




已阅读5页,还剩7页未读, 继续免费阅读
版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领
文档简介
Data Acquisition SystemsData acquisition systems are used to acquire process operating data and store it on,secondary storage devices for later analysis. Many or the data acquisition systems acquire this data at very high speeds and very little computer time is left to carry out any necessary, or desirable, data manipulations or reduction. All the data are stored on secondary storage devices and manipulated subsequently to derive the variables of in-terest. It is very often necessary to design special purpose data acquisition systems and interfaces to acquire the high speed process data. This special purpose design can be an expensive proposition. Powerful mini- and mainframe computers are used to combine the data acquisition with other functions such as comparisons between the actual output and the desirable output values, and to then decide on the control action which must be taken to ensure that the output variables lie within preset limits. The computing power required will depend upon the type of process control system implemented. Software requirements for carrying out proportional, ratio or three term control of process variables are relatively trivial, and microcomputers can be used to implement such process control systems. It would not be possible to use many of the currently available microcomputers for the implementation of high speed adaptive control systems which require the use of suitable process models and considerable online manipulation of data. Microcomputer based data loggers are used to carry out intermediate functions such as data acquisition at comparatively low speeds, simple mathematical manipulations of raw data and some forms of data reduction. The first generation of data loggers, without any programmable computing facilities, was used simply for slow speed data acquisition from up to one hundred channels. All the acquired data could be punched out on paper tape or printed for subsequent analysis. Such hardwired data loggers are being replaced by the new generation of data loggers which incorporate microcomputers and can be programmed by the user. They offer an extremely good method of collecting the process data, using standardized interfaces, and subsequently performing the necessary manipulations to provide the information of interest to the process operator. The data acquired can be analyzed to establish correlations, if any, between process variables and to develop mathematical models necessary for adaptive and optimal process control. The data acquisition function carried out by data loggers varies from one to 9 in system to another. Simple data logging systems acquire data from a few channels while complex systems can receive data from hundreds, or even thousands, of input channels distributed around one or more processes. The rudimentary data loggers scan the selected number of channels, connected to sensors or transducers, in a sequential manner and the data are recorded in a digital format. A data logger can be dedicated in the sense that it can only collect data from particular types of sensors and transducers. It is best to use a nondedicated data logger since any transducer or sensor can be connected to the channels via suitable interface circuitry. This facility requires the use of appropriate signal conditioning modules. Microcomputer controlled data acquisition facilitates the scanning of a large number of sensors. The scanning rate depends upon the signal dynamics which means that some channels must be scanned at very high speeds in order to avoid aliasing errors while there is very little loss of information by scanning other channels at slower speeds. In some data logging applications the faster channels require sampling at speeds of up to 100 times per second while slow channels can be sampled once every five minutes. The conventional hardwired, non-programmable data loggers sample all the channels in a sequential manner and the sampling frequency of all the channels must be the same. This procedure results in the accumulation of very large amounts of data, some of which is unnecessary, and also slows down the overall effective sampling frequency. Microcomputer based data loggers can be used to scan some fast channels at a higher frequency than other slow speed channels. The vast majority of the user programmable data loggers can be used to scan up to 1000 analog and 1000 digital input channels. A small number of data loggers, with a higher degree of sophistication, are suitable for acquiring data from up to 15, 000 analog and digital channels. The data from digital channels can be in the form of Transistor- Transistor Logic or contact closure signals. Analog data must be converted into digital format before it is recorded and requires the use of suitable analog to digital converters (ADC)The characteristics of the ADC will define the resolution that can be achieved and the rate at which the various channels can be sampled. An in-crease in the number of bits used in the ADC improves the resolution capability. Successive approximation ADCs are faster than integrating ADCs. Many microcomputer controlled data loggers include a facility to program the channel scanning rates. Typical scanning rates vary from 2 channels per second to 10, 000 channels per second. Most data loggers have a resolution capability of 0.01% or better, It is also pos-sible to achieve a resolution of 1 micro-volt. The resolution capability, in absolute terms, also depends upon the range of input signals, Standard input signal ranges are 0-10 volt, 0-50 volt and 0-100 volt. The lowest measurable signal varies form 1 t, volt to 50, volt. A higher degree of recording accuracy can be achieved by using modules which accept data in small, selectable ranges. An alternative is the auto ranging facil-ity available on some data loggers. The accuracy with which the data are acquired and logged-on the appropriate storage device is extremely important. It is therefore necessary that the data acquisi-tion module should be able to reject common mode noise and common mode voltage. Typical common mode noise rejection capabilities lie in the range 110 dB to 150 dB. A decibel (dB) is a tern