Controls: Direct and Digital (Feb. 2008)
by Derek Weber
January 31, 2008
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| The inGen Direct sensor output is a read-only
signal that can be ported directly to any processor. |
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Sensing technology eliminates need for signal
conditioning.
The ongoing revolution in electronics technology
has spurred a demand for advanced digital sensors. To help meet this demand,
Inprox Technology Corp., Boston, has developed advanced inductive-based and
capacitive-based digital sensor technology. The technology was originally,
developed for advanced aerospace engine controls, but has since evolved from
these specialized engine and flight-control systems into designs and products
for a diversified set of critical applications involving measurements based on
inductive and capacitive platforms including: position, pressure, vibration,
torque, level, speed, deposition and temperature. Applications now include
high-volume products in the home appliance and consumer electronics segments.
Branded
as inGen Direct™, this technology suite provides a real time, continuously
variable-frequency output in the form of a square wave. The ITC sensor circuit
produces this square wave in one step, without the need for signal conditioning
electronics, a digital simplification that often bridges the divide between
analog devices and digital networks. The inGen Direct sensor output is a
read-only signal that can be ported directly to the Generic I/O port (GIO) of
any processor. (See Fig. 1.) In this methodology, the speed and accuracy of the
processor is part of the sensor performance equation. The square-wave output is
recognized as demonstrating stability to 6 significant figures, so accuracy of
better than 0.25 percent of full scale is typically achievable. The output
frequency is entirely scaleable and can be adjusted for the particulars of any
system requirements.
Some of the key features to ITC’s
digital sensor technology designs are: increased bandwidth and mean dynamic
response rates (operating ranges and rates set between 10 – 700 kHz or 1-20
MHz); elimination of all signal conditioning electronics from design; the
utilization of a distinct time-based measurement system; high accuracy; the use
of novel targets and target materials; the acquisition of expanded sets of
secondary data; high sensor operating temperatures of –100 DegC to 650 DegC
(-76 DegF to 1,200 DegF); and a lower cost metric in production and
accompanying systems-level reductions.
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Fig. 1. Digital signal transfer methodology.
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The widespread use of low-cost microprocessors allows
digital sensor technology companies like ITC to offer attractive cost equations
that are able to offload hardware and electronics burdens onto lower cost
software implementations. This transition from hard solutions to soft solutions
is a trend that continues in multiple markets, including those related to
commercial products. For companies where software implementation and
architecture changes are cumbersome, OEMs can choose the option of a “smart”
integrated system with onboard or remotely located microprocessors for flexible
application configurability and functionality. There are
different approaches in output and signal interface architectures; ITC takes
particular advantage of modern electronics’ ability to measure time with great
precision. In turn, this translates
into greater sensor precision and, in many measurement applications, can
provide a new set of capabilities not previously feasible in analog systems
(using current cost metrics) with customers looking to improve the
performance/cost impact. The implementation of a
variable-frequency, digital, square-wave output is achieved by counting the
edges of the square wave or using the square wave as a counter enabler in order
to realize high accuracy measurements. The speed of the processor determines
the accuracy. In terms of direct comparisons between
digital and analog signals, inGen Direct can offer generally higher resolution,
a reduction in errors, elimination of time delays, elimination of signal
conditioning (A/D and D/A), better dynamic response, higher stability (where
oscillation is separated from ground), fewer components (error terms engineered
out), more immunity to interference, and easier transmission and signal
processing. The translation of analog signals through
signal conditioning electronics to interface with digital networks causes
delays, compounds errors and increases costs. ITC’s Direct Digital Transfer
Signal Methodology can provide a read-only output using a method that is
similar to pulse-width-modulation without the control feature. This is
pulse-width-measurement in a sense, where designers can opt for the
digital–to–digital interface they want without the need for protocols,
handshakes, and carrier signals present in competing analog, or even more
complicated digital sensor outputs. ITC’s time-based system
can provide measurement ranges that are designed in and span operating ranges
anywhere between 10 kHz to 20 MHz, depending on specific application
requirements, target materials, appropriate dynamic bandwidth, and
microprocessor, with decentralized or centralized control requirements in
mind.
Temperature measurement
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| Oven sensor array provides rack detection during self-clean
cycle.
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The following demonstrates how an inGen Direct
sensor can be used in a temperature measurement application. In this example,
the temperature transducer is a reactive component in the frequency generating
circuit. Change in temperature alters the reactance (capacitance/inductance) of
the transducer, which changes the frequency of the sensor output. The inGen
Direct sensor has an operating frequency range between 200 kHz to 220 kHz, for
a bandwidth of 20 kHz over a measurement range of 600 DegC. The
sensor is used in conjunction with a processor that has a 400 MHz counter. Resolution of 1 percent of measurement range
is required per the application. Making a measurement over 10 sensor periods
will yield 20,000 counts at 200 kHz and 18,180 counts at 220 kHz. The mean count deviation per 6 DegC over the
measurement range is 19.1 counts, thus resolution of 1 percent of the
measurement range is attained. The refresh rate with these
conditions must also be examined. For example, the transducer can experience a
change of temperature of 600 Deg C in 1 second. The same 1 percent resolution
across the bandwidth requires a measurement every 10 ms. The longest sensor
measurement time interval at 20 kHz is 500 us. So it yields 20 measurements in
the 10 ms window. Compare that to a typical,
signal-conditioned temperature measurement scheme such as an RTD or
thermocouple using an amplifier and A/D converter. The amplifier has gain error
and temperature error. The A/D converter has input error (sample and hold,
etc.) and resolution error (depending on whether it is 8, 12, 16 bits). The A/D
also requires control signals from the controller to initiate a conversion.
