Electronic caliper using a reduced offset induced current position transducer

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • RE37490
  • Patent Number
    RE37,490
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, March 16, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 1, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
An electronic caliper having a reduced offset position transducer that uses two sets of coupling loops on a scale to inductively couple a transmitter winding on a read head on a slide to one or more receiver windings on the read head. The transmitter winding generates a primary magnetic field. The transmitter winding is inductively coupled to first loop portions of first and second sets of coupling loops by a magnetic field. Second loop portions of the first and second sets of coupling loops are interleaved and generate secondary magnetic fields. A receiver winding is formed in a periodic pattern of alternating polarity loops and is inductively coupled to the second loop portions of the first and second sets of coupling loops by the secondary magnetic fields. Depending on the relative position between the read head and the scale, each polarity loop of the receiver winding is inductively coupled to a second loop portion of either the first or second set of coupling loops. The relative positions of the first and second loop portions of the first and second sets of coupling loops are periodic and dependent on the relative position of the coupling loops on the scale.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of Invention




This invention relates to an electronic caliper. More particularly this invention is directed to electronic calipers using a reduced offset induced current position transducer.




2. Description of Related Art




U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/645,483 filed May 13, 1996, and incorporated herein in its entirety, discloses an electronic caliper using an inductive position transducer.




The operation of the electronic caliper using the inductive position transducer described in the application Ser. No. '483 is generally shown in

FIGS. 1

,


2


, and


3


. As shown in

FIG. 1

, an inductive caliper


100


includes an elongated beam


102


. The elongated beam


102


is a rigid or semi-rigid bar having a generally rectangular cross section. A groove


106


is formed in an upper surface of the elongated beam


102


. An elongated measuring scale


104


is rigidly bonded to the elongated beam


102


in the groove


106


. The groove


106


is formed in the beam


102


at a depth about equal to the thickness of the scale


104


. Thus, the top surface of the scale


104


is very nearly coplanar with the top edges of beam


102


.




A pair of laterally projecting, fixed jaws


108


and


110


are integrally formed near a first end


112


of the beam


102


. A corresponding pair of laterally projecting movable jaws


116


and


118


are formed on a slider assembly


120


. The outside dimensions of an object are measured by placing the object between a pair of engagement surfaces


114


on the jaws


108


and


116


. Similarly, the inside dimensions of an object are measured by placing the jaws


110


and


118


within an object. The engagement surfaces


122


of the jaws


110


and


118


are positioned to contact the surfaces on the object to be measured.




The engagement surfaces


122


and


114


are positioned so that when the engagement surfaces


114


of the jaws


108


and


116


are contacting each other, the engagement surfaces


122


of the jaws


110


and


118


are aligned with each other. In this position, the zero position (not shown), both the outside and inside dimensions measured by the caliper


100


should be zero.




The caliper


100


also includes a depth bar


124


which is attached to the slider assembly


120


. The depth bar


124


projects longitudinally from the beam


102


and terminates at an engagement end


126


. The length of the depth bar


124


is such that the engagement end


126


is flush with a second end


128


of the beam


102


when the caliper


100


is at the zero position. By resting the second end


128


of the beam


102


on a surface in which a hole is formed and extending the depth bar


124


into the hole until the end


126


touches the bottom of the hole, the caliper


100


is able to measure the depth of the hole.




Whether a measurement is made using the outside measuring jaws


108


and


116


, the inside measuring jaws


110


and


118


, or the depth bar


124


, the measured dimension is displayed on a conventional digital display


134


, which is mounted in a cover


136


of the caliper


100


. A pair of push button switches


130


and


132


are also mounted in the cover


136


. The switch


130


turns on and off a signal processing and display electronic circuit


160


of the slider assembly


120


. The switch


132


is used to reset the display


134


to zero.




As shown in

FIG. 1

, the slider assembly


120


includes a base


138


with a guiding edge


140


. The guiding edge


140


contacts a side edge


146


of the elongated beam


102


when the slider assembly


120


straddles the elongated beam


102


. This ensures accurate operation of the caliper


100


. A pair of screws


144


bias a resilient pressure bar


146


against a mating edge of the beam


102


to eliminate free play between the slider assembly


120


and the elongated beam


102


.




The depth bar


124


is inserted into a depth bar groove


148


formed on an underside of the elongated beam


102


. The depth bar groove


148


extends along the underside of the elongated beam


102


to provide clearance for the depth bar


124


. The depth bar


124


is held in the depth bar groove


148


by an end stop


150


. The end stop


150


is attached to the underside of the beam


102


at the second end


128


. The end stop


150


also prevents the slider assembly


120


from inadvertently disengaging from the elongated beam


102


at the second end


128


during operation.




The slider assembly


120


also includes a read head assembly


152


mounted on the base


138


above the elongated beam


102


. Thus, the base


138


and read head assembly


152


move as a unit. The read head assembly


152


includes a substrate


154


such as a conventional printed circuit board. The substrate


154


bears an inductive read head


158


on its lower surface. A signal processing and display electronic circuit


160


is mounted on an upper surface of the substrate


154


. A resilient seal


156


is compressed between the cover


136


and the substrate


154


to prevent contamination of the signal processing and display electronic circuit


160


.




As shown in

FIG. 2

, the read head


158


is covered by a thin, durable, insulative coating


162


, which is preferably approximately 50 microns thick.




The scale


104


is preferably an elongated printed circuit board (PCB)


164


. As shown in

FIG. 1

, a set of magnetic flux modulators


166


are spaced apart along the PCB


164


in a periodic pattern. The flux modulators


166


are preferably formed of copper. The flux modulators


166


are preferably formed according to conventional printed circuit board manufacturing techniques, although many other methods of fabrication may be used. As shown in

FIG. 2

, a protective insulating layer


168


(preferably being at most 100 microns thick) covers the flux modulators


166


. The protective layer


168


can include printed markings, as shown in FIG.


1


.




The slider assembly


120


carries the read head


158


so that it is slightly separated from the beam


102


by an air gap


170


formed between the insulative coatings


162


and


168


. The air gap


170


is preferably on the order of 0.5 mm. Together, the read head


158


and the flux modulators


166


form an inductive transducer.




As shown in

FIG. 3

, the magnetic flux modulators


166


are distributed along a measuring axis


174


of the elongated beam


102


at a pitch equal to a wavelength λ, which is described in more detail below. The flux modulators


166


have a nominal width along the measuring axis


174


of λ/2. The flux modulators


166


have a width d in a direction perpendicular to the measuring axis


174


.




The read head


158


includes a generally square transmitter winding


176


that is connected to a drive signal generator


178


. The drive signal generator


178


provides a time varying drive signal to the transmitter winding


176


. The time varying drive signal preferably results in a sinusoidal signal in the transmitter winding


176


, and more preferably an exponentially decaying sinusoidal signal. When the time varying drive signal is applied to the transmitter winding


176


, the time varying current flowing in the transmitter winding


176


generates a time varying, or changing, magnetic field. Because the transmitter winding


176


is generally rectangularly shaped, the generated magnetic field is generally constant within a flux region inside the transmitter winding


176


.




The read head


158


further includes a first receiver winding


180


and a second receiver winding


182


positioned on the read head


158


within the flux region inside the transmitter winding


176


. Each of the first receiver winding


180


and the second receiver winding


182


is formed by a plurality of first loop segments


184


and second loop segments


186


. The first loop segments


184


are formed on a first surface of a layer of the printed circuit board


154


. The second loop segments


186


are formed on another surface of the layer of the printed circuit board


154


. The layer of the printed circuit board


154


acts as an electrical insulation layer between the first loop segments


184


and the second loop segments


186


. Each end of the first loop segments


184


is connected to one end of one of the second loop segments


186


through feed-throughs


188


formed in the layer of the printed circuit board


154


.




The first and second loop segments


184


and


186


are preferably sinusoidally shaped. Accordingly, as shown in

FIG. 3

the first and second loop segments


184


and


186


forming each of the receiver windings


180


and


182


form a sinusoidally shaped periodic pattern having a wavelength λ. Each of the receiver windings


180


and


182


are thus formed having a plurality of loops


190


and


192


.




The loops


190


and


192


in each of the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


have a width along the measuring axis


174


equal to λ/2. Thus, each pair of adjacent loops


190


and


192


has a width equal to λ. Furthermore, the first and second loop segments


184


and


186


go through a full sinusoidal cycle in each pair of adjacent loops


190


and


192


. Thus, λ corresponds to the sinusoidal wavelength of the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


. Furthermore, the second receiver winding


182


is offset by λ/4 from the first receiver winding


180


along the measuring axis


174


. That is, the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


are in quadrature.




The changing drive signal from the drive signal generator


178


is applied to the transmitter winding


176


such that current flows in a transmitter winding


176


from a first terminal


176




a,


through the transmitter winding


176


and out through a second terminal


176




b


. Thus, the magnetic field generated by the transmitter winding


176


descends into the plane of

FIG. 3

within the transmitter winding


176


and rises up out of the plane of

FIG. 3

outside the transmitter winding


176


. Accordingly, the changing magnetic field within the transmitter winding


176


generates an induced electromagnetic force (EMF) in each of the loops


190


and


192


formed in the receiver windings


180


and


182


.




The loops


190


and


192


have opposite winding directions. Thus, the EMF induced in the loops


190


has a polarity that is opposite to the polarity of the EMF induced in the loops


192


. The loops


190


and


192


enclose the same area and thus nominally the same amount of magnetic flux. Therefore, the absolute magnitude of the EMF generated in each of the loops


190


and


192


is nominally the same.




There are preferably equal numbers of loops


190


and


192


in each of the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


. Thus, the positive polarity EMF induced in the loops


190


is exactly offset by the negative polarity EMF induced in the loops


192


. Accordingly, the net nominal EMF on each of the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


is zero. Thus, no signal should be output from the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


as a result solely of the direct coupling from the transmitter winding


176


to the receiver windings


180


and


182


.




When the read head


158


is placed in proximity to the PCB


164


, the changing magnetic flux generated by the transmitter winding


176


also passes through the flux modulators


166


. The flux modulators


166


modulate the changing magnetic flux and can be either flux enhancers or flux disrupters.




