Customer SolutionsImproving Physical Understanding through Laboratory Automation
Author(s):Steven Orth, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Industry:University/Education
Product:Data Acquisition, GPIB & Instrument Control, LabVIEW
The Challenge:Automating an undergraduate laboratory on electrical and electromechanical power conversion.
The Solution:Using LabVIEW as the communication and user interface software, we created an icon-based, graphical programming environment referred to as "virtual instruments," which alludes to the strong link between the software and its GPIB, data acquisition, and analysis capabilities.The undergraduate engineering laboratory is often the most important opportunity for students to observe and explore real-world applications of fundamental theories learned in the classroom. However, the actual learning experience is often compromised by the lack of time, effort, and equipment. Over the course of a two-year period, we examined ways of automating an undergraduate laboratory on electrical and electromechanical power conversion. Learning proper instrument operation, interconnecting the experimental setup and the required instruments, and verifying the various connections are not trivial tasks. One major objective was to reduce the instrumentation learning time, so that most of the lab time was used for "core" material. A second major objective was to appropriately automate data acquisition, while a third was to expedite all forms of feedback and analysis so that the lab session results in a meaningful discussion of the experimental results. A final objective was to encourage discussion and preparation of report documents within the laboratory itself. The communication and user interface software used for our study was LabVIEW running on Apple Macintosh computers. Routines created in this icon-based, graphical programming environment are referred to as "virtual instruments," alluding to the strong link between the software and its GPIB, data acquisition, and analysis capabilities. Students are frequently called on to prepare laboratory reports simulating the experiment using a mathematical model and then comparing these results with the actual data collected in the lab. By incorporating this process as part of the experiment, we found that the theoretical model of the experiment can be become an important interactive tool during the experiment. One of the most effective examples of this was found in an introductory DC machine experiment. Initially, the students determined the armature resistance and the back-emf constant of the motor. Using these values in the steady-state model, the students then applied the model to independently predict the armature voltage necessary to attain speeds at given loads. In effect, the students were playing the role of a cruise control in a fictional electric vehicle. Once the actual motor speed reached ±1 percent of the target speed, the load requirement was changed. Following this, the same set of operating points was achieved by closing a speed control loop on the motor. After completion, the students were invited to compare the armature voltages they computed with those resulting from the speed controller. This interactive use of the model within the experiment not only illustrates the usefulness of the model in a real-world setting, but also exposes the limitations of the model, which did not incorporate friction, drag, and other second-order effects. View the entire user solution in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. |
