Small, New Force Sensor Solutions for Automotive, Automation, and Medical Apps

作者:Carolyn Mathas

投稿人:电子产品


Push or pull? Likely if that’s the action, and the field is electronics, a force sensor is involved. Simply put, force sensors are transducers that convert mechanical force input into an electrical output signal. Piezoelectric force sensors are used for such measurements as impact, high-speed compression, oscillation, and tension.

Force applied to a sensing element affects the atomic structure of the material, causing a separation of charges and the output signal. Force sensors are used in a variety of automotive applications such as brakes, air bags, speed control, suspension, and transmission. They have a wide range of medical, gaming, industrial, and aerospace uses.

There are many types of sensors measuring force, and the transducers within the sensor that detects the event of force fall into three main categories:
  • Strain gauge load cells
  • Piezoelectric crystal
  • Measurement through pressure
Strain gauge load cells are the most common kind of force transducer. A strain gauge responds to the strain where it is located, while the shape and elasticity of the element make up the magnitude of the strain produced by an applied force. Strain gauges include electrical resistance strain gauges, foil strain gauges, thin-film strain gauges, semiconductor strain gauges, and wire strain gauges. Strain gauges are used to measure static forces.

Piezoelectric crystal force transducers are used with a charge amplifier to integrate the electric charges formed on a crystal surface to a given and measurable signal proportional to the force applied. These sensors are unique in that they are active sensors that do not require a power supply, and signals are easily generated without causing geometric changes to the force measurement route. They have a high-frequency response capability that makes them suitable for dynamic measurement, but because of leakage of charge from the charge amplifier, also called drift, they cannot perform static measurements accurately. They have small dimensions and can operate well within a wide temperature range, and are typically used to measure oscillation, impact, and high-speed tension and compression.

Measurement of force through pressure is accomplished by means of hydraulic load cells or pneumatic load cells. In the first case, the hydraulic load cells are typically filled with oil that already has a specific preload pressure. Fluid pressure is increased by applying force to the loading member so that a result is measured or displayed on a pressure gauge dial. Given their self-contained nature and that they do not need external power, they can be used in potentially explosive environments. In comparison, a pneumatic load cell is similar to its hydraulic load cousin, except that force is applied to one side of a diaphragm of flexible material (or piston), and the force is balanced by pneumatic pressure on the other side. Here, air pressure is applied to a chamber and it builds until it is equal to the force on a close-fitting cap on the chamber. Increased pressure lifts the cap and air escapes until pressure equilibrium is present. The pressure in the chamber at equilibrium indicates the force on the cap, and the results are read on a pneumatic pressure dial.

There are several examples of force sensors today that have features that were not typically found in their predecessors. For example, in the past, a piezoresistive load cell was extremely expensive. Today, however, cost and performance breakthroughs by parts such as the Measurement Specialities FC22 compression load cell sensor (Figure 1) have opened up new markets and applications.

The FC22 series

Figure 1: The FC22 series compression load cell.

The FC22 series uses micro-machined silicon piezoresistive strain gauges fused with high-temperature glass to a high-performance stainless-steel substrate. The underlying technology eliminates age-sensitive, organic epoxies used in traditional load cell designs, increasing life expectancy and stability. The device measures direct force and operates at very low strain levels. Features include small size, low noise, high over-range capability, high reliability, low deflection, fast response time, and 10 to 100-lbf ranges. Applications include medical infusion pumps, robotics end-effectors, variable force control, load and compression sensing, exercise machines, pumps, contact sensing, and weighing.

The Parallax FlexiForce 30056 sensor (Figure 2) features an active sensing area that is a 0.375-in. diameter circle at the end of the sensor. Conductive leads are easy to connect to a breadboard or through-hole area and it has an ideal output for A/D conversion whereby 0 V is no force and 4.2 V is 100 lbs.

The Parallax FlexiForce 30056 sensor

Figure 2: The Parallax FlexiForce 30056 sensor.

Particularly beneficial is the range of applications it targets including industrial automation where it can be used from robotic grip forces to compression moldings and automotive products including airbag force and seatbelt tensioners. Medical applications include forceps closure and bandage/cast pressure, and other uses include alarm systems, joystick handles, touch pads, and weather seals and strips.

The Honeywell FS Series (Figure 3) is a family of low-profile force sensors that provides reliable force-sensing performance in a compact, commercial-grade package. The sensor features a low power, unamplified, uncompensated Wheatstone bridge circuit design for stable millivolt outputs across the force range.

FSS low-profile force sensors pinout

Figure 3: FSS low-profile force sensors pinout.

The sensor concentrates force from the application through the stainless-steel ball, directly to the silicon sensing element; the amount of resistance changes in proportion to the amount of force applied. The package design uses elastomeric technology and engineered molded plastics for load excitation capacities of 4.5/5.5 kg over force. The stainless-steel ball is adaptable to a variety of applications including medical infusion pumps, occlusion detection, kidney dialysis machines, variable tensions control, and robotic end-effectors.

Interlink’s FSR 400 series (Figure 4) is composed of single-zone force-sensing-resistor (FSR) polymer thick-film (PTF) devices that yield a decrease in resistance with an increase in force applied to the sensor’s surface. The sensitivity of the device is optimized for use in human touch control of such electronic devices as automotive electronics, medical systems, industrial applications, robotics, and even musical instruments.

The Interlink FSR 400 series

Figure 4: The Interlink FSR 400 series round force sensing resistor.

At 0.35 mm, the sensor is ultrathin, and it has a 7.62-mm diameter. It features an actuation force as low as 0.1 N and a sensitivity range to 10 N. Its highly repeatable force reading is as low as 2 percent of initial reading. The family is also offered in a wide range of custom sizes. We’ve explored just a sampling of the large number of force sensor products announced recently Advances can be seen in biomedical sensing where wearable force plate systems are designed using small, tri-axial force sensors, robotics applications to determine exoskeleton motion, and innovative uses of force control in tactile sensing. The affordability and performance of these devices are both increasing dramatically, and force sensors are being employed well beyond their historical uses for repetitive tasks and in rugged environments.

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Carolyn Mathas

Carolyn Mathas 曾在 EDN、EE Times Designlines、Light Reading、Lightwave 和 Electronic Products 等多家媒体任编辑或作者,从业经验达 20 多年。同时她还为多家公司提供定制内容和营销服务。

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电子产品

《电子产品》杂志和 ElectronicProducts.com 网站服务于负责电子设备和系统设计的工程师和工程管理人员。