When the flux modulators


166


are provided as flux disrupters, the flux modulators


166


are formed as conductive plates or thin conductive films on the PCB


164


. As the changing magnetic flux passes through the conductive plates or thin films, eddy currents are generated in the conductive plates or thin films. These eddy currents in turn generate magnetic fields having a field direction that is opposite to that of the magnetic field generated by the transmitter winding


176


. Thus, in areas proximate to each of the flux disrupter-type flux modulators


166


, the net magnetic flux is less than the net magnetic flux in areas distant from the flux disrupter type flux modulators


166


.




When the scale PCB


164


is positioned relative to the read head


158


such that the flux disrupters


166


are aligned with the positive polarity loops


190


of the receiver winding


180


, the net EMF generated in the positive polarity loops


190


is reduced compared to the net EMF generated in the negative polarity loops


192


. Thus, the receiver winding


190


becomes unbalanced and has a net negative signal across its output terminals


180




a


and


180




b.






Similarly, when the flux disrupters


166


are aligned with the negative polarity loops


192


, the net magnetic flux through the negative polarity loops


192


is disrupted or reduced. Thus, the net EMF generated in the negative polarity loops


192


is reduced relative to the net EMF generated in the positive polarity loops


190


. Thus, the first receiver winding


180


has a net positive signal across its output terminals


180




a


and


180




b.






When the flux modulators


166


are provided as flux enhancers, this result is exactly reversed. The flux enhancer type flux modulators


166


are formed by portions of high magnetic permeability material provided in or on the scale member


104


, in place of the conductive plates of PCB


164


. The magnetic flux generated by the transmitter winding


176


preferentially passes through the high magnetic permeability flux enhancer type flux modulators


166


. That is, the density of the magnetic flux within the flux enhancers


166


is enhanced, while the flux density in areas outside the flux enhancers


166


is reduced.




Thus, when the flux enhancers


166


are aligned with the positive polarity loops


190


of the second receiver winding


182


, the flux density through the positive polarity loops


190


is greater than a flux density passing through the negative polarity loops


192


. Thus, the net EMF generated in the positive polarity


190


increases, while the net EMF induced in the negative polarity loops


192


decreases. This appears as a positive signal across the terminals


182




a


and


182




b


of the second receiver winding


182


.




When the flux enhancers


166


are aligned with the negative polarity loops


192


, the negative polarity loops


192


generate an enhanced EMF relative to the EMF induced in the positive polarity loops


190


. Thus, a negative signal appears across the terminals


182




a


and


182




b


of the second receiver winding


180


. It should also be appreciated that, as outlined in the incorporated reference, both the flux enhancing and flux disrupting effects can be combined in a single scale, where the flux enhancers and flux disrupters are interleaved along the length of the scale


104


. This would act to enhance the modulation of the induced EMF, because the effects of both types of flux modulators additively combine.




As indicated above, the width and height of the flux modulators


166


are nominally λ/2 and d, respectively, while the pitch of the flux modulators


166


is nominally λ. Similarly, the wavelength of the periodic pattern formed in the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


is nominally λ and the height of the loops


190


and


192


is nominally d. Furthermore, each of the loops


190


and


192


enclose a nominally constant area.





FIG. 4A

shows the position-dependent output from the positive polarity loops


190


as the flux modulators


166


move relative to the positive polarity loops


190


. Assuming the flux modulators


166


are flux disrupters, the minimum signal amplitude corresponds to those positions where the flux disrupters


166


exactly align with the positive polarity loops


190


, while the maximum amplitude positions correspond to the flux disrupters


166


being aligned with the negative polarity loops


192


.





FIG. 4B

shows the signal output from each of the negative polarity loops


192


. As with the signal shown in

FIG. 4A

, the minimum signal amplitude corresponds to those positions where the flux disrupters


166


exactly align with the positive polarity loops


190


, while the maximum signal output corresponds to those positions where the flux disrupters exactly align with the negative polarity loops


192


. It should be appreciated that if flux enhancers were used in place of flux disrupters, the minimum signal amplitudes in

FIGS. 4A and 4B

would correspond to the flux enhancers


166


aligning with the negative polarity loops


192


, while the maximum signal amplitude would correspond to the flux enhancers


166


aligning with the positive polarity loops


190


.





FIG. 4C

shows the net signal output from either of the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


. This net signal is equal to the sum of the signals output from the positive and negative polarity loops


190


and


192


, i.e., the sum of the signal shown in

FIGS. 4A and 4B

. The net signal shown in

FIG. 4C

should ideally be symmetrical around zero, that is, the positive and negative polarity loops


190


and


192


should be exactly balanced to produce a symmetrical output with zero offset.




However, a “DC” (position independent) component often appears in the net signal in a real device. This DC component is the offset signal V


o


. This offset V


o


is an extraneous signal component that complicates signal processing and leads to undesirable position measurement errors. This offset has two sources.




First, the full amplitude of the transmitter field passes through the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


. As outlined above, this induces a voltage in each loop


190


and


192


. The induced voltage nominally cancels because the loops


190


and


192


have opposite winding directions. However, to perfectly cancel the induced voltage in the receiver windings requires the positive and negative loops


190


and


192


to be precisely positioned and shaped, for a perfectly balanced result. The tolerances on the balance are critical because the voltages induced directly into the receiver winding loops


180


and


182


by the transmitter winding


176


are much stronger than the modulation in the induced voltage caused by the flux modulators


166


.




Second, the spatially modulated field created by the flux modulators also exhibits an average position-independent offset component. That is, the flux modulators


166


within the magnetic field generated by the transmitter winding


176


all create the same polarity spatial modulation in the magnetic field. For example, when flux disrupters are used, the induced eddy current field from the flux modulators has an offset because the flux disrupters within the transmitter field all create a same polarity secondary magnetic field. At the same time, the space between the flux disrupters does not create a secondary magnetic field.




Thus, each positive polarity loop


190


and each negative polarity loop


192


of the receiver windings


180


and


182


sees a net magnetic field that varies between a minimum value and a maximum value having the same polarity. The mean value of this function is not balanced around zero, i.e., it has a large nominal offset. Similarly, when flux enhancers are used, the field modulation due to the flux enhancers has an offset because the enhancers within the transmitter winding


176


all create the same field modulation, while the space between the modulators provides no modulation. Each positive and negative polarity loop


190


and


192


of each receiver winding


180


or


182


therefore sees a modulated field that varies between a minimum value and a maximum value having the same polarity. The mean value of this function also has a large nominal offset.




A receiver winding having an equal number of similar positive and negative polarity loops


190


and


192


helps eliminate the offset components. However, any imperfection in the balance between the positive and negative polarity loops


190


and


192


allows residual offsets according to the previous description.




Both these offset components are expected to be canceled solely by the symmetry between the positive and negative polarity loops


190


and


192


in the first and second windings


180


and


182


. This puts very stringent requirements on the manufacturing precision of the receiver windings


180


and


182


. Experience in manufacturing a transducer indicates it is practically impossible to eliminate this source of error from the induced current position transducer of a conventional caliper.




Furthermore, any deviations in the width or pitch of the flux modulators


166


will unbalance the receiver windings


180


or


182


in a way that is independent of the relative position between the PCB


164


and the read head


158


.




Any signal component which is independent of the transducer position, such as the aforementioned offset components, is regarded as an extraneous signal to the operation of the transducer. Such extraneous signals complicate the required signal processing circuitry and otherwise lead to errors which compromise the accuracy of the transducer.




One proposed solution attempts to reduce the extraneous coupling between the transmitter and receiver windings simply by placing the receiver winding distant from the field produced by the transmitter winding. However, the effectiveness of this technique alone depends on the degree of separation between the transmitter and receiver windings. Hence, this technique contradicts the need for high accuracy linear caliper of compact size. Alternatively, the transmitter field can be confined with magnetically permeable materials so that the effectiveness of a given degree of separation is increased. However, this technique leads to additional complexity, cost, and sensitivity to external fields, in a practical device.




Furthermore, the simple winding configurations disclosed in association with these techniques include no means for creating a device with a measuring range significantly exceeding the span of the transmitter and receive windings. In addition, the simple winding configurations provide no means for significantly enhancing the degree of output signal change per unit of displacement for a given measuring range. Thus, the practical measuring resolution of these devices is limited for a given measuring range.




The need for a high accuracy inductive linear caliper which rejects both extraneous signal components and external fields, is compact, of simple construction, and capable of high resolution measurement over an extended measuring range without requiring increased fabrication and circuit accuracies, has therefore not been met previously.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




This invention provides an electronic caliper using an induced current position transducer with improved winding configurations. The improved winding configurations increase the proportion of the useful output signal component relative to extraneous (“offset”) components of the output signal without requiring increased transducer fabrication accuracy. Furthermore, the winding configurations provide means to enhance the degree of output signal change per unit of displacement for a given measuring range.




This is accomplished by winding configurations that minimize and nullify the direct coupling between the transmitter and receiver windings while providing enhanced position-dependent coupling between them through a plurality of coupling windings on the scale which interact with a plurality of spatial modulations of the windings.




In particular, this invention includes an electronic caliper using a reduced offset induced current position transducer having a scale and a read head that are movable relative to each other along a measuring axis. The read head includes a pair of receiver windings extending along the measuring axis and positioned in a center portion of the read head. The read head further includes a transmitter winding extending along the measuring axis and positioned laterally from the receiver windings in a direction perpendicular to the measuring axis.




In a first embodiment of the electronic caliper using the induced current position transducer of this invention, the transmitter winding is divided into a first transmitter loop and a second transmitter loop, with the first transmitter loop placed on one side of the receiver windings and the second transmitter loop placed on the other side of the receiver windings. The magnetic fields created by the first and second loops of the transmitter winding counteract each other in the area of the receiver winding. This minimizes the extraneous effects of any direct coupling from the transmitter winding to the receiver winding.




The scale member has a plurality of first coupling loops extending along the measuring axis and interleaved with a plurality of second measuring loops also extending along the measuring axis. The first coupling loops have a first portion aligned with the first transmitter winding and a second portion aligned with the receiver windings. Similarly, the second coupling loops have a first portion aligned with the second transmitter winding and a second portion aligned with the receiver windings.




In a second embodiment of the induced current position transducer of this invention, the transmitter has only one loop, which is placed alongside the receiver windings on the read head. The scale member in this case has a plurality of first coupling loops arrayed along the measuring axis and interleaved with a second plurality of coupling loops also arrayed along the measuring axis. Both the first and second coupling loops have a first portion aligned with the transmitter winding and a second portion aligned with the receiver windings.




