
Least accuracy is within ±(0.5+1) i.e. within ±1.5
Root square accuracy is within ± 0.52 + 12 = ± 1.25
Static Error
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2. systematic errors:
These types of errors are divided into three categories.
a. Instrumental errors
b. Environmental errors
c. Observational errors
a. Instrumentation errors:
These errors occur due to following reasons.
Due to mechanical structure of the instrument
Due to inherent short comings of the instrument
Due to misuse of instruments
Due to loading effects of instruments.
e.g. Errors due to friction and irregular spring tension
b)Environmental errors:
These errors are caused due to changes in the
environmental conditions in the area surrounding the
instrument, that may affect the instrument
characteristics, such as the affects of changes in
temperature, humidity, barometric pressure or if
magnetic field or electrostatic field.
These undesirable errors can be reduced by the
following ways.
I. Arrangement must be made to keep the conditions
approximately constant.
II. Employing hermetically sealing to certain components
in the instrument, which eliminate the effects of the
humidity dust, etc.
III. Magnetic or electrostatic shields must be provided.
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3. Random errors:
The cause of such errors is unknown (or) not
determinable in the ordinary process making
measurements.
Such errors are normally small and follow the law of
chance.
Random errors they may be treated mathematically
according to the law of probability.
Precision
Precision is the degree of exactness for which an
instrument is designed or intended to perform.
It is expressed in terms of conformity of the instrument
which is nothing but maximum deviation of an
instrument’s actual calibration curve as compared to its
specific characteristic curve.
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Repeatability
Reproducibility
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Drift
The gradual shift in the indication or record of the instrument
over an extended period of time, during which the true
value of the variable does not change is referred to as drift.
Different kind of drift are
The entire instrument calibration may gradually shift by the
same amount.
This is called as zero drift that can be easily corrected by
shifting the pointer position.
In case of span drift calibrations from lowest value to the
highest value get shifted by the proportional amount.
Hence, higher calibrations get shifted more than the lower
calibrations.
In some instruments, certain portion of the calibration only
gets shifted while the remaining portion of the scale remains
unaffected.
Classification of Drift
Sensitivity
Sensitivity of the instrument denotes the smallest change
in the value of a measured variable to which instrument
responds.
In other words sensitivity denotes the maximum change
in an input signal (measured variable) that will not
initiate a response on the output (indication).
Accuracy of the thermometer is 1 0C means the
thermometer output (response) would change only if
temperature around it changes by 1 0C.
Any change in temperature less than 1 0C are not
indicated by this thermometer.
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Dead zone
Hysteresis
B. Dynamic Characteristics
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Speed of response
Fidelity
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Dynamic error
3. Describing an Instrument
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