Semi-period measurement, Figure 23. buffered semi-period measurement, Single semi-period measurement – National Instruments Eight-slot USB Chassis NI cDAQ-9172 User Manual

Page 48: Buffered semi-period measurement

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NI cDAQ-9172 User Guide and Specifications

48

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Semi-Period Measurement

In semi-period measurements, the counter measures a semi-period on its
Gate input signal after the counter is armed. A semi-period is the time
between any two consecutive edges on the Gate input.

You can route an internal or external periodic clock signal (with a
known period) to the Source input of the counter. The counter counts
the number of rising (or falling) edges occurring on the Source input
between two edges of the Gate signal.

You can calculate the semi-period of the Gate input by multiplying the
period of the Source signal by the number of edges returned by the counter.

Single Semi-Period Measurement

Single semi-period measurement is equivalent to single pulse-width
measurement.

Buffered Semi-Period Measurement

In buffered semi-period measurement, on each edge of the Gate signal, the
counter stores the count in a hardware save register. The NI cDAQ-9172
transfers the stored values to host memory.

The counter begins counting when it is armed. The arm usually occurs
between edges on the Gate input, which means that the first value stored in
the hardware save register does not reflect a full semi-period of the Gate
input. In most applications, this first point should be discarded.

Figure 23 shows an example of a buffered semi-period measurement.

Figure 23. Buffered Semi-Period Measurement

3
1
2

2

3
1

2

2
3

2

SOURCE

GATE

Counter Value

Buffer

1 3

2

2

1 1

1

3

2

1

2

1

0

2

Counter Armed

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