The first and second portions of each first coupling loop are connected in series and are “untwisted”. Thus, the magnetic fields induced in the first and second portions of the first coupling loops have the same polarity. In contrast, the first and second portion of each second coupling loop are connected in series and are “twisted”. In this case, the magnetic fields induced in the first and second portions of the second coupling loops have opposite polarities. This creates an alternating induced magnetic field along the measuring axis in the area under the receiver winding in response to exciting the transmitter winding.




These winding configurations substantially eliminate several extraneous signal components, resulting in simplified signal processing and improved transducer accuracy and robustness in an economical design.




This invention provides an improved electronic caliper that uses an induced current position transducer with improved winding configurations. This invention uses a transducer with example embodiments that are described in copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/834,432, filed on Apr. 16, 1997, entitled “REDUCED OFFSET HIGH ACCURACY INDUCED CURRENT POSITION TRANSDUCER” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.




These and other features and advantages of this invention are described in or are apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The preferred embodiments of this invention will be described in detail, with reference to the following figures, wherein:





FIG. 1

shows an electronic caliper using an induced current position transducer having undesirable extraneous signal offset components;





FIG. 2

is a cross-sectional view of the caliper of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

shows the induced current position transducer of the electronic caliper of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 4A

shows the position-dependent output of the positive polarity loops of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 4B

shows the position-dependent output of the negative polarity loops of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 4C

shows the net position-dependent output of the positive and negative polarity loops of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5

shows an electronic caliper of this invention using a reduced offset high accuracy induced current position transducer;





FIG. 6

shows a first embodiment of the scale for the reduced offset induced current position transducer of the electronic caliper of this invention;





FIG. 7

shows a first embodiment of the read head for the reduced offset induced current position transducer of the electronic caliper of this invention;





FIG. 8

shows a second embodiment of the read-head for the reduced offset induced current position transducer of this invention.





FIG. 9

shows the signal amplitudes as a function of the relative position of the scale and read-head of

FIG. 8

;





FIG. 10

shows a schematic vector phase diagram for the three phase windings of

FIG. 8

;





FIG. 11A

shows a third embodiment of the scale for the reduced offset induced current position transducer of this invention;





FIG. 11B

shows a first portion of the scale of

FIG. 11A

in greater detail;





FIG. 11C

shows a second portion of the scale of

FIG. 11A

in greater detail;





FIG. 11D

shows a third embodiment of the read head usable with the scale of

FIG. 11A

;





FIG. 12A

shows a cross-sectional view of the first embodiment of the reduced offset induced current position transducer of this invention;





FIG. 12B

shows a cross-sectional view of the second embodiment of the reduced offset induced current position transducer of this invention;





FIG. 13

is a block diagram of the read head shown in FIG.


8


and its associated signal processing circuits; and





FIG. 14

is a timing diagram for one of the three channels of the electronic unit shown in FIG.


13


.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




As shown in

FIG. 5

, an inductive caliper


200


includes an elongated beam


202


. The elongated beam


202


is a rigid or semi-rigid bar having a generally rectangular cross section. A groove


206


is formed in an upper surface of the elongated beam


202


. An elongated measuring scale


204


is rigidly bonded to the elongated beam


202


in the groove


206


. The groove


206


is formed in the beam


202


at a depth about equal to the thickness of the scale


204


. Thus, the top surface of the scale


204


is very nearly coplanar with the top edges of beam


202


.




A pair of laterally projecting, fixed jaws


208


and


210


are integrally formed near a first end


212


of the beam


202


. A corresponding pair of laterally projecting movable jaws


216


and


218


are formed on a slider assembly


220


. The outside dimensions of an object are measured by placing the object between a pair of engagement surfaces


214


on the jaws


208


and


216


. Similarly, the inside dimensions of an object are measured by placing the jaws


210


and


218


within an object. The engagement surfaces


222


of the jaws


210


and


218


are positioned to contact the surfaces on the object to be measured.




The engagement surfaces


222


and


214


are positioned so that when the engagement surfaces


214


of the jaws


208


and


216


are contacting each other, the engagement surfaces


222


of the jaws


210


and


218


are aligned with each other. In this position, the zero position, both the outside and inside dimensions measured by the caliper


200


should be zero.




The caliper


200


also includes a depth bar


224


which is attached to the slider assembly


220


. The depth bar


224


projects longitudinally from the beam


202


and terminates at an engagement end


226


. The length of the depth bar


224


is such that the engagement end


226


is flush with a second end


228


of the beam


202


when the caliper


200


is at the zero position. By resting the second end


228


of the beam


202


on a surface in which a hole is formed and extending the depth bar


224


into the hole until the end


226


touches the bottom of the hole, the caliper


200


is able to measure the depth of the hole.




Whether a measurement is made using the outside measuring jaws


208


and


216


, the inside measuring jaws


210


and


218


, or the depth bar


224


, the measured dimension is displayed on a conventional digital display


234


, which is mounted in a cover


236


of the caliper


200


. A pair of push button switches


230


and


232


are also mounted in the cover


236


. The switch


230


turns on and off a signal processing and display electronic circuit


260


of the slider assembly


220


. The switch


232


is used to reset the display


234


to zero.




As shown in

FIG. 5

, the slider assembly


220


includes a base


238


with a guiding edge


240


. The guiding edge


240


contacts a side edge


242


of the elongated beam


202


when the slider assembly


220


straddles the elongated beam


202


. This ensures accurate operation of the caliper


200


. A pair of screws


244


bias a resilient pressure bar


246


against a mating edge of the beam


202


to eliminate free play between the slider assembly


220


and the elongated beam


202


. The depth bar


224


is inserted into a depth bar groove


248


formed on an underside of the elongated beam


202


. The depth bar groove


248


extends along the underside of the elongated beam


202


to provide clearance for the depth bar


224


. The depth bar


224


is held in the depth bar groove


248


by an end stop


250


. The end stop


250


is attached to the underside of the beam


202


at the second end


228


. The end stop


250


also prevents the slider assembly


220


from inadvertently disengaging from the elongated beam


202


at the second end


228


during operation.




The slider assembly


220


also includes a read head assembly


252


mounted on the base


238


above the elongated beam


202


. Thus, the base


238


and read head assembly


252


move as a unit. The read head assembly


252


includes a substrate


254


, such as a conventional printed circuit board. The substrate


254


bears an inductive read head


258


on its lower surface. A signal processing and display electronic circuit


260


is mounted on an upper surface of the substrate


254


. A resilient seal


256


is compressed between the cover


236


and the substrate


254


to prevent contamination of the signal processing and display electronic circuit


260


.




The slider assembly


220


carries the read head


258


so that it is slightly separated from the beam


202


by an air gap


270


formed between the insulative coatings


262


and


268


. The air gap


270


is preferably on the order of 0.5 mm. Together, the read head


258


and the flux couplers


266


form an inductive transducer.





FIGS. 6 and 7

show a first embodiment of the reduced-offset incremental induced current position transducer


200


used in the electronic caliper of this invention, which produces an output type usually referred to as “incremental”. “Incremental” output is defined as a cyclic output which is repeated according to a design-related increment of transducer displacement.




In particular,

FIG. 6

shows a first embodiment of the reduced offset scale


204


of the transducer


200


. The reduced-offset scale


204


includes a first plurality of coupling loops


274


interleaved with a second plurality of coupling loops


276


. Each of the coupling loops


274


and


276


is electrically isolated from the others of the first and second plurality of coupling loops


274


and


276


.




Each of the first plurality of coupling loops


274


includes a first loop portion


278


and a second loop portion


280


connected by a pair of connecting conductors


282


. Similarly, each of the second plurality of coupling loops


276


includes a first loop portion


284


and a second loop portion


286


connected by a pair of connecting conductors


288


.




In the first plurality of coupling loops


274


, the first loop portions


278


are arranged along one lateral edge of the scale


204


and are arrayed along a measuring axis


272


. The second loop portions


280


are arranged along the center of the scale


204


and are arrayed along the measuring axis


272


. The connecting conductors


282


extend perpendicularly to the measuring axis


272


to connect the first loop portions


278


to the second loop portions


280


.




Similarly, in the second plurality of coupling loops


276


, the first loop portions


284


are arranged along a second lateral edge of the scale


204


and arrayed along the measuring axis


272


. The second loop portions


286


are arranged along the center of the scale


204


along the measuring axis


272


, interleaved with the second loop portions


280


of the second coupling loops


276


. The connecting conductors


288


extend generally perpendicularly to the measuring axis


272


to connect the first loop portions


284


to the second loop portions


286


.




As shown in

FIG. 7

, the read head


258


of the transducer


200


includes a transmitter winding


290


having a first transmitter winding portion


292


A and a second transmitter winding portion


292


B. The first transmitter winding portion


292


A is provided at a first lateral edge of the read head


258


while the second transmitter winding portion


292


B is provided at the other lateral edge of the read head


258


. Each of the first and second transmitter winding portions


292


A and


292


B have the same long dimension extending along the measuring axis


272


. Furthermore, each of the first and second transmitter winding portions


292


A and


292


B have a short dimension that extends a distance d


1


in a direction perpendicular to the measuring axis


272


.




The terminals


290


A and


290


B of the transmitter winding


290


are connected to the transmitter drive signal generator


294


. The transmitter drive signal generator


294


outputs a time-varying drive signal to the transmitter winding terminal


292


A. Thus a time-varying current flows through the transmitter winding


292


from the transmitter winding terminal


292


A to the transmitter winding terminal


292


B.




In response, the first transmitter winding portion


292


A generates a magnetic field that rises up out of the plane of

FIG. 7

inside the first transmitter winding portion


292


A and descends into the plane of

FIG. 7

outside the loop formed by the first transmitter winding portion


292


A. In contrast, the second transmitter winding portion


292


B generates a primary magnetic field that rises up out of the plane of

FIG. 7

outside the loop formed by the second transmitter winding portion


292


B and descends into the plane of

FIG. 7

inside the loop formed by the second transmitter winding portion


292


B.




