Electrical circuit for pressure sensors: when is a sensor active, and when passive?

When using pressure sensors, the output signals 0 ? 20 mA, 4 ? 20 mA and DC 0 ? 10 V are generally chosen in order for the sensor signals to be evaluated and additional processed. For Effortless , the signal output of the pressure sensor is normally linked to a corresponding input card in the PLC.
In this context it could often be confusing, as the day-to-day using the terms ?active?, ?passive?, ?current source?, ?voltage source?, ?current sink? and ?load? tend to be wildly mixed together. Any electrical signal processing always requires a voltage supply (an ?active part?) and a ?load?, for instance a pressure sensor, which represents the ?passive part?. Sometimes the active the main interconnection is also described as an electrical source/voltage source and the passive part is referred to as a ?current sink?. In Lawsuit that a power circuit can function, current must flow in a circuit ? even though an instrument is usually known as lots, the current isn’t consumed by it, rather it only flows from the current or voltage source through the strain and back to the existing source.
This works only if an ?energy gap? exists between current source and current sink, therefore the power source operates actively (= sending out current) and the existing sink passively (= current flows through it) . Therefore, an interconnection of two current sources or two current sinks won’t operate normally. This situation is complicated in day-to-day application:
When does a pressure sensor work passively (current sink) and when does it work actively (current source)?
So how exactly does the input card in my PLC operate?
As a rule of thumb, you can remember that 2-wire sensors usually work passively and thus need a dynamic PLC input card. It is difficult with 4-wire sensors, since, for example, a 4-wire flow sensor consists of 2 wires for a separate voltage supply and 2 wires for an active or passive 0/4 ? 20 mA signal output. It is therefore imperative to check the datasheets for the sensor and PLC input card used.

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