THE STRAIN
GAUGEThe
strain gauge has been in use for many years and is the fundamental
sensing element for many types of sensors, including pressure
sensors, load cells, torque sensors, position sensors, etc.
The majority of
strain gauges are foil types, available in a wide choice of shapes
and sizes to suit a variety of applications. They consist of a
pattern of resistive foil which is mounted on a backing material.
They operate on the principle that as the foil is subjected to
stress, the resistance of the foil changes in a defined way.

The strain gauge is connected into a Wheatstone Bridge circuit with
a combination of four active gauges (full bridge), two gauges (half
bridge), or, less commonly, a single gauge (quarter bridge). In the
half and quarter circuits, the bridge is completed with precision
resistors.

The complete
Wheatstone Bridge is excited with a stabilised DC supply and with
additional conditioning electronics, can be zeroed at the null point
of measurement. As stress is applied to the bonded strain gauge, a
resistive changes takes place and unbalances the Wheatstone Bridge.
This results in a signal output, related to the stress value.
As the signal
value is small, (typically a few millivolts) the signal conditioning
electronics provides amplification to increase the signal level to 5
to 10 volts, a suitable level for application to external data
collection systems such as recorders or PC Data Acquistion and
Analysis Systems.

Some of the many
Gauge Patterns available
Most manufacturers of strain gauges offer extensive ranges of
differing patterns to suit a wide variety of applications in
research and industrial projects.
They also supply all the necessary accessories including preparation
materials, bonding adhesives, connections tags, cable, etc. The
bonding of strain gauges is a skill and training courses are offered
by some suppliers. There are also companies which offer bonding and
calibration services, either as an in-house or on-site service.
More about
the Strain Gauge...
If a strip
of conductive metal is stretched, it will become skinnier and
longer, both changes resulting in an increase of electrical
resistance end-to-end. Conversely, if a strip of conductive metal is
placed under compressive force (without buckling), it will broaden
and shorten. If these stresses are kept within the elastic limit of
the metal strip (so that the strip does not permanently deform), the
strip can be used as a measuring element for physical force, the
amount of applied force inferred from measuring its resistance.
Such a device is
called a strain gauge. Strain gauges are frequently used in
mechanical engineering research and development to measure the
stresses generated by machinery. Aircraft component testing is one
area
of application, tiny strain-gauge strips glued to structural
members, linkages, and any other critical component of an airframe
to measure stress. Most strain gauges are smaller than a postage
stamp, and they
look something like this:

A strain
gauge's conductors are very thin: if made of round wire, about
1/1000 inch in diameter. Alternatively, strain gauge conductors may
be thin strips of metallic film deposited on a nonconducting
substrate material called the carrier. The latter form of strain
gauge is represented in the previous illustration. The name "bonded
gauge" is given to strain gauges that are glued to a larger
structure under stress (called the test specimen) The task of
bonding strain gauges to test specimens may appear to be very
simple, but it is not. "Gauging" is a craft in its own right,
absolutely essential for obtaining accurate, stable strain
measurements. It is also possible to use an unmounted gauge wire
stretched between two mechanical points to measure tension, but this
technique has its limitations. Typical strain gauge resistances
range from 30 Ohms to 3 kOhms (unstressed). This resistance may
change only a fraction of a percent for the full force range
of the gauge, given the limitations imposed by the elastic limits of
the gauge material and of the test specimen. Forces great enough to
induce greater resistance changes would permanently deform the test
specimen and/or the gauge conductors themselves, thus ruining the
gauge as a measurement device. Thus, in order to use the
train gauge as a practical instrument, we must measure extremely
small changes in resistance with high accuracy.
Such demanding
precision calls for a bridge measurement circuit. Unlike the
Wheatstone bridge shown in the last chapter using a null-balance
detector and a human operator to maintain a state of balance, a
strain gauge bridge circuit indicates measured strain by the degree
of imbalance, and uses a precision voltmeter in the center of the
bridge
to provide an accurate measurement of that imbalance:

Typically, the
rheostat arm of the bridge (R2 in the diagram) is set at a value
equal to the strain gauge resistance with no force applied. The two
ratio arms of the bridge (R1 and R3) are set equal to each other.
Thus, with no force applied to the strain gauge, the bridge will be
symmetrically balanced and the voltmeter will indicate zero volts,
representing zero force on the strain gauge. As the strain gauge is
either compressed or tensed, its resistance will decrease
or increase, respectively, thus unbalancing the bridge and producing
an indication at the voltmeter. This arrangement, with a single
element of the bridge changing resistance in response to the
measured variable (mechanical force), is known as a quarter-bridge
circuit.
As the distance
between the strain gauge and the three other resistances in the
bridge circuit may be substantial, wire resistance has a significant
impact on the operation of the circuit. To illustrate the effects of
wire resistance, I'll show the same schematic diagram, but add two
resistor symbols in series with the strain gauge to represent the
wires:

The strain gauge's
resistance (Rgauge) is not the only resistance being measured: the
wire resistances Rwire1 and Rwire2, being in series with Rgauge,
also contribute to the resistance of the lower half of therheostat
arm of the bridge, and consequently contribute to the voltmeter's
indication. This, of course, will be falsely interpreted by
the meter as physical strain on the gauge.
While this effect
cannot be completely eliminated in this configuration, it can be
minimized with the addition of a third wire, connecting the right
side of the voltmeter directly to the upper wire of the strain
gauge:

Because the third
wire carries practically no current (due to the voltmeter's
extremely high internal resistance), its resistance will not drop
any substantial amount of voltage. Notice how the resistance of the
top wire (Rwire1) has been "bypassed" now that the voltmeter
connects directly to the top terminal of the strain gauge, leaving
only the lower wire's resistance (Rwire2) to contribute any stray
resistance in series with the gauge. Not a perfect solution, of
course, but twice
as good as the last circuit! There is a way, however, to reduce wire
resistance error far beyond the method just described, and also help
mitigate another kind of measurement error due to temperature. An
unfortunate characteristic
of strain gauges is that of resistance change with changes in
temperature. This is a property common to all conductors, some more
than others. Thus, our quarter-bridge circuit as shown (either with
two or with three wires connecting the gauge to the bridge) works as
a thermometer just as well as it does a strain indicator. If all we
want to do is measure strain, this is not good. We can transcend
this problem, however, by using a "dummy" strain gauge in place of
R2, so that both elements of the rheostat arm will change resistance
in the same proportion when temperature changes, thus
canceling the effects of temperature change:

Resistors R1 and R3
are of equal resistance value, and the strain gauges are identical
to one another. With no applied force, the bridge should be in a
perfectly balanced condition and the voltmeter should register 0
volts. Both gauges are bonded to the same test specimen, but only
one is placed in a position and orientation so as to be exposed
to physical strain (the active gauge). The other gauge is isolated
from all mechanical stress, and acts merely as a temperature
compensation device (the "dummy" gauge). If the temperature changes,
both gauge resistances will change by the same percentage, and the
bridge's state of balance will remain unaffected. Only a
differential resistance (difference of resistance between the two
strain gauges) produced by physical force on the test specimen can
alter the balance of the bridge.
Wire resistance
doesn't impact the accuracy of the circuit as much as before,
because the wires connecting both strain gauges to the bridge are
approximately equal length. Therefore, the upper and lower sections
of the bridge's rheostat arm contain approximately the same amount
of stray resistance, and their effects tend to cancel:

Even though there
are now two strain gauges in the bridge circuit, only one is
responsive to mechanical strain, and thus we would still refer to
this arrangement as a quarter-bridge. However, if we were to take
the upper strain gauge and position it so that it is exposed to the
opposite force as the lower gauge (i.e. when the upper gauge is
compressed, the
lower gauge will be stretched, and visa-versa), we will have both
gauges responding to strain, and the bridge will be more responsive
to applied force. This utilization is known as a half-bridge. Since
both strain gauges will either increase or decrease resistance by
the same proportion in response to changes in temperature, the
effects of temperature change remain canceled and the circuit will
suffer minimal temperature-induced measurement error:

An example of how a
pair of strain gauges may be bonded to a test specimen so as to
yield this effect is illustrated here:

With no force
applied to the test specimen, both strain gauges have equal
resistance and the bridge circuit is balanced. However, when a
downward force is applied to the free end of the specimen, it will
bend downward, stretching gauge #1 and compressing gauge #2 at the
same time:

In
applications where such complementary pairs of strain gauges can be
bonded to the test specimen, it may be advantageous to make all four
elements of the bridge "active" for even greater sensitivity. This
is called a full-bridge circuit:

Both half-bridge
and full-bridge configurations grant greater sensitivity over the
quarter-bridge circuit, but often it is not possible to bond
complementary pairs of strain gauges to the test specimen. Thus, the
quarter-bridge circuit is frequently used in strain measurement
systems.
When possible, the
full-bridge configuration is the best to use. This is true not only
because it is more sensitive than the others, but because it is
linear while the others are not. Quarter-bridge and half-bridge
circuits provide an output (imbalance) signal that is only
approximately proportional to applied strain gauge force. Linearity,
or proportionality, of these bridge circuits is best when the amount
of resistance change due to applied force is very small compared to
the nominal resistance of the gauge(s). With a full-bridge, however,
the output voltage is directly proportional to applied force, with
no approximation (provided that the change in resistance caused by
the applied force is equal for all four
strain gauges!).
Unlike the
Wheatstone and Kelvin bridges, which provide measurement at a
condition of perfect balance and therefore function irrespective of
source voltage, the amount of source (or "excitation") voltage
matters in an unbalanced bridge like this. Therefore, strain gauge
bridges are rated in millivolts of imbalance produced per volt of
excitation, per unit measure of force. A typical example for a
strain gauge of the type used for measuring force in industrial
environments is 15 mV/V at 1000 pounds. That is, at exactly 1000
pounds applied force (either compressive or tensile), the
bridge will be unbalanced by 15 millivolts for every volt of
excitation voltage. Again, such a figure is precise if the bridge
circuit is full-active (four active strain gauges, one in each arm
of the bridge), but only approximate for half-bridge and quarter
-bridge arrangements.
Strain gauges may
be purchased as complete units, with both strain gauge elements and
bridge resistors in one housing, sealed and encapsulated for
protection from the elements, and equipped with mechanical fastening
points for attachment to a machine or structure. Such a package is
typically called a load cell.
This article is
from 'All about circuits'...click
here
to visit.
|