Instrumentation 1
Instrumentation 1
This tutorial provides minimal engineering science necessary to complete the rest
of the
tutorials. Greater depth of the individual topics can be found on the web site. It
is useful to
anyone studying measurement systems and instrumentation but it is provided mainly
in
support of the EC module D227 � Control System Engineering. This tutorial is very
basic.
On completion of this tutorial, you should be able to explain and use the following
basic
relationships used in mechanical and electrical engineering science.
� Basic units.
� Displacement, velocity and acceleration.
� Newton�s Second Law of Motion.
� Springs.
� Pressure and flow.
� Resistance, current, capacitance and inductance.
� Stress and strain.
� Resistivity and temperature coefficient of resistance.
. D.J.Dunn 1
1. UNITS
There are only 5 basic units used in engineering. These are
Also used in physics is luminous intensity Candela (Cd). All other quantities used
are multiples of these
units.
Angular
Angular velocity = rate of change of angle (rad/s)
2.2 ACCELERATION
Linear
Acceleration = rate of change of velocity (m/s2).
a = dv/dt = d2x/dt2
Angular
Angular acceleration = rate of change of velocity (rad/s2)
a = dw/dt = d2q/dt2
Linear
Angular
2.4. SPRING
Linear
Force = constant x change in length (N)
F = kx
Angular
Torque = Constant x angle (N m)
T = k q
. D.J.Dunn
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2.5. PRESSURE
Pressure = Force per unit area (N/m2)
p = F/A
1 Pascal = 1 N/m2
1 bar = 10 5 Pa
E = L di/dt
E = L d2q/dt2
3.4. CAPACITANCE
This law is equivalent to the spring law. Capacitance (C Farads) is the property of
a component which
enables it to store electric charge.
Q = C V (Coulombs)
1.
A spring is compressed 30 mm by a force of 50 N. Calculate the spring constant.
(1.67 N/mm)
2.
A mass of 30 kg is accelerated at a rate of 4 m/s2. Calculate the force used to do
it. (120 N)
3.
A flywheel is accelerated at a rate of 4 rad/s2 by a torque of 10 Nm. Calculate the
moment of inertia.
(2.5 kg m2)
4.
A force of 5000 N acts on an area of 400 mm2. Calculate the pressure in Pascals.
(12.5 MPa)
5.
A pipe 100 mm diameter carries oil at a mean velocity of 2 m/s. Calculate the flow
rate in m3/s.
(0.0157 m3/s)
6.
The current in an inductive coil changes at 30 A/s and the back emf is 3 V.
Calculate the inductance
in H. (0.1 H)
7.
A capacitor has a charge of 2 Coulombs at 24 V stored on it. Calculate the
capacitance in mF.
(83.3 mF)
8.
A flywheel turns 120 radians in 3 seconds at a constant rate. Calculate the angular
velocity. (40 rad/s)
. D.J.Dunn
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4. STRESS AND STRAIN
4.1. DIRECT STRESS s
When a force F acts directly on an area A as shown in figure 1, the resulting
direct stress is the force per
unit area and is given as
s = F/A.
where
F is the force normal to the area in Newtons
A is the area in m2
and s (sigma) is the direct stress in N/m2 or Pascals.
Since 1 Pa is a small unit kPa , MPa and GPa are commonly used also.
If the force pulls on the area so that the material is stretched then it is a
tensile force and stress and this is
positive.
If the force pushes on the surface so that the material is compressed, then the
force and stress is
Figure 1
Strains are normally very small so often to indicate a strain of 10-6 we use the
name micro strain and
write it as me.
For example we would write a strain of 7 x 10-6 as 7me.
E= s /e
and E is called the MODULUS OF ELASTICITY. The units are the same as those of
stress.
. D.J.Dunn 4
ELASTIC LIMIT
Figure 2
A typical value for the elastic limit of strain gauges is 3000 me.
A metal bar which is part of a frame is 50 mm diameter and 300 mm long. It has a
tensile force acting
on it of 40 kN which tends to stretch it. The modulus of elasticity is 205 GPa.
Calculate the stress and
strain in the bar and the amount it stretches.
SOLUTION
F = 40 x 103 N.
A = pD2/4 = p x 502/4 = 1963 mm2
s = F/A = (40 x103)/(1963 x 10-6) = 20.37 x 106 N/m2 =20.37 MPa
E = s /e = 205 x 109 N/m2
e = s/E = (20.37 x 106)/(205 x 109) = 99.4 x 10-6 or 99.4 me
e = DL/L
DL= e x L = 99.4 x 10-6 x 300 mm = 0.0298 mm
(e x)/(e y) = -n
Figure 3
. D.J.Dunn 5
SELF ASSESSMENT EXERCISE No.2
1.
A metal wire is 1 mm diameter and 1 m long. It is stretched by a force of 2 N.
Calculate the change in
diameter. E = 90 GPa and n = 0.3 (Answer -8.5 x 10-6 mm).
Explain what happens to the resistance of the wire.
2.
Explain the significance of Poisson's ratio to the behaviour of strain gauges.
5. RESISTIVITY
The resistance of a conductor increases with length L and decreases with cross
sectional area A so we
may say R is directly proportional to L and inversely proportional to A.
R = Constant x L/A
The constant is the resistivity of the material r hence R = rL/A Ohms
1.
Calculate the resistance of a copper wire 5 m long and 0.3 mm diameter. The
resistivity is 1.7 x 10-8
Ohm metre. (Answer 1.202 W)
2.
Calculate the resistance of a nichrome wire 2 m long and 0.2 mm diameter given r =
108 x 10-8
(Answer 68.75 W)
1.
A resistor has a nominal resistance of 120 W at 0 oC. Calculate the resistance at
20oC. Calculate the
change in resistance when the temperature drops by 5 degrees. a = 6 x 10 -3 W/W oC
(Answers 134.4 W and - 3.6W)
. D.J.Dunn
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