Three situations of the effective value of the multimeter
The meaning of the effective value, true effective value and root mean square value in the multimeter, and three situations of the effective value of the multimeter: the standard average method, the peak detection method, and the true effective value method.
For alternating current, its voltage is a changing waveform, and its voltage value is usually described as its effective value. For example, the 220V power supply has a peak voltage of more than 310 volts and a peak-to-peak value of more than 600 volts.
1. Effective value: It is defined by heat generation (power). A certain alternating current generates heat through a resistor and another direct current passes through the resistor. If the heat generated in the same time is equal, then the direct current voltage value is this alternating current. The effective value of the voltage.
2. True RMS: The definition of RMS is defined by heating, but it is difficult to measure the RMS voltage in this way in measuring instruments, so in most voltage measuring instruments, such as multimeters measure voltage, Its measurement method is not measured according to the "heat" defined by the effective value. One of the multimeters uses the sine wave as a reference, and the effective value is obtained by the relationship between the peak value of the sine wave and the effective value twice the root sign (or Derived by the average value), the effective value obtained by this method is only correct for the AC voltage of the sinusoidal waveform, and there will be deviations for other shapes of the waveform.
Another type of multimeter voltage value is obtained by the square of the effective value of the DC component, the fundamental wave, and each higher harmonic. This value is similar to the definition of the effective value, and there is no requirement for the shape of the waveform. The sine wave is different from the effective value instrument, which is called "true effective value" in the measuring instrument.
3. Root mean square value: Another name for effective value (should be true effective value on the measuring instrument).
Three cases of the effective value of the multimeter:
1. Calibration average value method, the calibration average value is also called the corrected average value, or the rectified average value calibrated to the effective value. The principle is to convert the AC signal into a DC signal through the rectification and integration circuit, and then according to the characteristics of the sine wave, Multiplied by a coefficient, for a sine wave, after multiplying by this coefficient, the result is equal to the effective value of the sine wave. Therefore, this method is limited to sine wave testing.
2. The peak detection method obtains the peak value of the AC signal through the peak detection circuit, and then multiplies it by a coefficient according to the characteristics of the sine wave. For the sine wave, after multiplying the coefficient, the result is equal to the effective value of the sine wave. Therefore, this method is limited to sine wave testing.
3. True RMS method, using a true RMS circuit to convert the AC signal into a DC signal and then measure. This method is suitable for the true RMS test of arbitrary waveforms. Most multimeters use the first two methods. And there is a big limit to the frequency of the signal.
