The invention relates to a method for measuring physical variables using piezoelectric sensors that generate an input voltage for an amplifier.
Physical variables such as, for example, pressures, forces, accelerations, expansions etc are widely acquired by means of piezoelectric measuring techniques. Piezoelectric measuring techniques are based on the piezoelectric effect, electric charges being generated on the surface of piezocrystals when the latter are deformed. This electric charge is fed to a current/voltage transformer in which there is located an amplifier to which a capacitor is assigned in the bypass. Such an arrangement is described, for example, in CH 494 967.
It goes without saying that the piezoelectric sensor generates very small charges that are transported with lightning speed onto the capacitor in the integrator. The larger the resistance in the cable, the lower is the required compensating current for compensating possible offset input voltages of the integrator. This leads to drifting of the signal. As cable resistance becomes smaller, a portion of the charge generated is likewise lost before transport into the capacitor of the integrator.
Temperature also plays a role in this case. The warmer the surroundings, the worse the drift. If such sensors are therefore applied, for example to injection molding machines, the reduction in drift is exceptionally expensive.
In order to be able to transport such small charges, the cables must have a very high resistance, specifically in a range of 1012Ω to 1015Ω. If such cables are touched merely with the finger, resistance collapses, that is to say handling such cables is a very delicate matter and extremely expensive.
EP 0 253 016 exhibits a charge amplifier circuit in which there are provided a first operational amplifier, an integration capacitor between the inverting input and the output of the first amplifier, and a second amplifier whose input is connected to the output of the charge amplifier circuit, and whose output is connected via a resistor and, during the resetting face, a resetting device to the inverting input of the first amplifier. The aim in this case is to form the charge amplifier circuit as a measuring circuit by virtue of the fact that the integration capacitor can be short circuited by a resistor via the resetting device such that when the resetting device is active the integration capacitor automatically causes a charge to flow that compensates the zero point offset of the output voltage of the charge amplifier circuit during the zero phase following the resetting phase.
The charge/voltage transformation in this charge amplifier is therefore organized with the aid of a capacitor. Since the integration of the function:
is organized in the capacitor, the voltage currents of the capacitor, the line to the sensor and the input amplifier must be very low. If such a charge amplifier is used for measurements over lengthy periods, the measuring signal drifts since leakage resistances of less than 1015Ω can be realized only with difficulty, and the input amplifiers have an offset.
The present invention is based on the object of developing a low-resistance and driftless measurement of physical variables using piezoelectric sensors.
The achievement of the object results from feeding the voltage from the amplifier to a digital integrator.
A microcomputer can be provided in the integrator for the purpose of processing the voltage fed from the amplifier. However, the method can also be implemented with the aid of a so-called “freely programmable logic module”, such as a DSP, EPLD, CPLD or STGA (free programmable date array). These freely programmable logic modules could independently take over the task of a microcomputer, but it could also constitute a part of the microcomputer.
The digital integrator preferably forms a constant sum of the force differences present in neighboring time windows. In this case, the integrator calculates the integral over the current at time discrete points, the infinite sum being formed. The cycle of a process is determined in the integrator, and a quasi-static, piezoelectric amplifier is constructed without a cycle controller (operate reset circuit).
Since, owing to the current amplifier, the voltage at the sensor is respectively kept at 0 volts, and no voltage is stored at the capacitors, this method is particularly suitable for connecting piezosensors of very low resistance to the measuring amplifier, it being possible at the same time to eliminate the drift and, if the process is known, to work without resetting at the pressure intensifier. The current amplifier generates in each case by means of a resistor the same current as the current that is output by the sensor upon the action of force with a negative polarity. A current that behaves identically to the force that has changed in this period flows between two temporally offset points in time.
In one example of application, the resistor is arranged in a bypass around an amplifier. That is to say, in this case the resistor replaces the known capacitor or the known capacitance.
In a further exemplary embodiment, the resistor is integrated in the sensor. This yields the interesting possibility of using a single amplifier for all the sensors, there being no need to undertake any sort of gain corrections or gain changeovers. The principle consists in that a voltage is applied at the resistor by the charge while current is flowing.
Furthermore, it is provided in a preferred example of application to limit the current upstream of the current/voltage converter. This is performed by a resistor that is connected between the input and the amplifier. It can also be provided in addition that branching off to a frame takes place between the input and the limiting resistor, a capacitor being connected in the branch circuit. This capacitor prevents strong current rises, and thus permits low scanning rates for the downstream A/D converter.
The resistors in the current/voltage converter can be varied in order to take account of different sensitivities of sensors.
Given the arrangement of the resistor in the sensor, it is possible to generate for all sensor types uniform output signals that can be amplified by a charge amplifier having only a single gain, the current/voltage converter then being replaced by a voltage amplifier. It is important that it is likewise possible thus for manufacturing tolerances of the piezocrystals to be corrected electronically, and their sensitivity is automatically detected (“PRIASED function”).
