<div class="application article clearfix" id="description">
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NEW ZEALAND PATENTS ACT 1953 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION <br><br>
"A SAMPLING CIRCUIT" <br><br>
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WE, S^AN-BARB—gSLEf-HQNSS AND CABLES-PTY. LIM^T-ED, A Company of the State of New South Wales, of 252-280 Botany Road, Alexandria, New South Wales, 2015, Australia, hereby declare the invention for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: <br><br>
1 <br><br>
2 3 3 0 <br><br>
This invention relates to techniques and equipment for sampling two or more signals and will be described in the context of sampling voltage and current amplitudes in an AC kWh meter. <br><br>
In electronic electricity meters, current and voltage are sampled and converted to digital signals for further processing. At present the sampling Is done with a pair of sample/hold (S/H) amplifiers or track/hold circuits which sample current and voltage at the same time. These samples are then fed to a single analog-to-digital (A/D) converter via a multiplexer, this being cheaper than the use of a pair of A/D converters. <br><br>
The S/H amplifiers or track/hold circuits thus ensure a fairly constant Input to the A/D converter while the conversion takes place, otherwise a random phase error is introduced in the measurement due to the measurement being taken at an Indeterminate time in the measurement period. <br><br>
However, accurate S/H amplifiers are expensive, power hungry, and can induce digital noise into analog circuitry. They suffer from output droop between the time the sample is taken and the time the signal is measured, and require expensive capacitors to sample accurately. Therefore, they are difficult to integrate in large scale ICs. One S/H amplifier is required for each Input signal, which may require 6 to 12 for a three-phase electricity meter. <br><br>
These problems can be largely nullified and a cheaper circuit obtained by the techniques of this invention. <br><br>
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This specification discloses a technique for sampling two or more signals without the use of a S/H amplifier by measuring the signals sequentially. The random phase error introduced by this procedure is cancelled when averaged over 5 a large number of samples by reversing the order of successive samples. <br><br>
The technique produces a residual amplitude error related to the sine of the phase angle between the samples. <br><br>
This residual error can be eliminated by the standard 10 calibration procedure used to eliminate gain errors due to component variation. <br><br>
The invention will be more fully described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: <br><br>
Pig. 1 shows a block diagram of a single-phase Ac kWh 15 meter embodying the invention; and <br><br>
Pig. 2 shows a polyphase embodiment. <br><br>
With reference to the embodiment shown in Pig. 1, quantities proportional to the current and voltage used by load 6 are produced by transducers 1 and 2 respectively. These 20 signals may be selected by analog multiplexer 3 under control of processing means 5 (which may in turn be controlled by software). The signal selected by 3 is converted to digital format by A/D converter 4, which is started by processing means 5 at intervals dictated by timing means 7. 25 The processing means 5 first selects the desired analog input and then starts A/D converter 4. On completion of the conversion, the value measured by 4 is read by processing <br><br>
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m means 5 which may then initiate further conversions by controlling multiplexer 3 and A/D converter 4. Processor 5 performs calculations on the values measured by 4 to derive useful quantities (such as kWh, etc.) from the measured 5 quantities by known means. These derived quantities may then be transmitted to other systems for display, recording, billing, etc. <br><br>
Since the meter does not contain Sample/Hold amplifiers (S/H) to measure the transducer outputs as a simultaneous 10 pair, the processing means 5 must sequentially read the input signals, introducing a phase error into the measurements. However, processing means 5 may cancel this phase error by taking half of the samples with the voltage followed by the current, and the other half by sampling first 15 the current, then the voltage. In a preferred embodiment, the order is reversed on successive samples. <br><br>
The calculations performed by processing means 5 typically include a factory-settable calibration constant to account for component variations. This invention utilises the 20 same calibration means to correct for the ratio error introduced by non-simultaneous sampling of current and voltage. In a preferred embodiment the calibration constant may be entered via a serial calibration port 8. <br><br>
As an example a successive-approximation A/D converter 25 measuring low-frequency (50 or 60Hz) signals takes 150us to measure a voltage transducer, with a further 50us delay before starting measurement of the current transducer. This <br><br>
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results in a phase error of 3.6° at 50Hz, which would produce a power measurement error of 11 per cent at a phase angle of 60° (and greater errors at larger phase angles or higher frequencies). Mathematically cos(60+3-6°)/cos(60) = 5 0.89 = 11% low. This error is unacceptable for commercial power measurement. However, by employing the method described in this invention, a phase error in a single direction is replaced by a phase error in alternating directions, which sometimes overestimates the power by 11.1 per cent and 10 sometimes underestimates by 10.7 per cent. Mathematically cos(60-3-6°)/cos(60) = 1.111 = +11%. On average the calculated power will be low by 0.2 per cent at all phase angles. Residual error = cos(60-3.6°) + cos(60+3•6°)/cos(60) = 0.998 = -0.2%. When the meter Is calibrated to cancel variation 15 in component values, this 0.2 per cent gain error is also cancelled. <br><br>
In a further embodiment, known phase errors in the transducers (due to external current transformers, for example) may be corrected by altering the proportion of samples 20 taken in each order from an exact 50%. <br><br>
In a further embodiment, this proportion may change based on the current being measured, to correct phase errors which are worse at low current, for example. <br><br>
Fig. 2 shows a polyphase application of the invention. 25 In this case, a multiplicity of current and voltage transducers labc and 2abc (One pair for each phase) are sequentially sampled using multiplexer 3- As described for a <br><br>
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single-phase meter, the order of sampling current and voltage in each phase may be alternated to correct for phase errors in sampling- <br><br>
Such an embodiment may be used for a polyphase indus-5 trial meter capable of calculating further parameters such as V, I, VAR, VA, harmonic power and phase angle. Sets of measurements may be taken over several cycles with alternating order on successive sets and the necessary calculations are performed on the averaged readings. Although the in-10 vention has been described in relation to AC power measurements, it can also be used in other embodiments such as DC power measurements and AC phase meters. <br><br>
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