Measurement Specialties CIO-SSH16 Common Misunderstandings, Ground Loops, LOW Pass Filters

Page 24

the designer of the board (or other EE) would be able to translate that into a systems specification, most A/D board owners are confused or mislead by such specs.

6.3 COMMON MISUNDERSTANDINGS

The CMR specification of a differential input is often confused with an isolation specification, which it is not. CMR of 10 volts is not the same as 10 volts of isolation. The graph above shows why.

Also, failure to specify the common mode plus signal system specification leads people to believe that a DC offset equal to the component CMR can be rejected regardless of the input signal voltage. It cannot as the graph above illustrates.

When is a differential input useful? The answer is whenever electromagnetic interference (EMI) or radio frequency interference (RFI) may be present in the path of the signal wires. EMI and RFI can induce voltages on both signal wires and the effect on single ended inputs is generally a voltage fluctuation between signal high and signal ground.

A differential input is not affected in that way. When the signal high and signal low of a differential input have EMI or RFI voltage induced on them, that common mode voltage is rejected, subject to the system constraint that common mode plus signal not exceed the A/D board's CSR specification.

6.4 GROUND LOOPS

Ground loops are circuits (E=I*R) created when the signal ground and the PC ground are not the same. Ground loop inducing voltage differential may be a few volts of hundreds of volts. They may be constant or transient (spikes). A differential input will prevent a ground loop as long as the CSR specifications is not exceeded.

If ground differences greater than the CMR are encountered, isolation is required.

6.5 LOW PASS FILTERS

A low pass filter is placed on the signal wires between a signal and an A/D board. It stops frequencies greater than the cut off frequency from entering the A/D board's analog or digital inputs.

The key term in a low pass filter circuit is cut-off frequency. The cut-off frequency is that frequency above which no variation of voltage can enter the circuit. For example, if a low pass filter had a cut-off frequency of 30 Hz, the kind of interference

20

Image 24
Contents CIO-SSH16 Copyright 2000 Measurement Computing Corp Adding Amplifiers & Sample / Hold Chips This page is blank Software Installation Hardware InstallationIntroduction Power Cable Signal Cable Power ConnectorAnalog Input Board Setup Gain SwitchesSignal Connection Connector DiagramAnalog Inputs Floating DifferentialDifferential ExamplePage Architecture Analog InputAmplification CIO-SSH16 vs. Programmable Gain A/D Boards Sample & Hold S15 S16 Sample and Hold Timing Diagram Droop RateResolution Calculation Adding Amplifiers Sample / Hold ChipsRange Calculation Time to Sample CalculationSpecifications Analog input sectionSample / hold section Analog Electronics Voltage DividersPage Common Mode Range Differential & Single Ended InputsPage Common Misunderstandings Ground LoopsLOW Pass Filters A/D Resolution & Engineering Units Converter # VoltsEngineering Units Current Loop 4-20 mANoise Sources of NoiseSignal Wire Noise Sensor NoiseSmoothing Data For your notes EC Declaration of Conformity