Electronic – Sensor output current vs voltage reading options for accuracy

current measurementina219voltage measurement

I am trying to choose between two sensor output types.

Either 0-10V or 4-20mA.

I am using the INA219B to measure current right now but I am wondering if getting a different output sensor would be more accurate.

I understand current and voltage are very different things but in this case they mean the same thing for me, how much load is on the pressure sensor (0-100% or level height.)

I am using a 1 ohm shunt resistor to measure the current for now but I can change this if it is a problem.

I am trying to measure very small changes (down to the millimeter or below of a column of diesel fuel) on a pressure sensor. The more accuracy or resolution I can get the better.

The basic calculations I have done are that to measure 1mm I either need to measure every 10mV or 16uA depending on what I choose (I am using a 1M sensor.)
I am leaning towards every 10mV being the easier one of the 2 to measure.

I have also thought about changing this whole thing to a low noise temperature compensated op-amp design, but I have little or no idea where to start with that and as I only have 12V to work with I would only be amplifying the current in this situation to get an easier reading.
As this runs off battery, I don’t like the idea of that.

If anyone has experience with measuring sensor output with the INA219B in both voltage readings and current your input would be a great help.

Best Answer

Voltage or current output sensor have tradeoff.

Current allows a better immunity to noise if you have long wires, but requires a shunt or transimpedance amplifier which will introduce uncertainties.

The accuracy of the sensor may also depend on the type of output and will be indicated on the datasheet.

If you use a shunt, make sure to use a 4-point kelvin shunt. 1ohm will give you fairly low voltages and high-end amplifier will be required, with low input offset will be needed.

In your case, (current version) depending on the sensor max voltage output, 10ohm/100ohm shunt will give you way more signal, which will be easier to measure.

The voltage version of the sensor has a bigger range, if you don't have long wires or noise issues, you'd rather go this direction.