Signal Conditioning

cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

NI-9232 and ICP 224C

Solved!
Go to solution

Hi All,

 

Have been a LabView user for ~6 years, mainly working on Real-Time Data Acquisition with DIO signals. This is my first step into RT data acquisition of a force measurements. 

 

Currently interfacing a NI-9232 C-Series module to Piezotronics 224C ICP force sensor. The data sheet for the force sensor is attached. My question comes done to power excitation. It appears that the 224C sensor needs 2-20mA of excitation current in addition to a supply voltage of 20-30V. My question is, does the NI-9232 Excitation Current source satisfy the sensor needs, or will I need to utilize an external signal conditioner to meet the 224C sensor requirements?

 

Thanks in advance!

0 Kudos
Message 1 of 5
(133 Views)
Solution
Accepted by topic author __E.E.alex__

yes, they're compatible.

santo_13_0-1757995753483.png

 

Excitation current and compliance voltage are within range of sensor specs 2-20mA and 20-30V

 

Excitation and Compliance Voltage for IEPE Sensors in NI Cards - NI

 

Santhosh
Soliton Technologies

New to the forum? Please read community guidelines and how to ask smart questions

Only two ways to appreciate someone who spent their free time to reply/answer your question - give them Kudos or mark their reply as the answer/solution.

Finding it hard to source NI hardware? Try NI Trading Post
Message 2 of 5
(108 Views)
Solution
Accepted by topic author __E.E.alex__

As Santo already mentioned: YES you can use and power this senor with the 9232.

 

IEPE sensors must be powered by a constant current supply (as the 9232 will do) , if you try to power it with a constant voltage source you will fry the sensor!

 

The noted excitation volage (or compliance voltage) is the  voltage the current source can(or have to)  provide while powering the sensor with the constant current.   (The sensor internal electronic is powered by the the current and provide a variable resistance to the current source resulting in a voltage propotional to the sensor unit (force, acceleration, ...) with an constant offset , the bias voltage commonly representing a zero input (of force,acceleration...).

 

   

Greetings from Germany
Henrik

LV since v3.1

“ground” is a convenient fantasy

'˙˙˙˙uıɐƃɐ lɐıp puɐ °06 ǝuoɥd ɹnoʎ uɹnʇ ǝsɐǝld 'ʎɹɐuıƃɐɯı sı pǝlɐıp ǝʌɐɥ noʎ ɹǝqɯnu ǝɥʇ'


Message 3 of 5
(87 Views)

@santo_13 thanks for the answers and explanation!

0 Kudos
Message 4 of 5
(72 Views)

Henrik_Volkers thank you for the in-depth explanation. This was super helpful.

0 Kudos
Message 5 of 5
(71 Views)