Deadband
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Deadband
A Deadband (sometimes called a neutral zone) is an area of a signal range or band where no action occurs (the system is dead). Deadband is used in voltage regulators and other controllers. The purpose is common, to prevent oscillation or repeated activation-deactivation cycles (called 'hunting' in proportional control systems).
Voltage regulatorsIn some substations there are regulators that keep the voltage within certain predetermined limits, but there is a range of voltage in-between during which no changes are made, such as, maybe, between 112 to 118 volts (deadband is 6 volts here), or 215 to 225 volts (deadband is 10 volts here). Sloppy GearsGear teeth with slop (backlash) exhibit deadband. There is no drive from the input to the output shaft in either direction while the teeth are not meshed. Hysteresis is not DeadbandDeadband is different from hysteresis. With hysteresis there is no dead zone, the output is always in one direction or another. Examples of Hysteresis are Thermostats and smoke alarms ThermostatsThemostats exhibits hysteresis. The furnace in the basement of a house is adjusted automatically by the thermostat to be switched on as soon as the temperature at the thermostat falls to, maybe, 18 °C, and the furnace is switched off by the thermostat as soon as the temperature at the thermostat reaches 22 °C. There is no temperature at which the house is not being heated or allowed to cool (furnace on or off). AlarmsA smoke detector is also an example of hysteresis, not deadband. The smoke detector at the ceiling of the kitchen starts the alarm as soon as the level of the gases reaching it from the burning toast is at, say, x, then the smoke detector stays in the alarm position until the level of gases have been reduced to level y, after which the smoke detector is reset automatically to "normal". The hysteresis here is x minus y. References
(The examples in this entry were incorrectly confusing hysteresis with deadband. However the definition was correct. Need to check this text reference.) See alsoSource: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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