Electric and Electronic Measurements: Lecture-5:Measurement Errors
Electric and Electronic Measurements: Lecture-5:Measurement Errors
Electric and Electronic Measurements: Lecture-5:Measurement Errors
Lecture-5:Measurement Errors
1
Introduction
• Measurement is the process of comparing an unknown
quantity with an accepted standard quantity. It involves
connecting a measuring instrument into the system under
consideration and observing the resulting response on the
instrument.
2
Absolute Errors and Relative Errors
Error: The deviation of the true value from the measured value.
Absolute error may be defined as the difference between the
expected value of the variable and the measured value of the
variable:
e = absolute error
e = Yn - X n Yn = expected value
Xn = measured value
Yn - X n
Relative Error (%Error ) = ´ 100%
Yn
3
Absolute Errors and Relative Errors
It is more frequently expressed as accuracy rather than error.
Yn - X n
A = 1-
Yn
a = 100% - %error
a = A ´ 100%
a is the % accuracy.
4
Example The expected value of the voltage across
a resistor is 50 V. However, the measurement gives
a value of 49 V. Find:
a) Absolute error
b) % error
c) Relative accuracy
d) % accuracy
5
Solution
a) e = X t - X m = 50V - 49V = 1V
X t -X 50V - 49V
b) %Error = m
´100% = ´ 100% = 2%
Xt 50V
c) A = 1 - %Error = 1 - 2% = 0.98
d) %A cc = 100% - 2% = 98%
6
Example The expected value of the current through
a resistor is 20 mA. However, the measurement
yields a current value of 18 mA. Calculate:
a) Absolute error
b) % error
c) Relative accuracy
d) % accuracy
7
Solution
𝑎) 𝑒 = 𝑋' − 𝑋) = 20 – 18 = 2 mA
*+ ,*-
b) ﹪Error = ☓100% = 10%
*+
8
Accuracy, Precision, Resolution, and
Significant Figures
Instrument: A device or mechanism used to determine the present value
of the quantity under measurement.
Expected value: The design value, i.e. the most probable value that calculations
indicate one should expect to measure.
9
Accuracy, Precision, Resolution, and
Significant Figures
Precision: A measure of the consistency or repeatability of measurement, i.e.
successive reading do not differ. (Precision is the consistency of the instrument
output for a given value of input).
10
Accuracy, Precision, Resolution, and
Significant Figures
The precision of a measurement is a numerical indication of the closeness
with which a repeated set of measurement of the same variable agree with
the average set of measurement.
11
Example Table 1 gives the set of 10 measurement that were
recorded in the laboratory. Calculate the precision of the 5th
measurement.
Measurement number Measurement value Xn
1 98
2 101
3 102
4 97
5 101
6 100
7 103
8 98
9 106
12
10 99
Types of Errors
• Air conditioning.
17
Standard Deviation
§ The mean-squared value of the deviations can also be
calculated by first squaring each deviation value before
determining the average, which gives a quantity known as
variance.
Variance: the mean-squared value of the deviations
2 2 2
d + d + ...+ d
s2 = 1 2 n
n
§ Standard deviation: Taking the square root of the variance
produces the root mean square (rms) value.
18
Example The accuracy of five digital voltmeters are
checked by using each of them to measure a standard
1.0000V from a calibration instrument.
The voltmeter readings are as follows:
V1 = 1.001 V,
V2 = 1.002,
V3 = 0.999,
V4 = 0.998, and
V5 = 1.000.
Calculate the average measured voltage, the average
deviation, and the standard deviation.
19
Solution
V 1 +V 2 +V 3 +V 4 +V 5
V av =
5
1.001 + 1.002 + 0.999 + 0.998 + 1.000
= = 1.000V
5
20
Measurement Error Combinations
§ Sum of Quantities
o When a quantity is determined as the sum of two
measurements, the total error is the sum of the
absolute errors in each measurement.
21
Measurement Error Combinations
§ Difference of Quantities
o The error of the difference of two measurements are again
additive
22
Measurement Error Combinations
§ Product of Quantities
o When a calculated quantity is the product of two or more
quantities, the percentage error is the sum of the percentage
errors in each quantity.
P = EI
= ( E ± ΔE ) ( I ± ΔI )
= EI ± EΔ I ± IΔ E ± ΔEΔI
since DE DI is very small,
P » EI ± ( EΔ I ± IΔ E )
E DI + I DE
percentage error = ´ 100%
EI
æ DI ö æ DE ö
=ç ÷+ç ÷ ´ 100%
è I ø è E ø
E
% error in = (% error in E ) + (% error in I )
I
% error in A B = B (% error in A )
24
Measurement Error Combinations
Example: An 820Ω resistance with an accuracy of ±10% carries a current
of 10 mA. The current was measured by an analog ammeter on a 25mA
range with an accuracy of ±2% of full scale. Calculate the power dissipated
in the resistor, and determine the accuracy of the result.
Solution:
P = I 2 R = (10 mA) ´ 820W
2
= 82 mW
error in R = ± 10 %
error in I = ± 2% of 25 mA
= ± 0.5 mA
± 0.5 mA
= ´ 100% = ± 5%
10 mA
%error in I 2 = 2(± 5% ) = ± 10%
( )
%error in P = %error in I 2 + (%error in R )
= ± (10% + 10% ) = ± 20% 25
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