Pressure transmitter (ifm) |
In general, transmitters accomplish three steps, including converting the initial signal twice. The first step is the initial conversion which alters the input signal to make it linear. After an amplification of the converted signal, the second conversion changes the signal into either a standard electrical or pneumatic output signal that can be utilized by receiving instruments and devices. The third and final step is the actual output of the electrical or pneumatic signal to utilization equipment - controllers, PLC, recorder, etc.
Transmitters are available for almost every measured parameter in process control, and are often referred to according to the process condition which they measure.
Level transmitters (ifm) |
Some examples.
- Pressure transmitters
- Temperature transmitters
- Flow transmitters
- Level transmitters
- Vibration transmitters
- Current, voltage & power transmitters
- PH, conductivity, dissolved gas transmitters, etc.
Pressure transmitter (Winters) |
Many transmitters are provided with higher order functions in addition to merely converting an input signal to an output signal. On board displays, keypads, Bluetooth connectivity, and a host of industry standard communication protocols can also be had as an integral part of many process transmitters. Other functions that provide alarm or safety action are more frequently part of the transmitter package, as well.
Wireless transmitters are also available, with some operating from battery power and negating the need for any wired connection at all. Process transmitters have evolved from simple signal conversion devices to higher functioning, efficient, easy to apply and maintain instruments utilized for providing input to process control systems.
To lean more about transmitters, visit https://flowcontrol.processcontrolsolutions.com/ or call Process Control Solutions at 800-528-8997.