A current is then induced in the coupling loops


274


and


276


that counteracts the change of magnetic field. Thus, the induced current in each of the coupling loop sections


278


and


284


flows in a direction opposite to the current flowing in the respective adjacent portions of the transmitter loops


292


A and


292


B. As shown in

FIG. 7

adjacent ones of the second loop portions


280


and


286


in the center section of the scale have loop currents having opposite polarities. Thus, a secondary magnetic field is created having field portions of opposite polarity periodically distributed along the center section of the scale. The wavelength λ of the periodic secondary magnetic field is equal to the distance between successive second loop portions


280


(or


286


).




The read head


258


also includes first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


that are generally identical to the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


shown in FIG.


3


. In particular, similarly to the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


shown in

FIG. 3

, the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


are each formed by a plurality of sinusoidally-shaped loop segments


300


and


302


formed on opposite sides of an insulating layer of the printed circuit board forming the read head


258


.




The loop segments


300


and


302


are linked through feed-throughs


304


to form alternating positive polarity loops


306


and negative polarity loops


308


in each of the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


. The receiver windings


296


and


298


are positioned in the center of the read head


258


between the first and second transmitter portions


292


A and


292


B. Each of the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


extends a distance d


2


in the direction perpendicular to the measuring axis.




Extraneous (position independent and scale independent) coupling from the transmitter loops to the receiver loops is generally avoided in this configuration. That is, the primary magnetic fields generated by the first and second transmitter portions


292


A and


292


B point in opposite directions in the vicinity of the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


. Thus, the primary magnetic fields counteract each other in the area occupied by the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


. Ideally, the primary magnetic fields completely counteract each in this area. The first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


are spaced equal distances d


3


from the inner portions of the first and second transmitter winding portions


292


A and


292


B. Thus, the magnetic fields generated by each of the first and second transmitter winding portions


292


A and


292


B in the portion of the read head


258


occupied by the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


are in symmetric opposition and the associated inductive effects effectively cancel each other out. The net voltage induced in the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


by extraneous direct coupling to the first and second transmitter winding portions


292


A and


292


B is reduced to a first extent by positioning the transmitter windings away from the receiver windings. Secondly, the symmetric design effectively reduces the net extraneous coupling to zero.




Each of the first plurality of coupling loops


274


is arranged at a pitch equal to a wavelength λ of the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


. Furthermore, the first loop portions


278


each extends a distance along the measuring axis


272


which is as close as possible to the wavelength λ while still providing an insulating space


310


between adjacent ones of the first loop portions


276


and


278


. In addition, the first loop portions


276


and


278


extend the distance d


1


in the direction perpendicular to the measuring axis


272


.




Similarly, the second plurality of coupling loops


276


are also arranged at a pitch equal to the wavelength λ. The first loop portions


284


also extend as close as possible to each other along the measuring axis to the wavelength λ while providing the space


310


between adjacent ones of the first loop portions


284


. The first loop portions


284


also extend the distance d


1


in the direction perpendicular to the measuring axis


272


.




The second loop portions


280


and


286


of the first and second pluralities of coupling loops


274


and


276


are also arranged at a pitch equal to the wavelength λ. However, each of the second loop portions


280


and


286


extends along the measuring axis as close as possible to only one-half the wavelength λ. An insulating space


312


is provided between each adjacent pair of second loop portions


280


and


286


of the first and second pluralities of coupling loops


274


and


276


, as shown in FIG.


7


. Thus, the second loop portions


280


and


286


of the first and second pluralities of coupling loops


274


and


276


are interleaved along the length of the scale


204


. Finally, each of the second loop portions


280


and


286


extends the distance d


2


in the direction perpendicular to the measuring axis


272


.




As shown in

FIG. 7

, the second loop portions


280


and


286


are spaced the distance d


3


from the corresponding first loop portions


278


and


284


. Accordingly, when the read head


258


is placed in proximity to the scale


204


, as shown in

FIG. 7

, the first transmitter winding portion


292


A aligns with the first loop portions


278


of the first plurality of coupling loops


274


. Similarly, the second transmitter winding portion


292


B aligns with the first loop portions


284


of the second plurality of coupling loops


276


. Finally, the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


align with the second loop portions


280


and


286


of the first and second coupling loops


274


and


276


. As will be apparent from the preceding and the following discussions, the area enclosed by the second loop portions


280


and


286


define a sensing track extending parallel to the measuring axis, and that substantially all of the effective magnetic field passing through the sensing track is due solely to the current flow in the second loop portions.




In operation, a time-varying drive signal is output by the transmitter drive signal generator


294


to the transmitter winding terminal


290


A. Thus, the first transmitter winding portion


292


A generates a first changing magnetic field having a first direction while the second transmitter winding portion


292


B generates a second magnetic field in a second direction that is opposite to the first direction. This second magnetic field has a field strength that is equal to a field strength of the first magnetic field generated by the first transmitter winding portion


292


A.




Each of the first plurality of coupling loops


274


is inductively coupled to the first transmitter winding portion


292


A by the first magnetic field generated by the first transmitter winding portion


292


A. Thus, an induced current flows clockwise through each of the first plurality of coupling loops


274


. At the same time the second plurality of coupling loops


276


is inductively coupled to the second transmitter winding portion


292


B by the second magnetic field generated by the second transmitter winding portion


292


B. This induces a counterclockwise current to flow in each of the second plurality of coupling loops


276


. That is, the currents through the second portions


280


and


286


of the coupling loops


274


and


276


flow in opposite directions.




The clockwise flowing current in each of the second portions


280


of the first coupling loops


274


generates a third magnetic field that depends into the plane of

FIG. 7

within the second portions


280


. In contrast, the counterclockwise flowing currents in the second loop portions


286


of the second coupling loops


276


generate a fourth magnetic field that rises out of the plane of

FIG. 7

within the second loop portions


286


of the second coupling loops


276


. Thus, a net alternating magnetic field is formed along the measuring axis


272


. This net alternating magnetic field has a wavelength which is equal to the wavelength λ of the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


.




Accordingly, when the positive polarity loops


306


of the first receiver winding


296


are aligned with either the second loop portions


280


or


286


, the negative polarity loops


308


of the first receiver winding


296


are aligned with the other of the second loop portions


280


or


286


. This is also true when the positive polarity loops


306


and the negative polarity loops


308


of the second receiver winding


298


are aligned with the second loop portions


280


and


286


. Because the alternating magnetic field generated by the second loop portions


280


and


286


is spatially modulated at the same wavelength as the spatial modulation of the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


, the EMF generated in each of the positive and negative polarity loops


306


and


308


when aligned with the second loop portions


280


is equal and opposite to the EMF generated when they are aligned with the second loop portions


286


.




Thus, the net output of the positive polarity loops


306


, as the read head


258


moves relative to the scale


204


is a sinusoidal function of the relative position of the read head along the scale and the offset component of the output signal due to extraneous coupling is nominally zero. Similarly, the net output from the negative polarity loops


308


, as the read head


258


moves relative to the scale


204


, is also sinusoidal and centered on the position axis. The EMF output from the positive polarity loops


306


and the negative polarity loops


308


are in phase. They thus generate a net position-dependent output signal corresponding to

FIG. 4C

, but without the DC offset V


o


.




Finally, the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


, like the first and second receiver windings


138


and


140


, are in quadrature. Thus, the output signal generated by the first receiver winding


296


and output to the receiver signal processing circuit


314


is 90 degrees out of phase with the signal output by the second receiver winding


298


to the receiver signal processing circuit


314


.




The receiver signal processing circuit


314


inputs and samples the output signals from the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


, converts the signals to digital values and outputs them to the control unit


316


. The control unit


316


processes these digitized output signals to determine the relative position between the read head


258


and the scale


204


within a wavelength λ.




It should be appreciated that, with a suitable feed-through arrangement, either the positive polarity loops


306


or the negative polarity loops


308


could be reduced to zero width perpendicular to the measuring axis (becoming effectively simple conducting elements between the adjacent loops). In this case, the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


become unipolar flux receivers, introducing an increased sensitivity to external fields, and reducing their output signal amplitude to half that of the previously described embodiment (due to the eliminated loop area).




However, the modified design retains many inventive benefits. The net extraneous flux through the loops is still nominally zero due to the symmetric transmitter winding configuration. The output signal from each receiver winding


296


and


298


still swings from a maximum positive value to a maximum negative value with nominally zero offset. The degree of output signal change per unit of displacement, for a given measuring range, is still very high, due to the complementary periodic structure of the scale elements and receiver windings.




Based on the nature of the quadrature output from the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


, the control unit


316


is able to determine the direction of relative motion between the read head


258


and the scale


204


. The control unit


316


counts the number of partial or full “incremental” wavelengths λ traversed, by signal processing methods well-known to those skilled in the art and disclosed herein and in the incorporated references. The control unit


316


uses that number and the relative position within a wavelength λ to output the relative position between the read head


258


and the scale


204


from a set origin.




The control unit


316


also outputs control signals to the transmitter drive signal generator


294


to generate the time-varying transmitter drive signal. It should be appreciated that any of the signal generating and processing circuits shown in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/441,769, filed May 16, 1995, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/645,483, filed May 13, 1996 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/788,469, filed Jan. 29, 1997 hereby incorporated by reference, can be used to implement the receiver signal processing circuit


314


, the transmitter drive signal generator


294


and the control unit


316


. Thus, these circuits will not be described in further detail herein.





FIG. 8

shows a second embodiment of a read head that can be used with a scale according to FIG.


6


. The receiver in this version of the read head has three receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


. The receiver windings are offset from each other along the measurement axis by ⅓ of the wavelength λ.

FIG. 9

shows the signal functions from the three receivers as a function of the position along the measurement axis.




It should be appreciated that perfectly sinusoidal output functions are difficult to achieve in practice, and that deviations from a perfect sinusoidal output contain spatial harmonics of the fundamental wavelength of the transducer. Therefore, the three phase configuration of this second embodiment of the reduced-offset induced current position transducer has a significant advantage over the first embodiment of the reduced offset induced current position transducer, in that the third harmonic content in the separate receiver windings' signal can be largely eliminated as a source of position measurement error.




Eliminating the third harmonic is accomplished by combining the outputs of the receiver windings as shown in

FIG. 10

, where the three windings are connected in a star configuration and the signals used for determining position are taken between the corners of the star. This can also be accomplished by measuring each of the output signals independently from the receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


, and then combining them computationally in a corresponding way in a digital signal processing circuit. The following equations outline how the third harmonic component is eliminated by suitably combining the original three phase signals, designated as U


R


, U


S


, and U


T


.




