This authoritative new book focuses on recent developments in
the instrumentation for sending voltages and currents. It covers
new trends and challenges in the field, such as measurements of
biocurrents, the increased speed of the components for data taking,
testing of computers and integrated circuits where the measurement
of rapid voltage and current variations on a very small geometrical
scale is necessary. The first chapter concentrates on recent
methods to sense voltages and currents, while the rest of the book
investigates the applied side, covering for instance electrical
power and energy measurements. The main purpose of this volume is
to illustrate commonly employed techniques rather than track the
scientific evolution and merits and therefore mainly covers patent
literature aimed at industrial applications. It is an exciting
addition, justifying the series' claim to cover state-of-the-art
developments in both the applied and theoretical fields of sensors
and actuators.
The measurement of voltages and currents is a common task in the
field of electricity and electronics. From a technical point of
view it is useful to identify schematically different steps of such
a measurement. In a first step a voltage or a current is sensed,
intermediate steps such as amplification, transmission and further
treatment may follow to yield the result in the final step. Today
in most cases microprocessors perform the final steps of such
measurements. Analog-to digital converters digitise a voltage that
is proportional to the value to be measured and a processor
performs further computations and handles the storage and the
display of the results. The prerequisite for such measurements are
sensors or transducers that respond in a known way to the voltage
or current to be measured. The emphasis of this book is put on
recent developments of the instrumentation for sensing voltages and
currents.
Aside from the general trend towards smaller, cheaper and more
reliable instrumentation, new demands have arisen. New
applications, like measurements of biocurrents, ask for higher
sensitivities. Computers and integrated circuits pose new
challenges. To exploit the increased speed of the components for
data taking, suitable sensors are required. The accuracy that can
be achieved depends more than ever on the first step, the
acquisition of the raw data. The influence of the measurement
process on the results becomes more crucial. Testing of integrated
circuits themselves is a completely new application. For such tests
one has to measure rapid voltage and current variations on very
small geometrical scales. Here, as well as in the traditional high
voltage applications, contactless measurements play an important
role.
The organisation of this book is as follows: In the first
chapter different methods to sense voltages and currents are
described. For the sake of completeness most commonly used methods
are mentioned, we concentrate, however, on those developed
recently. The chapters address the subject from the side of
different applications in which voltages and currents are
sensed.
Since the main purpose of this publication is to illustrate
commonly employed techniques rather than to track the scientific
evolution and merits in particular fields, in general those
publications that illustrate a particular measurement principle
best have been cited. The citation of a particular reference does
therefore not imply that this is the first or most pertinent
publication in the respective field.
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