National Instruments X Series User Manual page 50

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MIO X Series devices are designed to have fast settling times. However, several factors can
increase the settling time which decreases the accuracy of your measurements. To ensure fast
settling times, you should do the following (in order of importance):
1.
Use Low Impedance Sources—To ensure fast settling times, your signal sources should
have an impedance of <1 kΩ. Large source impedances increase the settling time of the
NI-PGIA, and so decrease the accuracy at fast scanning rates.
Settling times increase when scanning high-impedance signals due to a phenomenon called
charge injection. Multiplexers contain switches, usually made of switched capacitors.
When one of the channels, for example channel 0, is selected in a multiplexer, those
capacitors accumulate charge. When the next channel, for example channel 1, is selected,
the accumulated charge leaks backward through channel 1. If the output impedance of the
source connected to channel 1 is high enough, the resulting reading of channel 1 can be
partially affected by the voltage on channel 0. This effect is referred to as ghosting.
If your source impedance is high, you can decrease the scan rate to allow the NI-PGIA more
time to settle. Another option is to use a voltage follower circuit external to your DAQ
device to decrease the impedance seen by the DAQ device. Refer to the document,
Eliminate Ghosting on Adjacent Input Channels by Decreasing Source Impedance,
by going to
ni.com/info
2.
Use Short High-Quality Cabling—Using short high-quality cables can minimize several
effects that degrade accuracy including crosstalk, transmission line effects, and noise. The
capacitance of the cable can also increase the settling time.
National Instruments recommends using individually shielded, twisted-pair wires that are
2 m or less to connect AI signals to the device. Refer to the
Signals
section for more information.
3.
Carefully Choose the Channel Scanning Order
Avoid Switching from a Large to a Small Input Range—Switching from a channel
with a large input range to a channel with a small input range can greatly increase the
settling time.
Suppose a 4 V signal is connected to channel 0 and a 1 mV signal is connected to
channel 1. The input range for channel 0 is -10 V to 10 V and the input range of
channel 1 is -200 mV to 200 mV.
When the multiplexer switches from channel 0 to channel 1, the input to the NI-PGIA
switches from 4 V to 1 mV. The approximately 4 V step from 4 V to 1 mV is 1,000%
of the new full-scale range. For a 16-bit device to settle within 0.0015% (15 ppm or
1 LSB) of the ±200 mV full-scale range on channel 1, the input circuitry must settle
to within 0.000031% (0.31 ppm or 1/50 LSB) of the ±10 V range. Some devices can
take many microseconds for the circuitry to settle this much.
To avoid this effect, you should arrange your channel scanning order so that transitions
from large to small input ranges are infrequent.
In general, you do not need this extra settling time when the NI-PGIA is switching
from a small input range to a larger input range.
and entering the Info Code
X Series User Manual
.
rdbbis
Connecting Analog Input
© National Instruments | 4-7

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