Assume each of the unprocessed phase signals contains the fundamental sinusoidal signal plus the third harmonic signal, with equal amplitude in the three phases, then:










U
R

=







A
0


sin






(

2

π






x
λ


)


+


A
3


sin






(

2

π







3

x

λ


)










U
S

=








A
0

·
sin







(

2

π



x
+

λ
3


λ


)


+


A
3


sin






(

2

π



3






(

x
+

λ
3


)


λ


)









=








A
0

·
sin







(


2

π


x
λ


+


2

π

3


)


+


A
3


sin






(


2

π



3

x

λ


+

2

π


)










=








A
0

·
sin







(


2

π






x
λ


+


2





π

3


)


+


A
3


sin






(

2

π



3

x

λ


)




;







U
T

=








A
0

·
sin







(

2

π



x
-

λ
3


λ


)


+


A
3


sin






(

2

π



3






(

x
-

λ
3


)


λ


)









=








A
0

·
sin







(


2

π


x
λ


-


2

π

3


)


+


A
3


sin






(


2

π



3

x

λ


-

2

π


)









=








A
0

·
sin







(


2

π






x
λ


-


2





π

3


)


+


A
3


sin






(

2

π



3

x

λ


)
















Creating new signals by pair-wise subtracting the above-outlined signals from each other eliminates the third harmonic to provide:













V
R

=



U
T

-

U
S


=



A

0








(


sin






(


2

π


x
λ


-


2

π

s


)


-

sin






(


2

π


x
λ


+


2

π

3


)



)


=


-

A
0




3


cos





2

π


x
λ











V
S

=



U
R

-

U
T


=



A

0








(


sin






(

2

π


x
λ


)


-

sin






(


2

π


x
λ


-


2

π

3


)



)


=


A
0



3


cos






(


2

π


x
λ


-


2

π

6


)














V
T

=



U
S

-

U
R


=



A

0








(


sin






(


2

π






x
λ


+


2

π

3


)


-

sin






(

2

π






x
λ


)



)


=


A
0



3


cos






(


2

π


x
λ


+


2

π

6


)

















To get quadrature signals for position calculation in the same way, V


S


and V


T


are combined:










V
Q

=



V
S

-

V
T


=






A
0



3







(


cos






(


2

π






x
λ


-


2

π

6


)


-

cos






(


2

π






x
λ


+


2

π

6


)



)









=







A
0



3

*
2

sin





2

π






x
λ


sin






(

-


2

π

6


)


=


A
0


3





sin





2

π






x
λ
















After identifying the applicable quarter-wavelength position quadrant within the incremental wavelength, the interpolated position within the quarter wavelength is then calculated by:








V
Q


-

V
R



=


3

*
tan






(

2

π






x
λ


)












Solving for x:






x
=


λ

2

π


*

tan
1







(


V
Q



-

V
R


*

3



)












The position calculated this way using the output from three phase receiver windings will not contain any error from third harmonic components in the receiver output signal functions, to the extent that the outputs from all three receiver windings have the same third harmonic characteristics, which is generally the case for practical devices. Also, if the receiver signals are amplified in preamplifiers in the electronic unit, the measurement error caused by certain distortion errors in those electronic preamplifiers will be canceled by the above described signal processing in the three phase configuration.





FIGS. 11A-11D

show a third embodiment of the read head and scale for the reduced offset induced current position transducer of the linear scale of this invention. This embodiment contains only one transmitter winding loop


490


, which is placed on one side of the receiver windings


496


and


498


on the read head


458


. The scale


404


is a two layer printed circuit board (PCB). Pattern forming coupling loops


474


and


476


are arrayed on the scale


404


along the measurement axis.




Each coupling loop


474


includes a first loop portion


478


which is connected by connection lines


482


to a second loop portion


480


. The first and second loop portions


478


and


480


are connected so that an induced current produces the same polarity field in the first loop portion


478


and the second loop portion


480


. Each coupling loop


476


includes a first loop portion


484


which is connected by connection lines


488


to a second loop portion


486


. The first and second loop portions


484


and


486


are connected so that an induced current produces fields having opposite polarities in the first and second loop portions


484


and


486


.




The detailed construction of the coupling loops


474


and


476


is shown in

FIGS. 11B and 11C

.

FIG. 11B

shows a first conductor pattern provided on a first one of the layers of the PCB forming the scale


404


.

FIG. 11C

shows a second construction pattern provided on a second one of the layers of the PCB forming the scale


404


. The individual portions of the first and second patterns formed on the first and second layers are connected via the feed-throughs


504


of the PCB to form the coupling loops


474


and


476


.




The read head


458


is formed by a second PCB and includes a transmitter loop


490


and first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


. The first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


are in this embodiment in a two-phase configuration. This embodiment could also use the three-phase configuration previously disclosed. The transmitter loop


490


encloses an area that covers the first loop portions


478


and


484


over the length of the read head. The transmitter loop


490


is excited in the same way as described previously in conjunction with FIG.


7


.




The first loop portions


478


and


484


of the coupling loops


474


and


476


under the transmitter loop


490


respond to the primary magnetic field generated by the transmitter


490


with an induced EMF that causes a current and magnetic field that counteracts the primary magnetic field produced in the transmitter winding


490


. When the transmitter winding current flows counter-clockwise, as shown in

FIG. 11D

, the induced current in the first loop portions


478


and


484


of the coupling loops


474


and


476


flows counterclockwise. The current in the second loop portions


480


of the coupling loops


474


also flows clockwise. However, the current in the second loop portions


486


of the coupling loops


476


flow counter-clockwise because of the crossed connections


488


described above.




Therefore, the array of second loop portions


480


and


486


produces a secondary magnetic field with regions of opposite polarity periodically repeating along the scale under the receiver windings


496


and


498


of the read head unit


458


. The secondary magnetic field has a wavelength λ equal to the period length for successive ones of the second loop portions


480


, which is also equal to the period length for successive ones of the second loop portions


486


. The receiver loops of the first and second windings


496


and


498


are designed to have the same wavelength λ as the scale pattern.




Hence, the receiver loops of the first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


will exhibit an induced EMF which produces a signal voltage whose amplitude will follow a periodic function with wavelength λ when the read head


458


is moved along the scale


404


. Thus, except for the distinction of the single transmitter loop


490


, this embodiment functions in the manner previously described for the embodiment shown in

FIGS. 6 and 7

. Similar to the previous discussion of second loop portions


280


and


286


of

FIG. 7

, the total area enclosed by the second loop portions


480


and


486


define a sensing track extending parallel to the measuring axis. In this case, the effective magnetic field within the sensing track includes some effect due to coupling to the fringe of the field produced by the transmitter winding


490


. However, the current flow in the second loop portions produces a field in the sensing track that predominates over any other field.





FIG. 12A

shows a cross-section of an inductive read head according to the first embodiment of this invention shown in FIG.


7


.

FIG. 12A

illustrates how the primary magnetic field caused by the current in the transmitter loop


292


A encircles the conductors and partly crosses through the receiver loops


296


and


298


.

FIG. 12A

also shows how the primary magnetic field caused by the current in the transmitter loop


292


B passes through the receiver loops


296


and


298


in the opposite direction from the primary magnetic field caused by the transmitter loop


292


A.




Thus, the resulting net magnetic field through the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


will be very close to zero and the extraneous direct coupling from the transmitter loops


292


A and


292


B to the first and second receiver windings


296


and


298


will be nullified. Experience and theoretical calculations show an improvement in the ratio of useful to extraneous signal components by a factor of more than 100 relative to the embodiment shown in FIG.


3


.





FIG. 12B

shows a cross-section of an inductive read head according to the third embodiment of this invention shown in FIG.


11


D.

FIG. 12B

illustrates how the primary magnetic field caused by the current in the transmitter loop


490


encircles the conductors and partly crosses through the first and second receiver loops


496


and


498


. Although this case fails to nullify the extraneous direct coupling, as provided in the first preferred embodiment, it still reduces the extraneous direct coupling by virtue of the separation of the transmitter loop


490


and the first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


.




Furthermore, the secondary magnetic field having alternating polarities is provided in the vicinity of the first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


. This eliminates other sources of offset. According to experience and theoretical calculations, the third embodiment shows an improvement in the ratio of useful to extraneous signal components by a factor of about 10 relative to the embodiment shown in FIG.


3


.




It should be appreciated that the previous embodiments may be modified in certain aspects, while retaining many of their inventive benefits. For example, the coupling loops


474


(or


476


) of

FIG. 11A

may be eliminated, while other aspects of this configuration remain the same. In this case, the secondary magnetic field provided in the vicinity of the first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


does not have a pattern of alternating polarities, as in the third embodiment. However, this design still reduces the extraneous direct coupling between transmitter and receiver windings by virtue of the separation of the transmitter loop


490


and the first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


.




Furthermore, the use of multiple coupling loops provides the benefit of averaging out the error contributions of small, but significant, random deviations in segments of the winding configurations due to imperfect fabrication processes. Also, even if the coupling loops


474


(or


476


) are eliminated, the fundamental operation of the transducer is still based on a moving structured field, defined by the coupling loops


474


(or


476


) providing the primary excitation for the first and second receiver windings


496


and


498


. It should also be noted that the vertical sections of the first loop portions


478


and


484


shown in

FIG. 11D

could be bridged by horizontal conductors at the top and bottom (not shown). In this case, the multiple coupling loops form a single coupling loop with a single elongated portion under the transmitter winding


490


, and multiple serially connected loop portions


480


and


486


under the windings


496


and


498


. Thus, the moving structured field is still maintained, although the function of the first coupling loop portions


478


and


484


is now provided by a single continuous winding.




In contrast, in the embodiment shown in

FIG. 3

, a spatially static uniform field provided the primary excitation for the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


. The receiver winding output signals are based on how this uniform field is affected by moving elements which disturb the uniform excitation field in the vicinity of the first and second receiver windings


180


and


182


. The moving structured field excitation approach of this invention provides an inherently superior signal, even if the coupling loops


474


(or


476


) are eliminated.





FIG. 13

shows a block diagram of the second embodiment of the reduced offset induced current position transducer


200


using the three phase read head


258


shown in FIG.


