ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 10 seconds.
Electronics Industry Search
Advertisement
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by

Sensor scene bustles in Beantown

By Rick DeMeis, Senior Technical Editor -- Design News, November 18, 2002

Sensors Expo, held here in September, showed developments still advancing in sensor technologies—those companies supplying and supporting pressure, contact, and inertial sensors had many new products on display. Here are just some of the noteworthy developments on the show floor:


Allegro MicroSystem's power lead frame holding the Hall effect sensor (pins 4 and 5) is designed for low power loss. In addition, th eleads are electrically isolated from the device leads (pins 1-3), allowing use withou opto-isolators or other isolating feedback methods.

Motorola (Phoenix, AZ) was highlighting its newly released low-g (1.5-8.0g) MEMS (microelectromechanical systems)-based inertial sensors. What impressed me was the small 16-pin SOIC package size (6.0 x 9.9 mm), which neatly takes up minimal board space for embedded applications. Rod Borras, manager of the company's Semiconductor Products Sector, said that the design engineers came up with a device able to sense accelerations in three orthogonal directions using the change in capacitance between surfaced-machined flat silicon plates in the sensor—all in one flat package rather than multiple, orthogonal ones. Starting with a single silicon plate, this is divided in two, with the interface between the halves a series of interdigitated "fingers." Any acceleration parallel to the plane (x, y axes) changes the capacitance between the fingers laterally or longitudinally. Parallel to this plate is a second plate. Any acceleration at right angles to the plates (z axis) produces a capacitance change between the two. And, because the plates are parallel, the result is a device enclosed in a single flat package on a pc board.

Uses for the accelerometers include vibration measurement, seismic detection, bearing wear monitoring, inclinometers, and security. The sensors could also find use in automotive applications to detect rollovers, sense braking deceleration, and control active suspensions. Healthcare and fitness equipment could benefit from applications in physical therapy and rehabilitation equipment sensing force and in use as pedometers to measure distance.

Allegro MicroSystems' (Worcester, MA) new, open loop Hall effect current sensor, is designed to free engineers from having to develop their own magnetic circuits and comes in a small package size easy to fit on a pc board. The ACS750ECA-100 is a fully integrated ±100A sensor with a 13 kHz bandwidth and low thermal drift (see figure). HITEC Corp. showed its nifty MMTTM Bolt Insert Strain Gage Assembly—an internal strain gauge assembly for insertion into existing bolts for monitoring tensile loads.

Sensors are sometimes only as good as their supporting electronics. Toward that end, Texas Instruments (Tucson, AZ) announced a new 1.8V op amp in its Burr-Brown product line. Frank Haupt, strategic development engineer in Advanced Analog Products, told me the big feature was rail-to-rail input without crossover between input stages to reduce distortion and improve common mode rejection ratio (CMRR) to 100 dB, typical. In more general engineering terms, this means that only one input stage is needed in the amplifier used to drive the sensors. Thus the usual crossover distortion in a signal when switching between the two input stages usually found in an amplifier is eliminated—a simple but elegant design change. The 1.8V amp's low voltage uses include devices powered by two battery cells.



For more information, go to

www.designnews.com/info and enter the numbers below:

Sensors from
Motorola:
Enter 539

Sensors by
Allegro Microsystems:
Enter 540

Strain gauges from
HITEC Corp.:
Enter 541

Microelectronics from
Texas Instruments:
Enter 542

Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Technology Marketplace

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Article tools sponsored by
Find a supplier on oemsuppliersearch.com

Talkback


We would love your feedback!


» Submit talk back
Advertisement

DN's Resource Center Get Free Information, Made Easy

Advertisement

Design News Partner Zones

AnarkCAD/CAE Model Clean-Up: Reduce Iterative Cycles
This webinar featured research and survey results related to problems associated with preparing CAD geometry for CAE applications.  We discussed how Recipe-Based Automation can help create "just-in-time" CAE-ready geometry each time a cad model is updated. Watch the Presentation


Light Matters: Systems Level Approach to HBLED illumination applications
Its good practice to apply a systems-level approach to high-brightness LED (HBLED) illumination applications. Minimally, the system includes the optical, thermal and electrical characteristics of the of the HBLED, the lens (if any) which is built-in to its package, secondary optics such as external plastic lenses/reflectors to direct the light as your application requires and power driver electronics. Read More


Design Engineers' Portal for Sensing and Machine Safety
Whatever industry you're in, or whatever product you manufacture, the right sensors to automate your plant, and to improve your overall efficiency, quality and safety are a must. You'll find Banner Engineering to be an amazing resource of products, training and people with expertise.

Design News Partner Zone Directory »

Please visit these other Reed Business sites