Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors

Direct interface circuits are a simple, inexpensive alternative for the digital conversion of a sensor reading, and in some of these circuits only passive calibration elements are required in order to carry out this conversion. In the case of resistive sensors, the most accurate methods of calibrati...

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Main Authors: Jesús A. Botín-Córdoba, Óscar Oballe-Peinado, José A. Sánchez-Durán, José A. Hidalgo-López
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Micromachines
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/10/10/664
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spelling doaj-adebdeb4130248719ddb03b31e49daaf2020-11-25T01:35:57ZengMDPI AGMicromachines2072-666X2019-09-01101066410.3390/mi10100664mi10100664Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive SensorsJesús A. Botín-Córdoba0Óscar Oballe-Peinado1José A. Sánchez-Durán2José A. Hidalgo-López3Departamento de Electrónica, Universidad de Málaga, Andalucía Tech, Campus de Teatinos, 29071 Málaga, SpainDepartamento de Electrónica, Universidad de Málaga, Andalucía Tech, Campus de Teatinos, 29071 Málaga, SpainDepartamento de Electrónica, Universidad de Málaga, Andalucía Tech, Campus de Teatinos, 29071 Málaga, SpainDepartamento de Electrónica, Universidad de Málaga, Andalucía Tech, Campus de Teatinos, 29071 Málaga, SpainDirect interface circuits are a simple, inexpensive alternative for the digital conversion of a sensor reading, and in some of these circuits only passive calibration elements are required in order to carry out this conversion. In the case of resistive sensors, the most accurate methods of calibration, namely two-point calibration method (TPCM) and fast calibration methods I and II (FCMs I and II), require two calibration resistors to estimate the value of a sensor. However, although FCMs I and II considerably reduce the time necessary to estimate the value of the sensor, this may still be excessive in certain applications, such as when making repetitive readings of a sensor or readings of a large series of sensors. For these situations, this paper proposes a series of calibration methods that decrease the mean estimation time. Some of the proposed methods (quasi single-point calibration methods) are based on the TPCM, while others (fast quasi single-point calibration methods) make the most of the advantages of FCM. In general, the proposed methods significantly reduce estimation times in exchange for a small increase in errors. To validate the proposal, a circuit with a Xilinx XC3S50AN-4TQG144C FPGA has been designed and resistors in the range (267.56 Ω, 7464.5 Ω) have been measured. For 20 repetitive measurements, the proposed methods achieve time reductions of up to 61% with a relative error increase of only 0.1%.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/10/10/664direct interface circuitscalibration methodserror analysisresistive tactile sensortime-based measurement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jesús A. Botín-Córdoba
Óscar Oballe-Peinado
José A. Sánchez-Durán
José A. Hidalgo-López
spellingShingle Jesús A. Botín-Córdoba
Óscar Oballe-Peinado
José A. Sánchez-Durán
José A. Hidalgo-López
Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors
Micromachines
direct interface circuits
calibration methods
error analysis
resistive tactile sensor
time-based measurement
author_facet Jesús A. Botín-Córdoba
Óscar Oballe-Peinado
José A. Sánchez-Durán
José A. Hidalgo-López
author_sort Jesús A. Botín-Córdoba
title Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors
title_short Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors
title_full Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors
title_fullStr Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors
title_full_unstemmed Quasi Single Point Calibration Method for High-Speed Measurements of Resistive Sensors
title_sort quasi single point calibration method for high-speed measurements of resistive sensors
publisher MDPI AG
series Micromachines
issn 2072-666X
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Direct interface circuits are a simple, inexpensive alternative for the digital conversion of a sensor reading, and in some of these circuits only passive calibration elements are required in order to carry out this conversion. In the case of resistive sensors, the most accurate methods of calibration, namely two-point calibration method (TPCM) and fast calibration methods I and II (FCMs I and II), require two calibration resistors to estimate the value of a sensor. However, although FCMs I and II considerably reduce the time necessary to estimate the value of the sensor, this may still be excessive in certain applications, such as when making repetitive readings of a sensor or readings of a large series of sensors. For these situations, this paper proposes a series of calibration methods that decrease the mean estimation time. Some of the proposed methods (quasi single-point calibration methods) are based on the TPCM, while others (fast quasi single-point calibration methods) make the most of the advantages of FCM. In general, the proposed methods significantly reduce estimation times in exchange for a small increase in errors. To validate the proposal, a circuit with a Xilinx XC3S50AN-4TQG144C FPGA has been designed and resistors in the range (267.56 Ω, 7464.5 Ω) have been measured. For 20 repetitive measurements, the proposed methods achieve time reductions of up to 61% with a relative error increase of only 0.1%.
topic direct interface circuits
calibration methods
error analysis
resistive tactile sensor
time-based measurement
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/10/10/664
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