National Instruments NI 6120 用户手册

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Chapter 4
Connecting Signals
4-8
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source. You must tie the ground reference of a floating signal to the 
NI 6115/6120 AI ground to establish a local or onboard reference for the 
signal. Otherwise, the measured input signal varies as the source floats out 
of the common-mode input range.
Ground-Referenced Signal Sources
A ground-referenced signal source is connected in some way to the 
building system ground and is, therefore, already connected to a common 
ground point with respect to the NI 6115/6120, assuming that the computer 
is plugged into the same power system. Non-isolated outputs of 
instruments and devices that plug into the building power system fall into 
this category.
The difference in ground potential between two instruments connected to 
the same building power system is typically between 1 and 100 mV but can 
be much higher if power distribution circuits are not properly connected. 
If a grounded signal source is improperly measured, this difference may 
appear as an error in the measurement. The connection instructions for 
grounded signal sources are designed to eliminate this ground potential 
difference from the measured signal.
Connecting Analog Input Signals
The NI 6115/6120 channels are configured as pseudodifferential inputs. 
The input signal of each channel, ACH<0..3>+, is tied to the positive input 
of its PGIA, and each reference signal, ACH<0..3>–, is tied to the negative 
input of its PGIA. The inputs are differential only in the sense that ground 
loops are broken. The reference signal, ACH<0..3>–, is not intended to 
carry signals of interest but only to provide a DC reference point for 
ACH<0..3>+ that may be different from ground.
Pseudodifferential signal connections increase common-mode noise 
rejection. They also allow input signals to float within the common-mode 
limits of the PGIA.