which defines the ratio of the power levels of two signals. Thus if the reference and actual signals have power levels of N, and Na respectively, they will have a ratio of n decibels, where n10 Log10(Na /Nr) Protection against maximum common mode voltages of 200 to 500 volt is available on typical microcomputer based data loggers. The voltage input to an individual data logger channel is measured, scaled and linearised before any further data manipulations or comparisons are carried out. In many situations, it becomes necessary to alter the frequency at which particu-lar channels are sampled depending upon the values of data signals received from a particular input sensor. Thus a channel might normally be sampled once every 10 minutes. If, however, the sensor signals approach the alarm limit, then it is obviously desirable to sample that channel once every minute or even faster so that the operators can be informed, thereby avoiding any catastrophes. Microcomputer controlled intel-ligent data loggers may be programmed to alter the sampling frequencies depending upon the values of process signals. Other data loggers include self-scanning modules which can initiate sampling. The conventional hardwired data loggers, without any programming facilities, simply record the instantaneous values of transducer outputs at a regular sampling in-terval. This raw data often means very little to the typical user. To be meaningful, this data must be linearised and scaled, using a calibration curve, in order to determine the real value of the variable in appropriate engineering units. Prior to the availability of programmable data loggers, this function was usually carried out in the off-line mode on a mini- or mainframe computer. The raw data values had to be punched out on pa-per tape, in binary or octal code, to be input subsequently to the computer used for analysis purposes and converted to the engineering units. Paper tape punches are slow speed mechanical devices which reduce the speed at which channels can be scanned. An alternative was to print out the raw data values which further reduced the data scanning rate. It was not possible to carry out any limit comparisons or provide any alarm information. Every single value acquired by the data logger had to be recorded even though it might not serve any useful purpose during subsequent analysis; many data values only need recording when they lie outside the pre-set low and high limits. If the analog data must be transmitted over any distance, differences in ground potential between the signal source and final location can add noise in the interface design. In order to separate common-mode interference form the signal to be recorded or processed, devices designed for this purpose, such as instrumentation amplifiers, may be used. An instrumentation amplifier is characterized by good common-mode- rejection capability, a high input impedance, low drift, adjustable gain, and greater cost than operational amplifiers. They range from monolithic ICs to potted modules, and larger rack-mounted modules with manual scaling and null adjustments. When a very high common-mode voltage is present or the need for extremely-low com-mon-mode leakage current exists(as in many medical-electronics applications),an isolation amplifier is required. Isolation amplifiers may use optical or transformer isolation. Analog function circuits are special-purpose circuits that are used for a variety of signal conditioning operations on signals which are in analog form. When their accu-racy is adequate, they can relieve the microprocessor of time-consuming software and computations. Among the typical operations performed are multiplications, division, powers, roots, nonlinear functions such as for linearizing transducers, rims measure-ments, computing vector sums, integration and differentiation, and current-to-voltage or voltage- to-current conversion. Many of these operations can be purchased in available devices as multiplier/dividers, log/antilog amplifiers, and others. When data from a number of independent signal sources must be processed by the same microcomputer or communications channel, a multiplexer is used to channel the input signals into the A/D converter. Multiplexers are also used in reverse, as when a converter must distribute analog information to many different channels. The multiplexer is fed by a DA converter which continually refreshes the output channels with new information. In many systems, the analog signal varies during the time that the converter takes to digitize an input signal. The changes in this signal level during the conversion process can result in errors since the conversion period can be completed some time after the conversion command. The final value never represents the data at the instant when the conversion command is transmitted. Sample-hold circuits are used to make an acquisition of the varying analog signal and to hold this signal for the duration of the conversion process. Sample-hold circuits are common in multichannel distribution systems where they allow each channel to receive and hold the signal level. In order to get the data in digital form as rapidly and as accurately as possible, we must use an analog/digital (A/D) converter, which might be a shaft encoder, a small module with digital outputs, or a high-resolution, high-speed panel instrument. These devices, which range form IC chips to rack-mounted instruments, convert ana-log input data, usually voltage, into an equivalent digital form. The characteristics of A/D converters include absolute and relative accuracy, linearity, monotonic, resolu-tion, conversion speed, and stability. A choice of input ranges, output codes, and other features are available. The successive-approximation technique is popular for a large number of applications, with the most popular alternatives being the counter-comparator types, and dual-ramp approaches. The dual-ramp has been widely-used in digital voltmeters. D/A converters convert a digital format into an equivalent analog representation. The basic converter consists of a circuit of weighted resistance values or ratios, each controlled by a particular level or weight of digital input data, which develops the output voltage or