Then, at the end of a conversion, the controller must read the data. Many converters use a serial data bus, so
the data rate is the baud rate times the number of bits. The controller now has
a data word that represents a temperature measurement term with gain and A/D
errors and time delays for conversion and data transmission.
Motor speed control
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Digital sensors improve closed-loop motor speed control.
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Another potential application for inGen Direct sensors is in
the realm of motor speed control. The obvious purpose of a closed-loop
(feedback-based) motor speed controller is to receive a signal representing the
actual speed, compare that to the demanded speed, and then adjust to drive the
motor at the demanded speed. With a number of variables affecting motor speed
(load, friction, temperature, etc.), sensing motion plays an integral part to
the motor control system. Feedback-based speed control
offers better motor control and positioning over open-loop control (sensing
motor drive parameters only), but typically has been a costly and complicated
addition to the system assembly. ITC technology offers a cost-effective
solution by removing the complexity on both the sensor-integration side and on
the motor-control system side. For speed-control
applications where speed is directly proportional to the supply voltage (as
with a DC motor), or for applications where speed is related to the switching
frequency (as with an AC induction motor or 3-phase induction motors), the ITC
sensor platform offers a high-resolution, fast-dynamic-response, high-accuracy
approach over the range from zero to full speed. While
there are many non-contact optical and magnetic encoder systems available, many
designers of motor-control systems have found the ITC technology to be an
attractive option. For example, ITC has worked with DC motor manufacturers on
control applications that involve rotary actuator position measurement using
inGen Direct technology. In one particular design, the
change in the integral of dielectric in the field created by the sensor
transducer changes reactance in the transducer and thus the frequency. In this
case, a one-lobe cam was used for a target with a pair of sensors in order to
produce a quadrature output. The target is fixed to the rotating shaft. The
system gives absolute zero speed/position measurement, as well as direction of
rotation and rotary speed. The same signal-processing methodology is used as in
the previous temperature example above.
Alternately, a single sensor can be used with a multi-toothed wheel to
give an incremental indication of speed and position. Benefits
of using this approach include: - Low measurement
hysteresis.
- True zero speed output with one sensor.
- Not
effected by dust, oil, moisture, etc.
- Lightweight targets can be used.
(Aluminum, metal-coated plastic, etc.).
- Minimal effect from motor EMI.
- Fast
dynamic response. Signal refresh to 500 kHz or more.
- Longer MTBF from
fewer components.
- Digital output.
- Low power consumption.
- High
resolution.
- Real time self-diagnostics. Continuous sensor output can
be monitored for fault conditions/pre-warning.
- Non-contact design.
- Does
not use permanent magnets. Exhibits no sensitivity to heat and no drift over
time.
- Economical design.
- Can also be used to detect motor
shaft run out/bearing run-out.
- Both absolute and incremental position
output options.
- Temperature operating range of –110 DegC to 450/650 DegC operability.
- Rotational
speed acceleration and de-acceleration.
- No induced magnetic field.
- Can
be used as rev-limiters or governors.
- Ramp up speed and braking
abilities are inherent in this sensor.
In addition to those
benefits, the system integration of the digital sensor technology can provide
more. When implementing the technology, the controller does not require a
particular bus (PCI, Ethernet, USB, RS232, ISA, etc). The controller does not
require any input filters, sample-and-hold circuitry, or translation hardware
(A/D Converters, serial-to-parallel converters, level shifters, etc). No special
interface IC’s, or amplifier boards, or required software tools or languages
are needed. Appliance project
Another potential application for the technology can
be realized in the home appliance industry, where the sensors can be used in
ovens to detect the position of racks in the self-cleaning cycle. In this case,
a change in the integral of dielectric in the field created by the sensor
transducer changes reactance in the transducer and thus the frequency. ITC has
developed a patent-pending sensor array for the cooking appliance market that
can be embedded directly in most oven walls; providing a position measurement
that operates up to 450 DegC and survives up to 600 DegC. The sensor array can
be flush mounted within the oven’s inner cavity and detect an interior rack in
any position for self-cleaning cycle monitoring. It is also possible to provide
color matching between the sensors and the oven walls to make them invisible to
the consumers.
Conclusion
Previous generations of analog devices and analog
measurements have long been the standard of most industries. The costs of
discrete components and signal conditioning electronics can be re-distributed
in the digital approach on to the lower cost metrics of software.
Benefits
on the component side include the ability to measure small physical changes
very accurately; robust temperature operability ranges of –60 DegC to 650 DegC;
the elimination of magnets and/or ferrites (in inductive designs); the ability
to utilize novel targets and target materials, and the ability to gather
secondary data for health monitoring and predictive maintenance.
Benefits
on the systems level side include the Digital Signal Transfer Methodology
itself; the associated hardware cost reductions (wire, cable, targets, etc.),
possible manufacturing process changes and reduction in circuit board space;
and positive interface and common bus options.
Digital
sensor technology, therefore, represents a clear and fundamental shift forward
on both the component and systems levels.
For more
information email: sales@inproxsensors.com
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