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Digital Voltmeters Digital Voltmeters (DVMs) are a special case of A/Ds. DVMs are voltmeters - i.e.

they measure voltage - and are general purpose instruments commonly used to measure voltages in labs and in the field. DVMs display the measured voltage using LCDs or LEDs to display the result in a floating point format. They are an instrument of choice for voltage measurements in all kinds of situations. Obviously, if voltage measurements are taken and the results are displayed digitally with LED or LCD displays, the instrument has to contain an A/D converter. Digital voltmeters have some characteristics that you might need to understand.
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Digital voltmeters usually have scales that are 0-0.3v, 0-3v, 0-30v, 0-300v, etc.

It is not clear why those ranges were chosen but they are commonplace. Now, consider some of the implications of these facts. Example E1 Consider a voltmeter built around a 10 bit A/D converter. We will assume the following.
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The range of the voltmeter is from 0-3v, and it does DC voltage measurements. It does not measure negative voltages.

Then, with 10 bits we can draw these inferences.


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Ten bits will produce 210 intervals. That's 1024 intervals. If there are 1024 intervals over a range of 3v, each interval will be 3/1024 = .00293v. It is easier to compute the displayed voltage if the interval is adjusted to .003v. o That would make the range 0-3.072v. (That's .003 x 1024.) o If you are measuring a voltage that varies around 3v, that would allow you to keep the range the same, but still change the range (if the instrument also has a 0-30v range, for instance) when the voltage got large enough. Manufacturers like to build in a little "hysteresis" to prevent constant range changes in situations like that and it might be especially hard on auto-ranging meters. If you wanted to measure negative voltages and have the range be from -3v to +3v, you would have intervals of .006v, and the meter would measure from -3.072v to +3.072v. If you wanted to measure voltages on a 0-30v scale, you would probably use a voltage divider or some other way to reduce the voltage by a factor of (exactly) 10

(i.e., multiply it by exactly 0.1) and then use the same converter as on the 0-3v scale. If we could use a 12 bit A/D, then some conclusions would change.
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Twelve bits will produce 212 intervals. That's 4096 intervals. If there are 4096 intervals over a range of 3v, each interval will be 3/4096 = .000732v. It is easier to compute the displayed voltage if the interval is adjusted to .0075v. o That would make the range 0-3.072v - just as it was in the case of the 10 bit converter, o That produces the same advantages as you had with the 10 bit converter. If you wanted to measure negative voltages and have the range be from -3v to +3v, you would have intervals of .0015v, and the meter would measure from -3.072v to +3.072v.

A Note on Voltmeter Specifications In the example you saw a few typical voltmeter possibilities. For some reason voltmeters have had scales like 0-3v, 0-30v, etc. for a long time. You might have expected 0-1v and 0-10v, etc. to be more common. However, that's not the way it is, and it probably won't change any time soon. That situation has led to some interesting ways to specify voltmeters. If you had a voltmeter that had a 0-1v range, and it had ten bits, it would probably be designed to have a range from 0-1.024v, and it would measure voltages in steps of .001v. Then, the measurement results would be things like 0.314v or 0.582v, things like that. Displayed values would all have exactly three decimal places, and the instrument would be referred to as a 3 digit meter. If you use the same converter on a 0-10v scale (and put the voltage through a 0.1x voltage divider!), then the results would be things like 3.14v or 5.82v. You would get exactly the same number of significant figures, and you would still refer to the meter as a 3 digit meter. Let's think about this situation.
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If you have a voltmeter with a 0-1v scale that can read increments of .001v the meter is a 3 digit meter. If you have a voltmeter with a 0-1v scale that can read increments of .0001v the meter is a 4 digit meter. If you have a voltmeter with a 0-10v scale that can read increments of .001v the meter is a 4 digit meter.

If you have a voltmeter with a 0-100v scale that can read increments of .001v the meter is a 5 digit meter.

Now, what if you have a meter that has a 0-3v scale that can read increments of .001v? How many digits is that meter? The Number Of Digits In A DVM You need to be able to answer the question in the last section. When you buy a meter it may tell you the number of digits and you need to know what that means, especially when the scales are 0-3v, etc. Here is the story.
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A meter that reads in increments of .001v and has a 0-1v range is a 3 digit meter. A meter that reads in increments of .001v and has a 0-10v range is a 4 digit meter. A meter that reads in increments of .001v and has a 0-100v range is a 5 digit meter.

Notice the logarithmic nature of the relationship, summarized in this table.

Range (v) 0-1 0-10 0-100

Digits (for .001v) 3 4 5

If the high limit of the scale is 3, that's almost halfway between 1 and 10 on a logarithmic scale. (The mid point is really at the square root of ten.) A meter that has a range of 03v is said to be a 3 1/2 digit meter when it has intervals of .001v. That's halfway between 3 and 4 digits. There is another way to look at the question of digits. If you have a meter that has a 0-10v scale that reads in increments of .01v that's a 3 bit meter. That meter has 1000 steps, and 1000=103. Let's repeat the table from above, but include the log10 of the number of steps.

Range 0-1v 0-10v

Digits (for .001v) 3 4

#Steps 1000 10,000

log10(#Steps) 3 4

0-30v 0-100v

4.5? 5

30,000 100,000

4.47 5

We included an extra row for a 0-30v meter. We also included the number of steps and a suggestion for the number of digits we can claim for the meter. It looks reasonable to call a 0-30v meter with 30,000 steps a 4.5 digit meter, and that's the way they are sold. That's it for digits in a voltmeter. That's the way that they are specified, and that's what you pay for when you buy a DVM. The number of digits is determined by the number of bits in the A/D, and we need to look at that idea just a little bit more. Click here for a lab exercise that gets you thinking about the topic.

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