National Instruments NI 4050 用户手册

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Chapter 2
NI 4050 Operation
© National Instruments Corporation
2-7
components and then measures the RMS value of the AC component. This 
method lets you measure a small AC signal in the presence of a large DC 
offset.
Input Ranges
The NI 4050 has five input ranges available for measuring AC voltages. 
These ranges are 20 mV
rms
, 200 mV
rms
, 2.0 V
rms
, 25 V
rms
, and 250 V
rms
The impedance in each of these ranges is a 0.068 µF capacitor followed by 
1 M
Ω
. When the NI 4050 is powered off, the 250 V, 25 V, and 2 V input 
ranges have a 0.068 µF capacitor, followed by a 1 M
Ω 
input impedance. 
The 200 mV and 20 mV ranges have a 0.068 µF capacitor, followed by 
an approximate 100 k
Ω 
input impedance.
The NI 4050 can measure AC voltages to its specified accuracy as long as 
the voltage is at least 10% and no more than 100% of the selected input 
range. The DC component in any of these ranges can be as high as 
250 VDC. Each range, except for the 250 V range, has a 10% overrange.
The AC voltage measurement accuracy depends on many factors, including 
the signal amplitude, frequency, and waveform shape.
Measurement Considerations
AC Offset Voltage
The AC measurements of the NI 4050 are specified over the range of 10% 
to 100% of the full-scale input range. Below 10% of the input range, errors 
due to the AC voltage offset become significant. This offset, unlike DC 
voltage offsets, cannot simply be subtracted from the readings or zeroed out 
because the offset gets converted in the RMS conversion. To minimize the 
errors due to the AC offset voltage, choose an input range that keeps the 
measured voltage between 10% and 100% of full scale.
Frequency Response
The accuracy of the NI 4050’s AC voltage measurements is a function of 
the input signal frequency. Your NI 4050 is calibrated at the factory using 
a 1 kHz sine wave. Your frequency-dependent error will be minimal around 
this frequency. The error will then increase as you approach the upper and 
lower bandwidth limits. This additional error is added to the accuracy 
errors in computing the absolute error.