Oscilloscope Tutorial
Oscilloscope Tutorial
– Many measurement are made easier by the CRO because it will display
not only amplitude, but also time and wave shape relationships.
• This simple graph can tell you many things about a signal:
– You can determine the time and voltage values of a signal.
– You can calculate the frequency of an oscillating signal.
– You can see the "moving parts" of a circuit represented by the
signal.
– You can tell if a malfunctioning component is distorting the signal.
– You can find out how much of a signal is direct current (DC) or
alternating current (AC).
– You can tell how much of the signal is noise and whether the noise
is changing with time.
OSCILLOSCOPE - TRIGGER
!! every scan draws a new trace !!
17
Triggering Stabilizes a Repeating Waveform
OSCILLOSCOPE - TRIGGER
Trigger event:
- input signal crosses the trigger level
- detection by voltage comparator
- rising (positive) OR falling (negative) edge
- trigger starts new scan
19
OSCILLOSCOPE - TRIGGER
Trigger-setting
20
OSCILLOSCOPE - TRIGGER
SINGLE
- one shot mode
- the scan starts only once at first trigger event
- for next scan new start needed (manually)
NORMAL
- scan restarts only on trigger event
- at the end waiting for next event
- with no trigger events - not any trace
AUTO
- scan restarts automatically at each end of scan
- trace is always shown without input signal
- small signal does generate “trigger”- sliding waveforms
21
Waveform shapes tell you a great deal about a signal
If a signal repeats, it has a frequency. The frequency is measured in Hertz (Hz) and
equals the number of times the signal repeats itself in one second
Voltage, Current, & Phase
Performance Terms
• Bandwidth
– The bandwidth specification tells you the frequency range
the oscilloscope accurately measures.
• Rise Time
– Rise time may be a more appropriate performance
consideration when you expect to measure pulses and steps.
An oscilloscope cannot accurately display pulses with rise
times faster than the specified rise time of the oscilloscope.
• Vertical Sensitivity
– The vertical sensitivity indicates how much the vertical
amplifier can amplify a weak signal. Vertical sensitivity is
usually given in millivolts (mV) per division.
• Sweep Speed
– For analog oscilloscopes, this specification indicates how
fast the trace can sweep across the screen, allowing you to
see fine details. The fastest sweep speed of an oscilloscope
is usually given in nanoseconds/div.
• Gain Accuracy
– The gain accuracy indicates how accurately the vertical system
attenuates or amplifies a signal.
• Time Base or Horizontal Accuracy
– The time base or horizontal accuracy indicates how accurately the
horizontal system displays the timing of a signal.
Sample Rate
– On digital oscilloscopes, the sampling rate indicates how many
samples per second the ADC can acquire. Maximum sample rates
are usually given in megasamples per second (MS/s). The faster
the oscilloscope can sample, the more accurately it can represent
fine details in a fast signal..
• ADC Resolution (Or Vertical Resolution)
– The resolution, in bits, of the ADC indicates how precisely it can
turn input voltages into digital values.
• Record Length
– The record length of a digital oscilloscope indicates how many
waveform points the oscilloscope is able to acquire for one
waveform record.
Grounding
• Proper grounding is an important step when setting up to take
measurements.
• Properly grounding the oscilloscope protects you from a hazardous
shock and protects your circuits from damage.
• Grounding the oscilloscope is necessary for safety. If a high voltage
contacts the case of an ungrounded oscilloscope, any part of the
case, including knobs that appear insulated, it can give you a shock.
However, with a properly grounded oscilloscope, the current travels
through the grounding path to earth ground rather than through you
to earth ground.
• To ground the oscilloscope means to connect it to an electrically
neutral reference point (such as earth ground). Ground your
oscilloscope by plugging its three-pronged power cord into an outlet
grounded to earth ground.
• Grounding is also necessary for taking accurate measurements with
your oscilloscope. The oscilloscope needs to share the same ground
as any circuits you are testing.
• Some oscilloscopes do not require the separate connection to earth
ground. These oscilloscopes have insulated cases and controls,
which keeps any possible shock hazard away from the user.
Scope Probes
Most passive probes have some degree of attenuation factor, such as 10X,
100X, and so on. By convention, attenuation factors, such as for the 10X
attenuator probe, have the X after the factor.
In contrast, magnification factors like X10 have the X first
Vertical Controls
35
Digital oscilloscope
• Capture and view events
– Digital storage oscilloscope (DSO)
36
Digital oscilloscope (contd.)
Sampling
Interpolation
37
Advantage of Digital Scope
Trend towards digital.
Easy to use.
One-shot measurement
Recoding
Triggering
Data reuse
Connectivity
38
Probes
• Components
39
Probes
• High quality connector
• High impedance (10M)
• 50 for high frequency measurement
40
Passive probe
• 10 attenuation
– Good for low circuit loading
– Suitable to high frequency signal
– Difficult to measure less than 10mV
signals
• 1 attenuation
– Good for small signals
– Introducing more interference
41
Active probe
• Signal conditioning ⇒ oscilloscope
• Require power source
• Good for high speed digital signals over
100MHz clock frequency
42
OSCILLOSCOPE: Mind the ground connection !!!!
43
• The work done on each electron from the filament
is
W = eV
where V is the p.d. across the filament and the
anode.
• Electron-volt
The electron-volt is an amount of energy equal to
the work done on an electron moved through a
p.d. of 1V.
19
1 electron-volt = 1.6 10 J
Properties of Electron Beams
(Cathode rays)
• Cathode rays travel in straight lines.
• Cathode rays can cause fluorescence.
• Cathode rays can be deflected by electric
field and magnetic field.
• Cathode rays may produce heat and X-rays.
• Cathode rays can affect photographic plates.
Deflection of Electrons in a
Uniform Electric Field (1)
• Consider an electron beam directed between two
oppositely charged parallel plates as shown below.
• With a constant potential difference between the two
deflecting plates, the trace is curved towards the
positive plate.
+
-
Deflection of Electrons in a
Uniform Electric Field (2)
• The force acting on each electron in the field
is given by
eVP
F eE
d
where E = electric field strength,
Vp = p.d. between plates,
d = plate spacing.
Deflection of Electrons in a
Uniform Electric Field (3)
• The vertical displacement y is given by
1 2 1 eV p 2
y at ( )t
2 2 md
1 eVp x 2
( ) 2
2 md v
This is the equation for a parabola.
Deflection of Electrons in a
Uniform Magnetic Field (1)
• The force F acting on an electron in a
uniform magnetic field is given by
F Bev
http://surendranath.tripod.com/Lissajous/Lissajous.html
POINTS TO REMEMBER:
• 1. CRO is used to study waveforms.
• 2. CRT is the main component of a CRO.
• 3. Prosperous P31 is used for the fluorescent screen of a CRO.
• 4. A CRO has the following components:
• (a) Electron gun
• (b) Deflecting system
• (c) Florescent screen
• 5. Lissajous figures are used to measure frequency and phase of the waves
under study.
• 6. A time-base generator produces saw-tooth voltage.
• 7. An oscilloscope amplifier is used to provide a faithful representation of
input signal applied to its input terminals.
IMPORTANT FORMULAE: