PERFORMANCE OF AN ANISOTROPIC MAGNETO-RESISTIVE ELECTRICAL ENERGY METER
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Date
2025
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Egerton University
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Electro-mechanical energy meters provide an excellent combination of simplicity and reliability
and have been used for over a hundred years. They only indicate units consumed and need for
additional functionalities made the transition to solid-state electrical energy meters a necessity.
Most energy meters use traditional current sensors which have shortcomings like thermal drift,
limitation of frequency range, cost, size and lack of electrical isolation. In this research an
Anisotropic Magneto-Resistive (AMR) current sensor which overcomes the above
disadvantages were tested and found to have a linear characteristic suitable for electrical energy
metering. A digital electrical energy meter based on the AMR current sensor was designed
using Proteus 8 Professional software, basic electronic components and an Arduino micro
microcontroller which sampled and processed supply voltage and current signals through a
C-code program. The meter displayed accurate output results of supply voltage, current, power
factor (pf), „real-time‟ power consumption and cumulative electrical energy (kWh) on a Liquid
Crystal Display (LCD). Test-runs lasting 5 minutes were conducted and repeated on electrical
loads using the developed AMR meter, Powertek and laboratory multimeters. Analysis of
variance was performed on recorded data using Statistical Analysis of Systems (SAS). Means
of currents, voltages and pf measured on different meters including the AMR meter were found
not to be significantly different at α = 0.05. In one of the test runs, analysis of variance on data
from four energy meters gave electrical energy means of 0.1197a, 0.1233a, 0.1233a and 0.1333a.
Since the means were followed by the same letters, it implied that the means were not
significantly different at α = 0.05 and the performances of the energy meters were therefore
similar. The results showed that the AMR meter performed competitively against common
domestic electrical energy meters and also displayed more useful information. Although in the
performance analysis the error bars overlapped, further study needs to be carried out to
investigate on how the errors could be reduced at low current loads.
Description
Keywords
Anisotropic, Magneto-Resistive, Electrical water meter