ASHRAE FUNDAMENTALS IP CH 36-2013 Measurement and Instruments.pdf
《ASHRAE FUNDAMENTALS IP CH 36-2013 Measurement and Instruments.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE FUNDAMENTALS IP CH 36-2013 Measurement and Instruments.pdf(38页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、36.1CHAPTER 36MEASUREMENT AND INSTRUMENTSTerminology . 36.1Uncertainty Analysis 36.3Temperature Measurement. 36.4Humidity Measurement 36.10Pressure Measurement. 36.13Air Velocity Measurement 36.15Flow Rate Measurement 36.20Air Infiltration, Airtightness, and Outdoor Air Ventilation Rate Measurement
2、36.24Carbon Dioxide Measurement. 36.25Electric Measurement. 36.26Rotative Speed Measurement . 36.27Sound and Vibration Measurement 36.27Lighting Measurement 36.30Thermal Comfort Measurement . 36.30Moisture Content and Transfer Measurement 36.32Heat Transfer Through Building Materials 36.33Air Contam
3、inant Measurement 36.33Combustion Analysis 36.33Data Acquisition and Recording 36.34VAC engineers and technicians require instruments for bothH laboratory work and fieldwork. Precision is more essential inthe laboratory, where research and development are undertaken, thanin the field, where acceptan
4、ce and adjustment tests are conducted.This chapter describes the characteristics and uses of some of theseinstruments.TERMINOLOGYThe following definitions are generally accepted.Accuracy. Ability of an instrument to indicate the true value ofmeasured quantity. This is often confused with inaccuracy,
5、 which isthe departure from the true value to which all causes of error (e.g.,hysteresis, nonlinearity, drift, temperature effect) contribute.Amplitude. Magnitude of variation from its equilibrium or aver-age value in an alternating quantity.Average. Sum of a number of values divided by the number o
6、fvalues.Bandwidth. Range of frequencies over which a given device isdesigned to operate within specified limits.Bias. Tendency of an estimate to deviate in one direction from atrue value (a systematic error).Calibration. (1) Process of comparing a set of discrete magni-tudes or the characteristic cu
7、rve of a continuously varying magni-tude with another set or curve previously established as a standard.Deviation between indicated values and their corresponding stan-dard values constitutes the correction (or calibration curve) for infer-ring true magnitude from indicated magnitude thereafter; (2)
8、 processof adjusting an instrument to fix, reduce, or eliminate the deviationdefined in (1). Calibration reduces bias (systematic) errors.Calibration curve. (1) Path or locus of a point that moves so thatits graphed coordinates correspond to values of input signals andoutput deflections; (2) plot of
9、 error versus input (or output).Confidence. Degree to which a statement (measurement) isbelieved to be true.Deadband. Range of values of the measured variable to which aninstrument will not effectively respond. The effect of deadband issimilar to hysteresis, as shown in Figure 1.Deviate. Any item of
10、 a statistical distribution that differs from theselected measure of control tendency (average, median, mode).Deviation. Difference between a single measured value and themean (average) value of a population or sample.Diameter, equivalent. The diameter of a circle having the samearea as the rectangu
11、lar flow channel cross section.Deviation, standard. Square root of the average of the squares ofthe deviations from the mean (root mean square deviation). A mea-sure of dispersion of a population.Distortion. Unwanted change in wave form. Principal forms ofdistortion are inherent nonlinearity of the
12、device, nonuniformresponse at different frequencies, and lack of constant proportional-ity between phase-shift and frequency. (A wanted or intentionalchange might be identical, but it is called modulation.)Drift. Gradual, undesired change in output over a period of timethat is unrelated to input, en
13、vironment, or load. Drift is gradual; ifvariation is rapid and recurrent, with elements of both increasing anddecreasing output, the fluctuation is referred to as cycling.Dynamic error band. Spread or band of output-amplitude devi-ation incurred by a constant-amplitude sine wave as its frequency isv
14、aried over a specified portion of the frequency spectrum (see Staticerror band).Emissivity. Ratio of the amount of radiation emitted by a real sur-face to that of an ideal (blackbody) emitter at the same temperature.Error. Difference between the true or actual value to be measured(input signal) and
15、the indicated value (output) from the measuringsystem. Errors can be systematic or random.Error, accuracy. See Error, systematic.Error, fixed. See Error, systematic.Error, instrument. Error of an instruments measured value thatincludes random or systematic errors.Error, precision. See Error, random.
16、Error, probable. Error with a 50% or higher chance of occur-rence. A statement of probable error is of little value.Error, random. Statistical error caused by chance and not recur-ring. This term is a general category for errors that can take values oneither side of an average value. To describe a r
17、andom error, its dis-tribution must be known.Error, root mean square (RMS). Accuracy statement of a sys-tem comprising several items. For example, a laboratory potentiom-eter, volt box, null detector, and reference voltage source haveindividual accuracy statements assigned to them. These errors areg
18、enerally independent of one another, so a system of these units dis-plays an accuracy given by the square root of the sum of the squaresof the individual limits of error. For example, four individual errorsof 0.1% could yield a calibrated error of 0.4% but an RMS error ofonly 0.2%.Error, systematic.
19、 Persistent error not due to chance; systematicerrors are causal. It is likely to have the same magnitude and signfor every instrument constructed with the same components andprocedures. Errors in calibrating equipment cause systematic errorsThe preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 1.2, Ins
20、truments andMeasurements.36.2 2013 ASHRAE HandbookFundamentalsbecause all instruments calibrated are biased in the direction of thecalibrating equipment error. Voltage and resistance drifts over timeare generally in one direction and are classed as systematic errors.Frequency response (flat). Portio
21、n of the frequency spectrumover which the measuring system has a constant value of amplituderesponse and a constant value of time lag. Input signals that havefrequency components within this range are indicated by the mea-suring system (without distortion).Hydraulic diameter Dh. Defined as 4Ac/Pwet,
22、 where Acis flowcross-sectional area and Pwetis the wetted perimeter (perimeter incontact with the flowing fluid). For a rectangular duct with dimen-sions W H, the hydraulic diameter is Dh= 2HW/(H + W ). Therelated quantity effective or equivalent diameter is defined as thediameter of a circular tub
23、e having the same cross-sectional area asthe actual flow channel. For a rectangular flow channel, the effectivediameter is Deff= .Hysteresis. Summation of all effects, under constant environ-mental conditions, that cause an instruments output to assumedifferent values at a given stimulus point when
24、that point isapproached with increasing or decreasing stimulus. Hysteresisincludes backlash. It is usually measured as a percent of full scalewhen input varies over the full increasing and decreasing range. Ininstrumentation, hysteresis and deadband exhibit similar outputerror behavior in relation t
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
10000 积分 0人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- ASHRAEFUNDAMENTALSIPCH362013MEASUREMENTANDINSTRUMENTSPDF

链接地址:http://www.mydoc123.com/p-454751.html