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METROLOGÍA E
INSTRUMENTACIÓN
• Instrumentación Industrial por Antonio Creus – 8va edición
• Fundamentals of Industrial Instrumentation and Process Control by
William C. Dunn
UNIT 1
Fundamentals of Metrology and Metrological Instruments
INTRODUCTION
At the beginning of the industrial age, measurements did not need
higher precision, the manufactured products were controlled manually.
This involved a person in charge of controlling the process.
Currently, variables must be measured more accurately and quickly, in
addition to, the process control is done automatically through
instrumentation and controls in such a way that people are needed
only to supervise the process.
Some types of instruments for measuring variables in the process are:
length, pressure, temperature, level, flow, humidity, pH, etc.
INTRODUCTION
VOCABULARY RELATED TO
MEASUREMENT AND CONTROL
RANGE (campo de medida)
(The measurement field) is the spectrum or set of values of the
measured variable that fall within the upper and lower limits of the
instrument's measurement, reception or transmission capacity. It is
expressed by establishing the two extreme values.
RANGEABILITY
Quotient between the upper and lower measurement value of an
instrument.
SPAN (alcance)
Algebraic difference between the upper and lower values of the
instrument's measuring range
Span: 10
Span: 450
Span: 16mA
ERROR
Measure of the deviation presented by the practical measures of a
process variable in relation to the theoretical or ideal measures, as a
result of the imperfections of the equipment and the parasitic variables
that affect the process. That is to say:
Absolute error = Read value - True value
Relative error = Absolute error/True error
ERROR
When a measurement is carried out with the participation of several
instruments, placed one after the other, the final value of the
measurement will be determined by the errors inherent in each one of
the instruments.
Ex: 4 instruments: A, B, C, D. 4 errors: ±a, ±b, ±c, ±d.
Maximum possible error a+b+c+d
Maximum probable error ± 𝑎2 + 𝑏 2 + 𝑐 2 + 𝑑2
ERROR
Calcular:
• Error máximo posible
• El error máximo
probable
2%
0.5%
0.5%
0.5%
HYSTERESIS
The hysteresis (hysteresis) is the maximum difference that is observed
in the values indicated by the index or the pen of the instrument or the
output signal for the same value of the measurement field, when the
variable travels the entire scale in both directions , ascending and
descending.
It is expressed as a percentage of the span.
This is due to stresses induced into the material of the instrument by
changing its shape in going from zero to full-scale deflection.
HYSTERESIS
Compute the
hysteresis of this
manometer
True
pressure
(psi)
80G100auge
reading
pressure
(psi)
Difference
Hysteresis
(%)
0
20
40
60
80
100
80
60
40
20
0
1.2
19.5
37.0
57.3
81.0
104.2
83.0
63.2
43.1
22.5
1.5
0.3
3.0
6.1
5.9
2.0
0
0.3
3.0
6.1
5.9
2.0
0
ACCURACY (exactitud)
Quality of a measuring instrument by which it tends to give readings
close to the true value of the measured quantity. It is the difference
between the indicated value and the actual value.
Accuracy depends on linearity, hysteresis, offset, drift, and sensitivity.
The resulting discrepancy is stated as a ± deviation from the true value,
and is normally specified as a percentage of full-scale reading or
deflection (%FSD).
Accuracy can also be expressed as the percentage of span, percentage
of reading, or an absolute value.
ACCURACY (examples)
a) Percentage of the span, (range). Example: range goes from 100°C to
300°C, for a reading of 150°C and an accuracy of ± 0.5%, the actual
temperature value will be between 150 ± 0.5 × 200/100 = 150 ± 1, that is,
between 149°C and 151°C.
b) Directly, in units of the measured variable. Example: accuracy ± 1°C.
c) Percentage of the reading made. Example: accuracy of ± 1% of 150°C,
that is, ± 1.5°C.
d) Percentage of the maximum value of the measurement field. Example:
accuracy ± 0.5% of 300°C = ± 1.5°C.
e) Percent of the scale length. Example: If the scale length of the instrument
in Figure 1.3 is 150 mm, the accuracy of ± 0.5% will represent ± 0.75 mm
on the scale.
