Instrumentation Instrumentation

Instrumentation - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Agency, Agent, Appraisal, Approximation, Arrangement, Assessment, Assize, Calculation, Channel, Computation, Estimate, Estimation, Evaluation, Harmonization, Instrument, Intonation, Mean, Measure, Measurement, Measuring
Contents

Musical

Instrumentation is the study and practice of writing music for a musical instrument.

Writing for a specific instrument requires the ability to take into account the special properties of that instrument such as the following:

  • the pitch, timbre and dynamic range of the instrument and available tones in these ranges
  • application of chords or other multiple tones
  • certain kinds of passages can be especially easy or difficult to play
  • playing techniques such as constraints of breathing, fingering, etc.
  • special effects, such as harmonics, clicks, pizzicato, glissandi and so on
  • notation conventions for the instrument.

See orchestration for a description of the difference between instrumentation, orchestration and arrangement.

Physical Science

Definition

Instrumentation is defined as "the art and science of measurement and control". Instrumentation be be used to refer to the field in which Instrument technicians and engineers work in, or it can refer to the available methods and use of instruments.

Measurement

Instruments are devices which are used to measure attributes of physical systems. The variable measured can include practically any measurable variable related to the physical sciences. These variables commonly include:

Instruments can often be viewed in terms of a simple input-output device. For example, if we "input" some temperature into a thermocouple, it "outputs" some sort of signal. (Which can later be translated into data.) In the case of this thermocouple, it will "output" a signal in millivoltage.

Output

Instruments communicate with some sort of standardized signal. This signal can be defined by standards associations, or it can be proprietary. Some standards include:

Control

These devices are generally connected to some sort of control system which responds to the instrument's measurement. The response programmed into the control system manipulates control devices attached to the process. This cycle of changing of manipulated variables, measurement of controlled variables, and proper response is the basic concept behind process control. The control systems used are often considered part of the field of instrumentation, and can include simple Programmable Logic Controllers(PLCs) or Remote Terminal Units (RTUs), to more advanced Distributed Control Systems (DCSs). Inputs can vary from a few measured variables, to thousands of measured variables.

Related Professions

Instrumentation Engineers largely design control and measurement systems primarily for industrial processes, although instruments are present in almost any modern technology today including vehicles, computers, appliances etc.

Instrumentation Technologists largely troubleshoot, repair, and install instruments and instrumention systems. This trade is so intertwined with electricians, pipefitters, power engineers, and engineering companies, that one can find his/herself in extremely diverse working situations.

Further Reading

  • www.isa.org
  • Lipták, Béla G. Instrumentation engineers' handbook. Process Measurement and Analysis. CRC Press. 2003. HB.

ISBN 0-8493-1083-X;

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