ME-441-004 (Static Performance Characteristics of Instruments)
ME-441-004 (Static Performance Characteristics of Instruments)
ME-441-004 (Static Performance Characteristics of Instruments)
441
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Part I :Measurements and
Instrumentation
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments
If we have a thermometer in a room and its reading shows a
temperature of 20°C, then it does not really matter whether the true
temperature of the room is 19.5°C or 20.5°C. Such small variations around
20°C are too small to affect whether we feel warm enough or not. Our bodies
cannot discriminate between such close levels of temperature and therefore a
thermometer with an inaccuracy of +/- 0.5°C is perfectly adequate. If we had
to measure the temperature of certain chemical processes, however, a
variation of 0.5°C might have a significant effect on the rate of reaction or
even the products of a process. A measurement inaccuracy much less than
+/- 0.5°C is therefore clearly required.
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Accuracy of measurement is thus one consideration in the choice of
instrument for a particular application. Other parameters such as sensitivity,
linearity and the reaction to ambient temperature changes are further
considerations.
These attributes are collectively known as the static characteristics of
instruments, and are given in the data sheet for a particular instrument. It is
important to note that the values quoted for instrument characteristics in
such a data sheet only apply when the instrument is used under specified
standard calibration conditions.
Due allowance must be made for variations in the characteristics when
the instrument is used in other conditions. The various static characteristics
are enumerated and defined in the coming slides, as follows:
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Static Characteristics of Instruments may be enumerated as follows:
Accuracy and inaccuracy (measurement uncertainty)
Precision/repeatability/reproducibility
Tolerance
Range or Span
Linearity
Sensitivity of Measurement
Threshold
Resolution
Sensitivity to disturbance
Hysteresis effects
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
2.2 Static characteristics of instruments ...
Accuracy and inaccuracy (measurement uncertainty). The accuracy of
an instrument is a measure of how close the output reading of the instrument is to
the correct value.
Inaccuracy is the extent to which a reading might be wrong, and is often
quoted as a percentage of the full-scale (f.s.) reading of an instrument.
If, for example, a pressure gauge of range 0–10 bar has a quoted inaccuracy
of +/-1.0% f.s. { +/- (1/100) x full-scale reading}, then the maximum error to be
expected in any reading is 0.1 bar. This means that when the instrument is reading
1.0 bar, the possible error is 10% of this value. For this reason, it is an important
system design rule that instruments are chosen such that their range is appropriate
to the spread of values being measured.
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. The term measurement
uncertainty is frequently used in place of inaccuracy.
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Precision
Precision is a term that describes an instrument’s degree of freedom
from random errors.
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.
Precision is often, though incorrectly, confused with accuracy. High
precision does not imply anything about measurement accuracy.
A high precision instrument may have a low accuracy. Low accuracy
measurements from a high precision instrument are normally caused by a
bias in the measurements, which is removable by recalibration.
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Introduction to Measurement …
Some important definitions to remember
Precision :
A measure of the consistency or repeatability of measurements
i.e. successive readings do not differ.
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performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Precision/repeatability/reproducibility. …
Repeatability describes the closeness of output readings when the same
input is applied repetitively over a short period of time, with the same
measurement conditions, same instrument and observer, same location and
same conditions of use maintained throughout.
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performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Precision
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Precision . … Both the accuracy and precision of Robot 1 are shown to
be low in this trial.
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Precision. … Robot 2 consistently puts the component down at
approximately the same place but this is the wrong point. Therefore, it has
high precision but low accuracy.
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Precision. … Finally, Robot 3 has both high precision and high
accuracy, because it consistently places the component at the correct
target position.
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Tolerance. Tolerance is a term that is closely related to accuracy and
defines the maximum error that is to be expected in some value.
Whilst it is not, strictly speaking, a static characteristic of measuring
instruments, it is mentioned here because the accuracy of some
instruments is sometimes quoted as a tolerance figure.
Tolerance describes the maximum deviation of a manufactured
component from some specified value.
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Range
The range of an instrument defines the minimum and maximum
values of a quantity that the instrument is designed to measure.
Span
Span is the maximum value minus minimum value
For example, a load cell for the measurement of forces might have a
range of 1 to 50N but it will have a span of 49N
Resolution.
It is defined as the smallest change in input that will cause an
observable change in output.
One of the major factors influencing the resolution of an instrument is
how finely its output scale is divided into subdivisions.
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Linearity.
Linearity is a measure of the
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Sensitivity of Measurement
Sensitivity is the relationship indicating how much output changes
per unit input.
Example The following resistance values of a platinum resistance
thermometer were measured at a range of temperatures. Determine the
measurement sensitivity of the instrument in ohms/°C.
Resistance (Ω) Temperature (°C)
307 200
314 230
321 260
328 290
Solution: If these values are plotted on a graph, the straight-line
relationship between resistance change and temperature change is obvious.
For a change in temperature of 30°C, the change in resistance is 7Ω.
Hence the measurement sensitivity = 7/30 = 0.233 Ω/°C.
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Performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
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. This minimum level of input is known as
the threshold of the instrument.
Dead space. Dead space is defined as the range of different
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Sensitivity to disturbance. All calibrations and specifications of
an instrument are only valid under controlled conditions of
temperature, pressure etc. These standard ambient conditions are
usually defined in the instrument specification.
As variations occur in the ambient temperature etc., certain static
instrument 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 and sensitivity drift. Zero drift is sometimes known
by the alternative term, bias.
Zero drift or bias describes the effect where the zero reading of
an instrument is modified by a change in ambient conditions. This
causes a constant error that exists over the full range of measurement
of the instrument.
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Sensitivity to disturbance. ...
It is quite usual to find that there is a reading of perhaps 1 kg with
no one stood on the scale. If someone of known weight 70 kg were to get
on the scale, the reading would be 71 kg, and if someone of known
weight 100 kg were to get on the scale, the reading would be 101 kg.
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Instrument types and
performance characteristics
Static characteristics of instruments ...
Sensitivity to disturbance. ...
Sensitivity drift. Sensitivity drift also known as (scale factor drift)
defines the amount by which an instrument’s sensitivity of measurement
varies as ambient conditions change. Many components within an
instrument are affected by environmental fluctuations, such as
temperature changes: for instance, the modulus of elasticity of a spring is
temperature dependent.
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Hysteresis
Hysteresis is the difference in readings obtained when an instrument
approaches a signal from opposite directions. if an instrument reads a
midscale value going from zero it can give a different reading from
the value after making a full-scale reading. This is due to stresses
induced into the material of the instrument by changing its shape in
going from zero to full-scale deflection.
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Static characteristics of instruments ...
Hysteresis effects. ... Hysteresis is most commonly found in
instruments that contain springs, such as the passive pressure gauge. It is
also evident when friction forces in a system have different magnitudes
depending on the direction of movement, such as in the pendulum-scale
mass-measuring device. Devices like the mechanical flyball (a device for
measuring rotational velocity) suffer hysteresis from both of the above
sources because they have friction in moving parts and also contain a spring.
Hysteresis can also occur in instruments that contain electrical windings
formed round an iron core, due to magnetic hysteresis in the iron. This occurs
in devices like the variable inductance displacement transducer, the LVDT and
the rotary differential transformer.