PRECISION
Quality of an instrument by which it tends to give readings very close to
each other, that is, it is the degree of dispersion of the same.
DEAD ZONE or DEAD BAND
Is the field of values of the variable that does not vary the indication or
the output signal of the instrument, that is, it does not produce its
response. It is given as a percentage of the span. For example: dead
zone is ± 0.1% and span is 200°C, then, dead zone in values is 0.1 ×
200/100 = ± 0.2°C.
OTHER TERMS
Measuring Range with Zero Elevation.- It is that measurement field in
which the zero value of the measured variable or signal is greater than
the lower value of the field. For example, -10°C to 30°C.
Campo de medida con supresión de cero.- It is that measurement field
in which the zero value of the measured variable or signal is less than
the lower value of the field. For example, 20°C to 60°C.
Zero elevation.- It is the amount by which the lower value of the field
exceeds the zero value of the variable. It can be expressed in units of
the measured variable or in % of the span. For example, 20°C in the
20°C to 60°C range of the instrument, that is (20/40) × 100 = 50%.
OTHER TERMS
Drift (deriva).- It is a variation in the output signal that occurs in a given
period of time while keeping the measured variable and all
environmental conditions constant. The drift from zero (variation in the
output signal for the zero value of the measurement attributable to any
internal cause) and the thermal drift from zero (variation in the output
signal at zero measurement, due to the unique effects of temperature).
Drift is usually expressed as a percentage of the full scale output signal
at room temperature, per unit, or per range of temperature variation.
For example, the zero thermal drift of an instrument under room
temperature conditions for 1 month was 0.2% of span.
OTHER TERMS
Reliability .- The probability that an instrument will continue to behave
within specified limits of error over a specified time and under
specified conditions.
Resolution.- Smallest amount of a variable that an instrument can
resolve.
Noise.- Any electrical disturbance or accidental unwanted signal that
modifies the transmission, indication or recording of the desired data.
Reproducibility.- Ability of an instrument to repeatedly read the same
signal over time, and give the same output under the same conditions.
An instrument may not be accurate but can have good reproducibility
OTHER TERMS
Repeatability.-Is the reproducibility of the positions of the pen or of
the index or of the output signal of the instrument, when repeatedly
measuring identical values of the variable under the same operating
conditions and in the same direction of variation, going all over the
field. Repeatability is synonymous with precision.
σ 𝑥𝑖 − 𝑥
𝑁
2
OTHER TERMS
Sensitivity.- Ratio between the increase in the output signal or the reading
and the increase in the variable that causes it, after reaching the rest state.
For example, if in a 0-10 bar electronic transmitter, the pressure goes from 5
to 5.5 bar and the output signal goes from 11.9 to 12.3 mA DC, the sensitivity
is the quotient:
12.3 − 11.9
20 − 4 = ±0.5𝑚𝐴𝑐𝑐/𝑏𝑎𝑟
5.5 − 5
10
Traceability.- Property of the result of measurements carried out with an
instrument or with a standard, such that it can be related to national or
international standards, through an uninterrupted chain of comparisons and
with all determined uncertainties.
UNCERTAINTY
It is the dispersion of the values that can be reasonably attributed to the true
value of the measured quantity.
Sources of uncertainty:
• Influence of environmental conditions.
• Different readings of analog instruments made by operators.
• Variations in repeated observations of the measure under apparently
identical conditions.
• Inaccurate values of the standard instruments.
• Product sample not representative. For example, in temperature
measurement with a glass standard thermometer, the mass of the bulb
changes the temperature of the process sample whose temperature is to be
measured.
UNCERTAINTY
For the comparison to be correct, the general procedure is that the
measurement standard is sufficiently more precise than that of the device
being calibrated (ratio 4:1).