8


. Only the essential portions of the signal processing circuit needed to determine the position of the read head


258


relative to the scale


204


are shown in FIG.


13


.




As shown in

FIG. 13

, the transmitter winding


290


is connected to a signal generator circuit


295


of the transmitter drive signal generator


294


. The signal generator circuit


295


includes a first switch


324


serially connected to a second switch


326


between ground and a power supply voltage V


DD


from an energy source


328


. One terminal of a capacitor


330


is connected to a node N


1


between the first and second switches


324


and


326


. A second plate of the capacitor


330


is connected to the terminal


290


A of the transmitter winding


290


. The second terminal


290


B of the transmitter winding


290


is connected to ground. This, the transmitter winding


290


forms the inductor in a LC resonant circuit with the capacitor


330


.




The transmitter winding


290


is indirectly inductively coupled via the coupling loops


274


and


276


formed on the scale


204


to the first-third receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


. The receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


are connected to a sample and hold circuit


332


. In particular, the output of the first receiver


318


is connected to a first sample and hold subcircuit


334


. The output of the second receiver


320


is connected to a second sample and hold subcircuit


336


, while the output of the third receiver


322


is connected to a third sample and hold subcircuit


338


.




Each of the three sample and hold subcircuits


334


,


336


and


338


includes a switch


340


receiving an output from the corresponding receiver loop


318


,


320


, or


322


. The output of the switch


340


is connected to the positive input terminal of a buffer amplifier


342


. One plate of a sample and hold capacitor


344


is connected to a node N


3


between the switch


340


and the buffer amplifier


342


. The other plate of the sample and hold capacitor


344


is connected to ground. An output of the buffer amplifier


342


is connected to a switch


346


. The negative input terminal of the buffer amplifier


342


is connected to the output of the buffer amplifier at a node N


4


.




The outputs of the switches


346


of the three sample and hold subcircuits


334


,


336


and


338


are connected to a single output line


348


that is connected to an input of analog-to-digital (A/D) converter


350


. The A/D converter


350


converts the output of the sample and hold circuit


332


from an analog value to a digital value. The digital value is output to a microprocessor


352


which processes the digital values from the A/D converter to determine the relative position between the read head


258


and the scale


204


.




Each position within a wavelength can be uniquely identified by the microprocessor


352


, according to known techniques and the equations previously disclosed herein. The microprocessor


352


also uses known techniques to keep track of the direction of motion and the number of wavelengths that are traversed to determine the position for the transducer relative to an initial reference position.




The microprocessor


352


also controls the sequence of signal sampling by outputting a control signal over a signal line


354


to a digital control unit


356


. The digital control unit


356


controls the sequence of transmission, signal sampling and A/D conversion by outputting control signals on the signal lines


358


,


360


,


362


,


364


,


366


and


368


to the transmitter drive signal generator


294


and the sample and hold circuit


332


. In particular, as shown in

FIG. 13

, the digital control unit


356


outputs switch control signals over the signal lines


358


and


360


to the first and second switches


324


and


326


, respectively, for controlling the transmitter excitation.




The digital control unit


356


outputs switch control signals on the signal lines


362


,


364


,


366


and


368


to the sample and hold circuit


332


. In particular, the control signal


362


controllably opens and closes the switches


340


of the first-third sample and hold subcircuits


334


,


336


and


338


to connect the receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


to the sample and hold capacitors


344


. When the control signal


362


controllably opens the switches


340


, the signals received from the receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


are stored in the sample and hold capacitors


344


. The switch control signals on the signal lines


364


,


366


and


368


are used to controllably connect the outputs of the buffer amplifiers


342


of one of the first-third sample and hold subcircuits


334


,


336


, and


338


, respectively, to the A/D converter


350


over the signal line


348


.





FIG. 14

shows a timing diagram for generating the switch control signals


358


,


360


,


362


,


364


,


366


and


368


to obtain a position measurement. First, the switch control signal output on the signal lines


358


is set to a high state to close the switch


324


. This charges up the capacitor


330


to the supply voltage V


DD


. The switch control signal on the signal line


358


is then set to a low state to open the switch


324


.




Next, the switch control signal output on the signal line


360


is changed from a low state to a high state to close the switch


326


. This allows the capacitor


330


to discharge through the corresponding transmitter winding


290


. In particular, the capacitor


330


forms a resonant circuit with the transmitter windings


290


with a chosen resonant frequency on the order of several MHz. The resonance is a damped oscillation with a waveform corresponding essentially to the signal S


X


shown in FIG.


14


.




The signal S


X


appears with the same time function on each of the receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


. However, the amplitude and polarity of the signal S


X


appearing on each of the receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


depends on the position of the read head


250


relative to the scale


204


, as shown in FIG.


9


.




Before the signal S


X


on the receiver windings reaches a peak, the switch control signal on the signal line


362


changes from a low state to a high state to begin charging each of the sample and hold capacitors


344


of the sample and hold circuit


332


. At a point just after, but approximately at, the peak of the signal S


X


, the switch control signal on the signal line


362


returns to the low state to open the switches


340


. This holds the amplitude of the signals S


X


for each of the three receiver windings on the corresponding one of the sample and hold capacitors


344


of the first-third sample and hold subcircuits


334


,


336


and


338


. At some point thereafter, the switch control signal on the signal line


360


is returned to the low state to open the switch


326


.




Next, at some time after the control signal


362


has returned to the low state, the switch control signal on the signal line


364


changes from the low state to the high state to close the switch


346


of the sample and hold subcircuit


334


. This connects the sampled value held on the corresponding sample and hold capacitor


344


over the signal line


348


to the A/D converter


350


. The A/D converter


350


converts the analog value on the signal line


348


to a digital value and outputs the digital value to the microprocessor


352


. The switch control signal on the signal line


364


returns to the low state to open the corresponding switch


346


. This sequence is then repeated for the switch control signals output on the signal lines


366


and


368


to connect the signals sampled by the sample and hold subcircuits


336


and


338


to the A/D converter


350


over the signal line


348


.




This process is repeated according to the program in the microprocessor. A program can easily be made that adapts the sampling rate of the system to the speed of movement of the transducer, thereby minimizing the current consumption. This operation is well known to those skilled in the art and thus will not be described in further detail herein.




The previously described signal processing system can be operated on very low power with the disclosed inductive position transducers, and other related inductive position transducers, if desired. For example, intermittently activating the drive signal generator


295


to support a signal processing system sampling frequency of about 1 kHz provides sufficient accuracy and motion tracking capability for most applications. To reduce power consumption, the drive signal generator duty cycle can be kept low by making the pulses relatively short. For example, for the 1 kHz sampling frequency described above, a suitable pulse width is about 0.1-1.0 μs. That is, the duty cycle of the pulses having sampling period of 1 ms is 0.01%-0.1%.




The resonant frequency of the capacitor


330


and the winding


290


is then preferably selected such that the peak of the voltage across the capacitor


330


occurs before the end of the 1.0 μs or less pulse. Thus, the resonant frequency is on the order of several megahertz, as previously disclosed. The corresponding magnetic flux will therefore be modulated at a frequency above 1 MHz, and typically of several megahertz. This is considerably higher than the frequencies of conventional inductive position transducers.




The inventors have determined that, at these frequencies, the currents generated in the scale


204


with the coupling loops


274


and


276


produce strong inductive coupling to the first-third receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


. The EMFs generated in the first-third receiver windings


318


,


320


and


322


, and the resulting output signal, therefore respond strongly to variations in coupling loop position. This occurs despite the low duty cycle and low power used by the pulsed drive signal.




The strength of the response, combined with the low duty cycle and low power consumption, allows the inductive position transducer to make measurements while the drive signal generator


294


and the remainder of the signal processing electronic circuit shown in

FIG. 13

draw an average current preferably below 200 μA, and more preferably below 75 μA, for lower power applications. It should be understood that “average current” as used herein means the total charge consumed over one or more measurement cycles, divided by the duration of the one or more measurement cycles, while the inductive position transducer is in normal use.




The inductive position transducers similar to the type disclosed herein can therefore be operated with an adequate battery lifetime using three or fewer commercially available miniature batteries or with a photo-electric cell. Further details regarding low power signal processing are disclosed in the incorporated references.




It should be appreciated that although the foregoing embodiments are shown with spatially uniform windings designated as the transmitter windings, and spatially modulated windings designated as the receiver windings, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the disclosed transducer winding configurations will retain all of their inventive benefits if the roles of the transmitter and receiver windings are “reversed” in conjunction with appropriate signal processing. One such appropriate signal processing technique is disclosed in reference to FIG. 21 of incorporated U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/441,769. Other applicable signal processing techniques will be apparent to those skilled in the art.




Thus, while this invention has been described in conjunction with the specific embodiments outlined above, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the preferred embodiments of the invention as set forth above are intended to be illustrative, not limiting. Various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. An electronic caliper comprising:a slide; an elongated beam having a measuring axis, the slide movable along the measuring axis; at least one magnetic field generator, each magnetic field generator responsive to a drive signal to generate a first changing magnetic flux in a first flux region; at least one flux coupling loop, a first portion of the at least one flux coupling loop positionable within the first flux region and responsive to the first changing magnetic flux when positioned within the first flux region to produce a second changing magnetic flux in a second portion of the flux coupling loop in a second flux region that is separated from the first flux region; and at least one magnetic flux sensor; wherein: one of a) the at least one magnetic flux sensor or b) the at least one magnetic field generator includes an inductive area extending along the measuring axis, and the inductive area is spatially modulated along the measuring axis in a pattern including alternating increases and decreases in width, each magnetic flux sensor is positioned outside the first flux region to sense the second changing magnetic flux in the second flux region portion of at least one flux coupling loop, and each magnetic flux sensor is responsive to the second changing magnetic flux to generate an output signal which is a function of the relative position between the slide and the elongated beam.
  • 2. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein the inductive area comprises a plurality of alternating polarity regions.
  • 3. The electronic caliper of claim 2, wherein the pattern of alternating polarity regions comprises regions along a surface, the regions bounded by at least one conductor positioned on the surface in a prescribed pattern.
  • 4. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein the one of a) the at least one magnetic field generator or b) the at least one magnetic flux sensor which has the inductive area spatially modulated along the measuring axis is positioned on one of the slide and the elongated beam, and the at least one flux coupling loop is positioned on the other one of the slide and the elongated beam.
  • 5. The electronic caliper of claim 4, wherein the other of a) the at least one magnetic field generator and b) the at least one magnetic flux sensor is positioned on either the slide or the elongated beam.
  • 6. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein in the absence of the at least one flux coupling loop, the output signal generated by each magnetic flux sensor is insensitive to the changing magnetic flux generated by each magnetic field generator.
  • 7. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein the at least one magnetic field generator, the at least one flux coupling loops and the at least one magnetic flux sensor are fabricated by printed circuit board processing.
  • 8. The electronic caliper of claim 1, further comprising:an energy supply source that outputs a power supply; a drive circuit that inputs the power supply and outputting a drive signal to the at least one magnetic field generator during each measurement cycle; and an analyzing circuit that inputs the output signal from each at least one magnetic field sensor, determines the position of the slide relative to the elongated beam, and outputs a position signal indicative of the position of the slide relative to the elongated beam at a first level of resolution.
  • 9. The electronic caliper of claim 8, wherein the drive circuit comprises a capacitor discharged through the at least one magnetic field generator.
  • 10. The electronic caliper of claim 9, wherein the capacitor and the at least one magnetic field generator form a resonant circuit.
  • 11. The electronic caliper of claim 8, wherein the analyzing circuit comprises a counter for counting fractions of cycles of the at least one output signal output from the at least one magnetic field sensor at a second level of resolution coarser than the first level of resolution in response to motion of the slide along the measuring axis.
  • 12. The electronic caliper of claim 8, wherein each of a plurality of 3*N, where N is greater than or equal to 1, of magnetic flux sensors comprise identical inductive areas spatially modulated along the measuring axis with a periodic modulation having a wavelength W, and such inductive areas are offset from each other by a length O=W/3N along the measuring axis; andthe analyzing circuit substantially eliminates the influence of signal components which are third harmonics of the wavelength W.
  • 13. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein the changing magnetic flux generated by the at least one magnetic field generator changes at a rate equivalent to an oscillation frequency of at least 1 MHz.
  • 14. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein the pattern including alternating increases and decreases in width comprises a periodic pattern having a selected wavelength.
  • 15. The electronic caliper of claim 14, wherein the portion of each coupling loop adjacent the periodic pattern spans, at most, one-half wavelength along the measuring axis.
  • 16. The electronic caliper of claim 14, wherein a first plurality of coupling loops of a first type are arranged along the measuring axis at a pitch equal to the wavelength.
  • 17. The electronic caliper of claim 16, wherein a second plurality of coupling loops of a second type are arranged along the measuring axis offset by one-half wavelength from the first plurality of coupling loops and at a pitch equal to the wavelength, and the coupling loops of the first and second type alternate along the measuring axis in at least the region adjacent to the periodic pattern.
  • 18. The electronic caliper of claim 17, wherein, in one of the first or second coupling loop types, the induced current produces the same polarity flux in the first flux region portion and the second flux region portion, and, in the other of the first or second coupling loop types, the induced current produces flux in the second flux region portion which is opposite in polarity to the flux induced in the first flux region portion.
  • 19. The electronic caliper of claim 17, wherein the first and second coupling loop types couple to the same magnetic flux generator region and are configured so that coupling loops of the first type extend in a first direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a first magnetic flux sensor region and the coupling loops of the second type extend in an opposite direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a second magnetic flux sensor region.
  • 20. The electronic caliper of claim 17, wherein the first and second coupling loop types couple to the same magnetic flux sensor region, but are configured so that coupling loops of the first type extend in a first direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a first magnetic flux generator region and the coupling loops of the second type extend in an opposite direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a second magnetic flux generator region.
  • 21. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein a) the at least one magnetic flux generator or b) the at least one magnetic flux sensor comprises two similar portions arranged symmetrically on opposite sides of the other of the at least one magnetic flux generator and the at least one magnetic flux sensor, such that in absence of coupling loops, the net flux through the magnetic flux sensor is substantially zero as a result of the symmetric configuration.
  • 22. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein the at least one flux coupling loop comprises a plurality of flux coupling loops arranged along the measuring axis and the measuring range of the sensor is determined by the extent of the plurality of coupling loops.
  • 23. The electronic caliper of claim 1, wherein each of a plurality of the inductive areas which are spatially modulated along the measuring axis comprises an area outlined by a patterned conductor insulated from other patterned conductors, and a plurality of such inductive areas at least partially overlap.
  • 24. The electronic caliper of claim 23, wherein each of a plurality of N inductive areas which are spatially modulated along the measuring axis is identical and is periodically modulated along the measuring axis with a selected wavelength W, and such inductive areas are offset from each other by a length O along the measuring axis, where O=W/2N for N equal to 2, and O=W/N for N greater than 2.
  • 25. An electronic caliper comprising:a slide; an elongated beam having a measuring axis, the slide movable along the measuring axis; a low power energy supply source on the slide capable of providing a power supply to a drive circuit on the slide; the drive circuit connected to the power supply and responsive to a control signal to output an intermittent drive signal; at least one magnetic field generator on the slide, each magnetic field generator responsive to the drive signal to generate a first changing magnetic flux in a first flux region; at least one flux coupling loop on the elongated beam, a first portion of the at least one flux coupling loop positionable within the first flux region and responsive to the first changing magnetic flux when positioned within the first flux region to produce a second changing magnetic flux in a second flux region proximate to a second portion of the flux coupling loop outside the first flux region; at least one magnetic flux sensor on the slide, each magnetic flux sensor positioned outside the first flux region for sensing the second changing magnetic flux in the second flux region portion of the at least one flux coupling loop, and each magnetic flux sensor responsive to the second changing magnetic flux to generate an output signal which is a function of the relative position between the magnetic flux sensor and the at least one flux coupling loop; and an analyzing circuit on the slide responsive to the output signal from at least one magnetic flux sensor to output an output signal indicative of the position of the slide relative to the elongated beam at a first level of resolution.
  • 26. The electronic caliper of claim 25, wherein the drive circuit comprises a capacitor that discharges through the magnetic field generator.
  • 27. The electronic caliper of claim 26, wherein the capacitor and the magnetic field generator operate as a resonant circuit.
  • 28. The electronic caliper of claim 26, wherein the first changing magnetic flux changes at a rate equivalent to an oscillation frequency of at least 1 MHz in response to the intermittent drive signal.
  • 29. The electronic caliper of claim 26, wherein the intermittent drive signal comprises at least one pulse signal.
  • 30. The electronic caliper of claim 29, wherein the analyzing circuit determines changes in the relative position at a coarse level of resolution during each pulse interval, and determines the relative position at a finer level of resolution once during a plurality of pulse intervals.
  • 31. The electronic caliper of claim 29, wherein the analyzing circuit includes synchronous sampling means for sampling the output signal from at least one magnetic flux sensor synchronously with the pulse signal.
  • 32. The electronic caliper of claim 31, wherein the synchronous sampling uses sample timing based on an expected time delay between the pulsed signal and a peak in a response to a resonant circuit formed by the pulse generator components and the magnetic field generator components.
  • 33. The electronic caliper of claim 26, wherein:at least one of a) the at least one magnetic flux sensor, and b) the at least one magnetic field generator includes an inductive area extending along the measuring axis, and the inductive area is spatially modulated along the measuring axis in a pattern including alternating increases and decreases in width; the output signal from each magnetic flux sensor exhibits spatial cycles which are a function of a relative position between the magnetic flux sensor and the at least one flux coupling loop; and the analyzing circuit comprises a counter for counting fractions of cycles of the output signal from the at least one magnetic flux sensor in response to motion of the slide along the elongated beam, at a second level of resolution coarser than the first level of resolution, the counter providing an approximate position of the slider assembly relative to the elongate beam.
  • 34. The electronic caliper of claim 33, wherein the counter is responsive at spatial intervals of at most ¼ cycle.
  • 35. The electronic caliper of claim 33, wherein the inductive area comprises a plurality of alternating polarity regions.
  • 36. The electronic caliper of claim 35, wherein the plurality of alternating polarity regions comprises regions of a surface bounded by at least one conductor positioned on the surface in a prescribed pattern.
  • 37. A method for operating an electronic caliper, comprising:supplying power from a self-contained energy supply source to a drive circuit of the electronic caliper; outputting a drive signal from the drive circuit in response to a control signal; inducing a current in at least one flux coupling loop in response to the drive signal, wherein the at least one flux coupling loop is positioned on one of a slide and an elongated beam of the electronic caliper, the elongated beam having a measuring axis, the slide being moveable along the measuring axis, and the at least one flux coupling loop being arranged along the measuring axis; producing a spatially modulated time-varying magnetic field with the at least one flux coupling loop in response to the current, the spatially modulated time-varying magnetic field extending along the measuring axis; sensing the spatially modulated time-varying magnetic field using at least one magnetic flux sensor on the other of the slide and the elongated beam; generating a position signal based on the sensed field; and analyzing the position signal to generate an output indicative of a relative position of the slide and the elongated beam.
  • 38. The method of claim 37, wherein:the spatially modulated time-varying magnetic field is generated and sensed in a sensing track positioned parallel to the measuring axis; and the spatially modulated time-varying magnetic field predominates the total magnetic field within the sensing track.
