In any industrial automation system, inaccurate pressure measurement can compromise safety, product quality, and process stability.
A pressure transmitter is often referred to as the “nerve ending” of a control system. If its zero point drifts, every downstream control action — from PID regulation to safety interlocks — may operate on incorrect data.
Zero calibration is therefore not just a routine maintenance task. It is the foundation of measurement integrity.
1. What Is Zero Calibration?
Zero calibration means adjusting the transmitter output when the input pressure is at its lower range limit:
Gauge pressure transmitter → atmospheric pressure
Absolute pressure transmitter → reference vacuum
Differential pressure transmitter → zero differential pressure
The output signal must correspond exactly to the theoretical minimum:
4–20 mA → 4.000 mA at zero
0–10 V → 0.000 V at zero
In simple terms, zero calibration corrects baseline offset and ensures linear accuracy across the entire measuring range.
If the starting point is wrong, the entire measurement curve shifts
2. Why Does Zero Drift Occur?
Zero drift is not necessarily equipment failure. It is the result of physical and environmental influences over time:
Temperature variation (thermal expansion of sensing elements)
Static pressure effect
Mechanical stress and vibration
Electronic component aging
Long-term overload exposure
Corrosive media impact
Capillary thermal expansion (remote seal systems)
Even high-quality transmitters will experience minor drift under harsh industrial conditions.
3. Risks of Ignoring Zero Drift
1️⃣ Safety Risks
Incorrect pressure readings in reactors or pipelines may lead to overpressure incidents or leakage detection failure.
2️⃣ Quality Control Failure
In pharmaceutical or food industries, pressure deviation can affect sterilization performance and product purity.
3️⃣ Energy Waste
Steam and gas flow miscalculations increase operating costs.
4️⃣ Control Instability
Incorrect pressure feedback to DCS systems may cause valve misoperation and unstable PID performance.
A seemingly small 0.1% FS error in a 10 MPa transmitter equals:
10 MPa × 0.1% = 0.01 MPa (10 kPa)
In critical processes, this deviation is significant.
4. Core Benefits of Zero Calibration
✔ Ensures Measurement Accuracy
Maintains zero error within tolerance (typically ≤ ±0.075% FS).
✔ Extends Equipment Life
Early detection of drift trends prevents diaphragm or sensor damage.
✔ Compliance with Standards
ISO 9001, GMP, and other quality systems require periodic calibration of critical instruments.
✔ Optimizes Process Control
Accurate baseline improves PID response and reduces overshoot.
5. Standard Zero Calibration Procedure
Step 1 – Safety Preparation
Isolate process medium
Release pressure completely (never adjust under pressure)
Verify stable 24 VDC power supply
Ensure ambient conditions (20 ±5°C recommended)
Step 2 – Verification
Use a pressure calibrator with accuracy 3–5 times better than the transmitter
Confirm output signal with a high-precision multimeter or HART communicator
Step 3 – Zero Adjustment
Adjust via HART communicator or local interface
Confirm output reads exactly 4.000 mA (or equivalent)
Step 4 – Documentation
Record before/after data
Update maintenance logs
6. Special Considerations
Absolute Pressure Transmitters
Must be calibrated against reference vacuum or compensated atmospheric pressure.
Remote Seal / Capillary Systems
If capillary length > 2 meters, temperature changes over 5°C may require re-zeroing.
Corrosive Media Applications
Ensure diaphragm is fully cleaned before calibration.
7. Common Misconceptions
❌ “New transmitters don’t need calibration.”
Transportation vibration and installation stress may affect zero.
❌ “Zero calibration equals span calibration.”
Zero and span are independent adjustments.
❌ “Small drift can be ignored.”
Minor deviations accumulate and impact process stability.
❌ “Adjusting under pressure saves time.”
This is unsafe and technically incorrect.
8. Recommended Calibration Frequency
Calibration frequency depends on:
Process criticality
Environmental conditions
Historical drift trends
If zero deviation exceeds 50% of allowable tolerance, immediate calibration is recommended rather than waiting for scheduled maintenance.
Conclusion
Zero calibration is not a simple “reset.”
It is a fundamental requirement to ensure measurement reliability, process safety, and regulatory compliance.
In modern industrial environments where precision drives efficiency, maintaining correct baseline measurement is essential.
If you need technical support for pressure transmitter selection, calibration guidance, or export supply solutions, feel free to contact us.
We provide industrial pressure transmitters with full calibration support and global export experience.
