This title presents the general principles of instrumentation processes. It explains the theoretical analysis of physical phenomena used by standard sensors and transducers to transform a physical value into an electrical signal. The pre-processing of these signals through electronic circuits – amplification, signal filtering and analog-to-digital conversion – is then detailed, in order to provide useful basic information.
Attention is then given to general complex systems. Topics covered include instrumentation and measurement chains, sensor modeling, digital signal processing and diagnostic methods and the concept of smart sensors, as well as microsystem design and applications. Numerous industrial examples punctuate the discussion, setting the subjects covered in the book in their practical context.
Introduction.
Chapter 1. Measurement Instrumentation (Mustapha Nadi).
Chapter 2. General principles of Sensors (François Lepoutre).
Chapter 3. Physical Principles of Optical, Thermal and Mechanical Sensors (François Lepoutre).
Chapter 4. Analog Processing Associated with Sensors (Eduardo Santander and Bernard Journet).
Chapter 5. Analog Filters (Paul Bildstein).
Chapter 6. Real-time Data Acquisition and Processing Systems (Dominique Miller).
Chapter 7. The Contribution of Microtechnologies (François Baillieu and Olivier Vancauwenberghe).
Chapter 8. Instruments and Measurement Chains (Bernard Journet and Stéphane Poujouly).
Chapter 9. Elaboration of Models for the Interaction Between the Sensor
and its Environment (Michel Lecollinet).
Chapter 10. Representation and Analysis of Signals (Frédéric Truchetet, Cécile Durieu and Denis Prémel).
Chapter 11. Mul3: