Measurement and Instrumentation: Lecture#1
Measurement and Instrumentation: Lecture#1
Lecture#1
Engr. M.Ubaidullah
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Course Outline:
1. Basics Concepts
5. Measurement of Resistance
6. Measurement of Inductance and Capacitance (AC
Reference Books:
Berlin, Electronic Instruments &
Measurements Modern Electronic Instrumentation & Measurement Techniques A.D. Hell Frick and W.D Cooper. Electronic Instrumentation & Measurements David A Bell A course in Electronic and electrical measurements and Instrumentation by J.B. Gupta
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Grading Scheme:
Assignments
Quizzes
Presentations Midterm Final Term
1.Basics Concepts
1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Measurement Methods Type of Measurement Instruments Classification of Instrumentations. Terms related to measurement Errors in measurement Types of errors
Electronics:
Measurement:
man uses his imaginative skills to identify a physical phenomena Developed & utilized a means to understand this.
Instrumentation:
Deals with Science and technology of measurement of large no. of variables Uses principles in physics , chemistry & Appld. Science (Engg), Electrical. Electronics, Mech,computer, commn. etc.
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1.3 Instruments
An instrumentation may be defined as a device which helps to determine value of an unknown quantity.
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Mechanical instruments. Used to measure static and stable quantities. E.g. force, pressure etc They cant measure dynamic and variable quantities. E.g. are pressure gauge, speedometer, water meter
Tire pressure gauge
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Electrical Instruments. Faster than mechanical instruments However, their measuring part is also mechanical like needle, springs etc They are more accurate and sensitive They can measure dynamic quantities like current (varying at the rate of 50Hz/sec) measuring by ammeter. E.g. are ammeters, voltmeters etc
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Electronic Instruments. Modern than the previous 2 types. Uses semiconductor devices like diodes, transistors etc which have excellent time response and have no noise pollution. E.g. are CRO, Power supplies etc.
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Instruments can also be classified as: Absolute instruments. Secondary Instruments. Analog instruments Digital Instruments
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Absolute instruments. Which gives measurement quantity in terms of constant of the instrument. Used in the laboratory for calibration and standardization. E.g. Tangent galvanometer
Secondary Instruments. Gives the measurement of the quantity directly on the instrument. E.g. frequency meter, ohm meter, volt meter etc
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Digital Instruments. Gives the digital measurement like DMM Also measure the analog signal.
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Parallax error While taking reading, eye and pointer should be in the same line, otherwise error occurs, called parallax error. This error cant be removed completely. Human error Reading wrongly or recorded wrongly. Parallax is also a type of human error.
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Indicating Instruments
Indicating instruments indicate, generally the quantity to be measured by means of a pointer which moves on a scale. Examples are ammeter, voltmeter, wattmeter etc.
Recording Instruments
These instruments record continuously the variation of any electrical quantity with respect to time. In principle, these are indicating instruments but so arranged that a permanent continuous record of the indication is made on a chart or dial. Integrating instruments
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These instruments record the consumption of the total quantity of electricity, energy etc., during a particular period of time. That is, these instruments totalize events over a specified period of time. No indication of the rate or variation or the amount at a particular instant are available from them. Some widely used integrating instruments are: Ampere-hour meter: kilowatt-hour (kWh) meter, kilovolt-ampere-hour (kVARh) meter.
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True Value.
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Precision.
It is measure of the consistency of reproducibility (repeatability) of the measurement (i.e., the successive reading do not differ). For a given fixed value of an input variable, precision is a measure of the degree to which successive measurement differ from one another.
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Efficiency. Ratio of the measured quantity at full scale to the input power taken by the instrument.
Resolution or Discrimination. Resolution is the smallest change in a measured variable (or measurand) to which the instrument will respond.
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If the instrument produces the o/p exactly the replica of the input, process is said to 100% fidelity. E.g. if a sine wave is fed to a CRO, the output of CRO should be an exact sine wave without any distortion. Torque weight Ratio: (T/W) Ratio of the deflecting torque produced on the moving system and weight of the moving system. For accuracy this ratio should be less. Response speed and response time: Rapid response of the instrument to the applied input. Time taken by the instrument to respond to the changes in the i/p.
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Gross error
The class of error mainly covers human mistake in reading instruments recording and calculating result. These can be avoided by two means : Great care should be taken with reading & recording the data. 2, 3 or more reading should be taker for the quantity under measurement. some gross error can be detected & some others cannot. complete elimination is not possible.
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Systematic error
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Systematic error
These are divided as Instrumental error: Due to inherent short comings in the instrument. Due to misuse of instrument. Due to loading effect of instrument. Cab be reduced by: Substitution method or calibration against standard may be used for the purpose. Correction factors should be applied after determining instrumental errors. Instrument may be recalibrated carefully.
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Systematic error
There are divided as Environmental due to surroundings E.g. Noise from electrical machine. Magnetic field, temperature Observational may be due to misreading of instruments.
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Random Error:
Errors due to unknown Causes. Magnitude and direction not known Expressed as average deviation of probable errors or standard deviation Can be reduced by:
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Statistical Analysis:
Arithmetic Mean
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Statistical Analysis:
Deviation from Mean
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Statistical Analysis:
Average Deviation
D= |di| / n
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Statistical Analysis:
Standard Deviation
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Statistical Analysis:
Variance v= 2
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Statistical Analysis:
Probable error = +/- 0.6745 (obtained from Gaussian error curve)
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Statistical Analysis:
Limiting error specified by manufactures
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Summary:
1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Measurement Methods Type of Measurement Instruments Classification of Instrumentations. Terms related to measurement Errors in measurement Types of errors Statistical Analysis
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