current in accordance with the digital input code. A special class of D/A converter exists which have the capability of handling variable reference sources. These devices are the multiplying DACs. Their output value is the product of the number represented by the digital input code and the analog reference voltage, which may vary form full scale to zero, and in some cases, to negative values. Component Selection Criteria In the past decade, data-acquisition hardware has changed radically due to ad-vances in semiconductors, and prices have come down too; what have not changed, however, are the fundamental system problems confronting the designer. Signals may be obscured by noise, rfi,ground loops, power-line pickup, and transients coupled into signal lines from machinery. Separating the signals from these effects becomes a matter for concern. Data-acquisition systems may be separated into two basic categories:(1)those suited to favorable environments like laboratories -and(2)those required for hostile environments such as factories, vehicles, and military installations. The latter group includes industrial process control systems where temperature information may be gathered by sensors on tanks, boilers, wats, or pipelines that may be spread over miles of facilities. That data may then be sent to a central processor to provide real-time process control. The digital control of steel mills, automated chemical production, and machine tools is carried out in this kind of hostile environment. The vulnerability of the data signals leads to the requirement for isolation and other techniques.At the other end of the spectrum-laboratory applications, such as test systems for gathering information on gas chromatographs, mass spectrometers, and other sophis-ticated instruments-the designers problems are concerned with the performing of sen-sitive measurements under favorable conditions rather than with the problem of pro-tecting the integrity of collected data under hostile conditions. Systems in hostile environments might require components for wide tempera-tures, shielding, common-mode noise reduction, conversion at an early stage, redun-dant circuits for critical measurements, and preprocessing of the digital data to test its reliability. Laboratory systems, on the other hand, will have narrower temperature ranges and less ambient noise. But the higher accuracies require sensitive devices, and a major effort may be necessary for the required signal /noise ratios. The choice of configuration and components in data-acquisition design depends on consideration of a number of factors: 1. Resolution and accuracy required in final format. 2. Number of analog sensors to be monitored. 3. Sampling rate desired. 4. Signal-conditioning requirement due to environment and accuracy. 5. Cost trade-offs. Some of the choices for a basic data-acquisition configuration include: 1 Single-channel techniques. A. Direct conversion. B. Preamplification and direct conversion. C. Sample-hold and conversion. D. Preamplification, sample-hold, and conversion. E. Preamplification, signal-conditioning, and direct conversion. F. Preamplification, signal-conditioning, sample-hold, and conversion. 2. Multichannel techniques. A. Multiplexing the outputs of single-channel converters. B. Multiplexing the outputs of sample-holds. C. Multiplexing the inputs of sample-holds. D. Multiplexing low-level data. E. More than one tier of multiplexers. Signal-conditioning may include: 1. Radiometric conversion techniques. B. Range biasing. D. Logarithmic compression. A. Analog filtering.B. Integrating converters. C. Digital data processing. We shall consider these techniques later, but first we will examine some of the components used in these data-acquisition system configurations. Multiplexers When more than one channel requires analog-to-digital conversion, it is neces-sary to use time-division multiplexing in order to connect the analog inputs to a single converter, or to provide a converter for each input and then combine the converter outputs by digital multiplexing. Analog Multiplexers Analog multiplexer circuits allow the timesharing of analog-to-digital converters between a numbers of analog information channels. An analog multiplexer consists of a group of switches arranged with inputs connected to the individual analog channels and outputs connected in common(as shown in Fig. 1)The switches may be ad-dressed by a digital input code. Many alternative analog switches are available in electromechanical and solid-state forms. Electromechanical switch types include relays, stepper switches, cross-bar switches, mercury-wetted switches, and dry-reed relay switches. The best switching speed is provided by reed relays(about 1 ms)The mechanical switches provide high do isolation resistance, low contact resistance, and the capacity to handle voltages up to 1 KV, and they are usually inexpensive. Multiplexers using mechanical switches are suited to low-speed applications as well as those having high resolution requirements. They interface well with the slower A/D converters, like the integrating dual-slope types. Mechanical switches have a finite life, however, usually expressed in number of operations. A reed relay might have a life of 109 operations, which would allow a 3-year life at 10 operations/second. Solid-state switch dev
温馨提示
- 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
- 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
- 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
- 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
- 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
最新文档
- 2025年新能源行业上市公司ESG信息披露质量与能源效率提升报告
- 2025年地热能与地源热泵结合的住宅供暖系统研究报告
- 针对金融衍生品市场2025年创新风险的金融风险管理方法研究报告
- 电子产品废弃物无害化处理与资源回收行业标准与认证分析报告
- 2025年环保产业园循环经济模式与绿色金融政策协同效应报告
- 活动三 巧手制农具说课稿-2023-2024学年小学劳动三年级上册东北师大版《学生劳动实践与评价指导手册》
- 2025年中国高分辨率音响(高保真音响)行业市场分析及投资价值评估前景预测报告
- 第五课 网络交流说课稿初中信息技术浙教版2013八年级上册-浙教版2013
- 实体化妆知识培训课程课件
- 6.自制水果果酱 教案小学劳动四年级上册(人民版)
- 智慧校园XXX学院总体解决方案
- 2025-2026学年人教版(2024)七年级上学期第一次月考英语试题(含答案无听力原文及音频)
- 2025年大学实验室安全知识试题及答案
- 商场品牌引进
- ICEEMDAN与优化LSSVM结合的大坝变形预测模型研究
- 钢结构施工工艺指导手册
- 新编民航乘务员英语教程 课件 李勇 Unit 1 Briefing -Unit 8 meal and beverage service I
- 2025年五年级语文上册重要知识点
- 宫颈恶性肿瘤的个案护理
- 环境工程专业导论课件
- kfc考试题目及答案
评论
0/150
提交评论