Connecting Floating Signal Sources; What Are Floating Signal Sources; When To Use Differential Connections With Floating Signal Sources; When To Use Non-Referenced Single-Ended (Nrse) Connections With Floating Signal Sources - National Instruments NI 6221 User Manual

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Connecting Floating Signal Sources

What Are Floating Signal Sources?

When to Use Differential Connections with Floating Signal Sources

When to Use Non-Referenced Single-Ended (NRSE) Connections with
Floating Signal Sources
© National Instruments Corporation
A floating signal source is not connected to the building ground system, but
has an isolated ground-reference point. Some examples of floating signal
sources are outputs of transformers, thermocouples, battery-powered
devices, optical isolators, and isolation amplifiers. An instrument or device
that has an isolated output is a floating signal source.
Use DIFF input connections for any channel that meets any of the following
conditions:
The input signal is low level (less than 1 V).
The leads connecting the signal to the device are greater than 3 m
(10 ft).
The input signal requires a separate ground-reference point or return
signal.
The signal leads travel through noisy environments.
Two analog input channels, AI+ and AI–, are available for the signal.
DIFF signal connections reduce noise pickup and increase common-mode
noise rejection. DIFF signal connections also allow input signals to float
within the common-mode limits of the NI-PGIA.
Refer to the
Using Differential Connections for Floating Signal Sources
section for more information about differential connections.
Only use NRSE input connections if the input signal meets the following
conditions.
The input signal is high-level (greater than 1 V).
The leads connecting the signal to the device are less than 3 m (10 ft).
DIFF input connections are recommended for greater signal integrity for
any input signal that does not meet the preceding conditions.
In the single-ended modes, more electrostatic and magnetic noise couples
into the signal connections than in DIFF configurations. The coupling is the
4-15
Chapter 4
Analog Input
M Series User Manual

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