The measuring (mesurando) can be measured directly (for example, the
temperature of a body with a thermometer) or indirectly from other
mathematically or functionally related magnitudes.
There are two uncertainties A and B present in the measurement.
The A's are related to random sources of error and can be evaluated from
statistical distributions (readings on the instrument), while the B's are
associated to systemic errors and correspond to the uncertainty of the
calibrator, the resolution of the instrument and the influence of other
magnitudes (temperature, external fields, humidity, position, etc.)
UNCERTAINTY
Combined uncertainty Uc
𝑢𝑐 =
𝑢𝐴2 + 𝑢𝐵2
Expanded uncertainty Uexpanded
Uexpanded=kuc
K = Coverage or safety factor that is determined according to the
confidence level of the uncertainty,
STUDENT'S T-VALUES FOR DIFFERENT LEVELS
OF CONFIDENCE AND DEGREES OF FREEDOM
STUDENT'S T-VALUES FOR DIFFERENT LEVELS
OF CONFIDENCE AND DEGREES OF FREEDOM
UNCERTAINTY type “A”
Thus, in a series of repeated measures of the variable, the value is given x is
given by the arithmetic mean or average of the observed values:
𝑛
1
𝑥 = ෍ 𝑥𝑖
𝑛
𝑖=1
The estimated value of the experimental variance:
1
1
2
2
2
𝜎 𝑥 =
෍ 𝑥𝑖 − 𝑥ҧ
𝑜𝑟 𝑏𝑒𝑡𝑡𝑒𝑟, 𝜎 𝑥 =
෍ 𝑥𝑖 − 𝑥ҧ
𝑛−1
𝑛 𝑛−1
Its positive square root is the experimental standard deviation of the
𝑠(𝑥)
arithmetic mean that is equal to the standard uncertainty. 𝑈 𝑥ҧ =
𝑛
2
MULTIPLYING FACTOR OF THE NUMBER OF
MEASUREMENTS
When the number of repetitive measurements is less than 10, the
standard deviation must be multiplied by a multiplying factor.
UNCERTAINTY type “B”
It is determined based on the information available from various
sources, such as:
• Data from previous measurements.
• Experience and knowledge of the instruments.
• Manufacturer's specifications.
• Uncertainty values from technical manuals.
UNCERTAINTY type “B”
coverage factor=1.65 (= 0.95 × 3) and confidence level=95%:
𝑢 𝑥𝑖 = 𝑠(𝑥)
𝑢 𝑥𝑖 =
𝑏−𝑎
12
2
o
𝑏−𝑎
3
𝑢 𝑥𝑖 =
𝑏−𝑎
24
2
𝑜
𝑏−𝑎
6
UNCERTAINTY AND PROPAGATION OF ERRORS
Si z=f(x,y)
𝑢𝑧2
𝜕𝑧
=
𝑢𝑥
𝜕𝑥
2
𝜕𝑧
+
𝑢𝑥
𝜕𝑥
𝐴
2
𝜕𝑧
+
𝑢𝑦
𝜕𝑦
𝐵
2
𝜕𝑧
+
𝑢𝑦
𝜕𝑦
𝐴
2
𝐵
EXCERCISE 3
Determinar la incertidumbre en la medición de la densidad de una
sustancia. Instrumentos usados:
DATOS
PESO (g)
1
23.28
2
23.279
3
23.279
4
23.28
5
23.281
6
23.278
7
23.28
8
23.279
9
23.279
10
23.28
PROMEDIO
23.280
VARIANZA
7.22222E-07
DESVIAC.
0.000849837
DATOS
VOLUMEN (ml) DENSIDAD
24.75
0.94060606
25.00
0.93116
24.75
0.94056566
25.25
0.9219802
25.00
0.93124
25.00
0.93112
25.00
0.9312
24.75
0.94056566
25.00
0.93116
25.00
0.9312
24.95
0.025
0.158113883
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