01-08-2007 03:46 PM
01-09-2007 01:01 PM - edited 01-09-2007 01:01 PM
Message Edited by Jeff T. on 01-09-2007 01:07 PM
09-06-2012 08:09 AM - edited 09-06-2012 08:18 AM
Hello,
This is an old topic but I had to reply because we have a problem with the channel-to-channel voltage restriction of NI 9206. What we try to do is measure the voltage of twelve series connected li-ion cells in a battery stack, each cell to a seperate channel in differential configuration. The open circuit voltage is 4.2 V for an individual cell when it is fully charged, and 3.7V nominal. There seems to be no problem if the number of cells is less than 6, however it is impossible to measure the voltage properly if we connect more than 6 batteries, therefore we can't use the 9206 with this battery stack configuration. This channel-to-channel voltage limit of ~20V or so doesn't clearly exist in technical specifications, it took a long while to figure out where the trouble was. We thought 9206 would be the best choice for our test system after carefully comparing the specs of all available products. Is it really possible to achieve what we need without saturating the device? Would you mind guiding us on how to solve the problem?
Thank you very much in advance,
MCMC
09-06-2012 11:19 AM - edited 09-06-2012 11:20 AM
Hi MCMC,
The limitation you are running into is the maximum working voltage. Here is the relevent spec from the NI 9206 Operating Instructions and Specifications:
6 batteries at 3.7V technically violates this spec since the total voltage is 22.2V. Even if you put COM at the middle of 11.1V, you would still be over the 10.4V limit. This is probably still close enough for the device to make a measurement, but it is still out of spec. It makes sense that adding another battery results in an incorrect measurement.
As for options for measuring 12 batteries, there are a couple ways you could go about this. One way is to get 3x 9206. Each 9206 would then handle 4 of the batteries, so it does not violate the working voltage spec listed above.
The most cost effective way would be to use the NI 9221. It has a +/-60V range. The downside is the resolution is only 12 bits and it is spread across a 120V range so the resolution is not as good as the 9206. The overall accuracy is an order of magnitude worse than the 9206 as well. You would need 2x 9221 to get the channel count for your application. Also, this is a single ended device.
09-07-2012 02:47 AM
Hi Steven,
Thanks a lot for your answer. I think we will try to build identical resistive voltage dividers for each channel in order to decrease the overall
voltage, but i'm afraid the accuracy will suffer. If this doesn't work then 3x 9206 or 2x 9221 seems to be the only solution.
All the best,
MCMC
09-07-2012 01:27 PM - edited 09-07-2012 01:27 PM
Hi MCMC,
You want to be careful when using voltage divider to step down voltage for measurement. Most of our cards are multiplexed devices (including the 9206 and 9201), so there is a RC circuit in line before the ADC. By having too high of a resistive load, the time to discharge the capacitor increases, which can cause ghosting. Here is a good article on multiplexing and ghosting:
How Do I Eliminate Ghosting From My Measurements?
08-19-2013 12:59 AM
Hello,
I know this is an old topic but I have a concern about the same issue. I have a small electrical network and i'm collecting arbitrary measurements from PTs and CTs. Is NI 9205 ok and will it work properly or should I go to 9206?
Your help is appreciated in advance.
08-20-2013 09:04 AM
Hi engahmedtg,
What would be the requirements for your application?