  • 39. An electronic caliper comprising:a slide; an elongated beam having a measuring axis, the slide movable along the measuring axis: at least one magnetic field generator, each magnetic field generator responsive to a drive signal to generate a primary changing magnetic flux in a corresponding primary flux region; at least one operably positionable flux coupling loop associated with at least one of the at least one magnetic field generator, wherein, for each operably positionable flux coupling loop, a portion of that flux coupling loop is positionable within the corresponding primary flux region of the associated at least one magnetic field generator and, for each operably positionable flux coupling loop, that portion of that flux coupling loop is responsive to the primary changing magnetic flux when that portion of that flux coupling loop is positioned within the corresponding primary flux region to produce a secondary changing magnetic flux in a portion of that flux coupling loop that is separated from the corresponding primary flux region; and at least one magnetic flux sensor: wherein: one of a) the at least one magnetic flux sensor or b) the at least one magnetic field generator includes at least one inductive area extending along the measuring axis, and the inductive area is spatially modulated along the measuring axis in a pattern including alternating increases and decreases in width, and for each magnetic flux sensor: that magnetic flux sensor is positioned outside the corresponding primary flux region of at least one magnetic field generator to sense, in at least one associated operably positionable flux coupling loop, the secondary changing magnetic flux in the portion of that flux coupling loop that is separated from the corresponding primary flux region, and that magnetic flux sensor is responsive to the sensed secondary changing magnetic flux to generate an output signal which is a function of the relative position between the slide and the elongated beam.
  • 40. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein each inductive area comprises a plurality of alternating polarity regions.
  • 41. The electronic caliper of claim 40, wherein each pattern of alternating polarity regions comprises regions along a surface, the regions bounded by at least one conductor positioned on the surface in a prescribed pattern.
  • 42. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein the one of a) the at least one magnetic field generator or b) the at least one magnetic flux sensor which has the at least one inductive area spatially modulated along the measuring axis is positioned on one of the slide and the elongated beam, and the at least one operably positionable flux coupling loop is positioned on the other one of the slide and the elongated beam.
  • 43. The electronic caliper of claim 42, wherein the other of a) the at least one magnetic field generator and b) the at least one magnetic flux sensor is positioned on either the slide or the elongated beam.
  • 44. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein in the absence of the at least one associated operably positionable flux coupling loop, the output signal generated by that associated magnetic flux sensor is relatively insensitive to the changing magnetic flux in the corresponding primary flux region.
  • 45. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein the at least one magnetic field generator, the at least one operably positionable flux coupling loop and the at least one magnetic flux sensor are fabricated by printed circuit board processing.
  • 46. The electronic caliper of claim 39, further comprising:an energy supply source that outputs a power supply; a drive circuit that inputs the power supply and that outputs a drive signal to at least one of the at least one magnetic field generator during each measurement cycle; and an analyzing circuit that inputs the output signal from at least one of the at least one magnetic field sensor, determines the position of the slide relative to the elongated beam, and outputs a position signal indicative of the position of the slide relative to the elongated beam at a first level of resolution.
  • 47. The electronic caliper of claim 46, wherein the drive circuit comprises a capacitor discharged through the at least one magnetic field generator.
  • 48. The electronic caliper of claim 47, wherein the capacitor and each of the at least one magnetic field generator form a resonant circuit.
  • 49. The electronic caliper of claim 46, wherein the analyzing circuit comprises a counter for counting fractions of cycles of the at least one output signal output from the at least one magnetic field sensor at a second level of resolution coarser than the first level of resolution in response to motion of the slide along the measuring axis.
  • 50. The electronic caliper of claim 46, wherein each of a plurality of N magnetic flux sensors, where N is greater than or equal to 3, comprise identical inductive areas spatially modulated along the measuring axis with a periodic modulation having a wavelength W, and such inductive areas are offset from each other by a length O=W/N along the measuring axis; andthe analyzing circuit substantially eliminates the influence of signal components which are third harmonics of the wavelength W.
  • 51. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein the changing magnetic flux generated by the at least one magnetic field generator changes at a rate equivalent to an oscillation frequency of at least 1 MHz.
  • 52. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein the pattern including alternating increases and decreases in width comprises a periodic pattern having a selected wavelength.
  • 53. The electronic caliper of claim 52, wherein the portion of each operably positionable flux coupling loop adjacent the periodic pattern spans, at most, one-half wavelength along the measuring axis.
  • 54. The electronic caliper of claim 52, wherein a first plurality of operably positionable flux coupling loops of a first type are arranged along the measuring axis at a pitch equal to the wavelength.
  • 55. The electronic caliper of claim 54, wherein a second plurality of operably positionable flux coupling loops of a second type are arranged along the measuring axis offset by one-half wavelength from the first plurality of operably positionable flux coupling loops and at a pitch equal to the wavelength, and the operably positionable flux coupling loops of the first and second type alternate along the measuring axis in at least the region adjacent to the periodic pattern.
  • 56. The electronic caliper of claim 55, wherein, in one of the first or second flux coupling loop types, the induced current produces the same polarity flux in the portion of an operably positionable flux coupling loop positionable within the corresponding primary flux region and in the portion of that flux coupling loop that is separated from the corresponding primary flux region, and, in the other of the first or second flux coupling loop types, the induced current produces flux in the portion of an operably positionable flux coupling loop that is separated from the corresponding primary flux region which is opposite in polarity to the flux induced in the portion of that flux coupling loop positionable within the corresponding primary flux region.
  • 57. The electronic caliper of claim 55, wherein the first and second flux coupling loop types couple to the same magnetic field generator region and are configured so that the operable positionable flux coupling loops of the first type extend in a first direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a first magnetic flux sensor region and the operably positionable flux coupling loops of the second type extend in an opposite direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a second magnetic flux sensor region.
  • 58. The electronic caliper of claim 55, wherein the first and second flux coupling loop types couple to the same magnetic flux sensor region, but are configured so that the operably positionable flux coupling loops of the first type extend in a first direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a first magnetic flux generator region and the operably positionable flux coupling loops of the second type extend in an opposite direction perpendicular to the measuring axis to couple to a second magnetic flux generator region.
  • 59. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein a) the at least one magnetic flux generator or b) the at least one magnetic flux sensor comprises two similar portions arranged symmetrically on opposite sides of the other of the at least one magnetic flux generator and the at least one magnetic flux sensor, such that in absence of the at least one operably positionable flux coupling loop, the net flux through the magnetic flux sensor is substantially zero as a result of the symmetric configuration.
  • 60. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein the at least one operably positionable flux coupling loop comprises a plurality of flux coupling loops arranged along the measuring axis and the measuring range of the sensor is determined by the extent of the plurality of flux coupling loops.
  • 61. The electronic caliper of claim 39, wherein each of a plurality of the inductive areas which are spatially modulated along the measuring axis comprises an area outlined by a patterned conductor insulated from other patterned conductors, and a plurality of such inductive areas at least partially overlap.
  • 62. The electronic caliper of claim 61, wherein each of a plurality of N inductive areas which are spatially modulated along the measuring axis is identical and is periodically modulated along the measuring axis with a selected wavelength W, and such inductive areas are offset from each other by a length O along the measuring axis, where O=W/2N for N equal to 2, and O=W/N for N greater than 2.
  • 63. An electronic caliper comprising:a slide; an elongated beam having a measuring axis, the slide movable along the measuring axis; a low power energy supply source on the slide capable of providing a power supply to a drive circuit on the slide; the drive circuit connected to the power supply and responsive to a control signal to output an intermittent drive signal; at least one magnetic field generator on the slide, each magnetic field generator responsive to the drive signal to generate a primary changing magnetic flux in a corresponding primary flux region; at least one operable positionable flux coupling loop on the elongated beam associated with at least one of the at least one magnetic field generator, wherein, for each operably positionable flux coupling loop, a portion of that flux coupling loop is positionable within the corresponding primary flux region of the associated at least one magnetic field generator and, that portion of that flux coupling loop is responsive to the primary changing magnetic flux when that portion of that flux coupling loop is positioned within the corresponding primary flux region to produce a secondary changing magnetic flux in a portion of that flux coupling loop that is outside the corresponding primary flux region; and at least one magnetic flux sensor on the slide, wherein, for each magnetic flux sensor: that magnetic flux sensor is positioned outside the corresponding primary flux region of at least one magnetic field generator for sensing, in at least one associated flux coupling loop, the secondary changing magnetic flux in the portion that is outside the corresponding primary flux region of each at least one associated flux coupling loop, and that magnetic flux sensor is responsive to the sensed secondary changing magnetic flux to generate an output signal which is a function of the relative position between the magnetic flux sensor and the at least one associated flux coupling loop; and an analyzing circuit on the slide responsive to the output signal from at least one magnetic flux sensor to output an output signal indicative of the position of the slide relative to the elongated beam at a first level of resolution.
  • 64. The electronic caliper of claim 63, wherein the drive circuit comprises a capacitor that discharges through the magnetic field generator.
  • 65. The electronic caliper of claim 64, wherein the capacitor and each of the at least one magnetic field generator operate as a resonant circuit.
  • 66. The electronic caliper of claim 64, wherein the primary changing magnetic flux changes at a rate equivalent to an oscillation frequency of at least 1 MHz in response to the intermittent drive signal.
  • 67. The electronic caliper of claim 64, wherein the intermittent drive signal comprises at least one pulse signal.
  • 68. The electronic caliper of claim 67, wherein the analyzing circuit determines changes in the relative position at a coarse level of resolution during each pulse interval, and determines the relative position at a finer level of resolution once during a plurality of pulse intervals.
  • 69. The electronic caliper of claim 67, wherein the analyzing circuit includes synchronous sampling means for sampling the output signal from at least one magnetic flux sensor synchronously with the pulse signal.
  • 70. The electronic caliper of claim 69, wherein the synchronous sampling uses sample timing based on an expected time delay between the pulsed signal and a peak in a response to a resonant circuit formed by the pulse generator components and the magnetic field generator components.
  • 71. The electronic caliper of claim 63, whereinat least one of a) each of the at least one magnetic flux sensor, and b) each of the at least one magnetic field generator includes at least one inductive area extending along the measuring axis, and the at least one inductive area is spatially modulated along the measuring axis in a pattern including alternating increases and decreases in width; the output signal from each of the at least one magnetic flux sensor exhibits spatial cycles which are a function of a relative position between that magnetic flux sensor and the at least one associated flux coupling loop; and the analyzing circuit comprises a counter for counting fractions of cycles of the output signal from the at least one magnetic flux sensor in response to motion of the slide along the elongated beam, at a second level of resolution coarser than the first level of resolution, the counter providing an approximate position of the slider assembly relative to the elongate beam.
  • 72. The electronic caliper of claim 71, wherein the counter is responsive at spatial intervals of at most {fraction (1/4)} cycle.
  • 73. The electronic caliper of claim 71, wherein the inductive area comprises a plurality of alternating polarity regions.
  • 74. The electronic caliper of claim 73, wherein the plurality of alternating polarity regions comprises regions of a surface bounded by at least one conductor positioned on the surface in a prescribed pattern.
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Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/975651 Nov 1997 US
Child 09/527518 US
Reissues (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/975651 Nov 1997 US
Child 09/527518 US