In order to reduce the input resistance of the piezoelectric amplifier, all the charge carriers are preferably to be discharged at once to frame. In this case, there is no voltage present at the sensor that can be reduced by losses in the cable. The digital integrator undertakes the requisite integration in order to prevent drift phenomena.
Further advantages, features and details of the invention emerge from the following description of preferred exemplary embodiments, and with the aid of the drawing, in which:
In accordance with
The current/voltage converter V1 includes a current amplifier 11 that operates to frame 3. Furthermore, connected to it is a digital integrator 4 that is essentially formed from a microcomputer 5 that is, in turn, connected to frame 6. The microcomputer has an output 13 for the calculated voltage Ua(t), which is connected in turn to frame 14.
The mode of operation of the present invention is as follows:
Upon application of the pressure, the piezoelectric sensor (not shown in more detail), which can serve, for example, as a pressure sensor, generates a current which it conducts to input 1 as input current Ie.
It holds for the system that: Ie=Ir+Iopv+Ileck
The input current Ie is then divided at a nodal point 15 into the current Ir to the resistor R, and the current Iopv to an inverted input of the current amplifier 11 and Ileck. The leakage current Ileck is discharged via the frame 2.
Furthermore, it must be that IR>1000 Iopv and it must hold for small measuring errors that:
Ia>1000 (Iopv+Ileck)
The current amplifier 11 respectively generates through the resistor R the same current as the current Ie that is output by the sensor when force is acting. A current that behaves in an identical fashion to the force changed in this period flows between two temporally offset instants.
The digital integrator 4 is connected to the output of the current amplifier 11, and operates according to the following formula:
The digital integrator 4 replaces the previously known capacitor (analog integrator), at which the charge is able to be reduced. No values are lost in the microcomputer system.
This digital integrator 4 forms the infinite sum of the difference signals that are measured at the sensor between two access points in each case. That is to say, the computing operation in a microcomputer is performed according to the following formula:
It is not critical here whether the force is produced by pressure via a surface, is a directly acting force. The following general equation results:
Thus, only the differential is amplified, and so a leakage current through a leakage resistance can no longer exert an influence later by digital offset measurement. As mentioned above, it need only hold that the current through the leakage resistance is 100 times smaller than the current IR through the resistor R, so that the measuring error is <1%. It follows that a leakage resistance of 107Ω (that is to say 6 powers of ten lower) suffices for offset voltages of 5 mV, and so the cable and sensor can be designed in a much more favorable way.
The value stored in the computer cannot drift, and so by contrast with the prior art possible offset properties of the current/voltage converter V1 can be eliminated by designing the program. All that need be done is to eliminate the offset starting value in the analog part in a digital fashion.
Since the current/voltage converter keeps the voltage at the sensor at 0 volts in each case, and no voltage is stored at the capacitors, this method is particularly suitable for connecting piezosensors of very low resistance to the measuring amplifier, it being possible (independently of a change in force/pressure) to eliminate the drift simultaneously and, to the knowledge of the process, to operate on the pressure intensifier without resetting.
In the case of an example of a sensor with 10 pC/bar and a full scale deflection of 4000 bar that reaches full scale deflection within 1 ms by a linear rise in pressure, the following current would flow in the course of 1 ms:
If the measuring error is to be <0.1% for this example, and assuming an amplifier with an offset of approximately 5 mV for the current amplifier V1, it is possible to calculate the leakage resistance, which may be connected in parallel with the cable.
for the measuring error of 0.1%
The resistance connected in parallel with the sensor in this case would be:
This means that the leakage resistance of the cable may be at 12.5 KΩ given a 5 mV offset at the input of the new pressure intensifying method.
By comparison therewith, according to EP 253 016 A1 the input resistance of the circuit must be at least 1015Ω.
When the entire measuring range is swept within 1 s, it follows from equation 4 that:
It follows from equations 5 and 6 that in this case the leakage resistance connected in parallel to the line may still be:
In this example, the input resistance can be smaller by a factor of 80*10[illegible] to 80*106 for example measuring method.
It follows that the novel amplifier should be very easily capable of implementing input resistances of 100 MΩ without the possibility of the occurrence of measuring errors or drift phenomena. This is smaller by a factor of 10 000 than in the case of the integrator known from EP 253 016 A1.
It is also possible that the computer analyzes the process and can itself take the decision as to when the amplifier is to be reset. This is attended by the advantage that the signal to be considered is not to be synchronized with a digital signal of the machine, or a short pulse (edge in the case of operate or reset) suffices.
In the field of use in accordance with
In this exemplary embodiment, a compromise possible for the maximum rates of rise that are technically possible in the measurement systems is adopted to the effect that the scanning rates of the integrator 4 can be reduced while the integration error is nevertheless small. In this case, however, the different sensitivities of the sensors still have to be set at the amplifier 11. The limiting resistance 8 prevents the charge from flowing off at lightning speed into the current/voltage transformer V1, and so the dynamics of the current/voltage transformer V1 can be somewhat restricted.
In the further field of use in accordance with
The result of this is a setting of the measuring range of the measuring chain in the sensor and a compensation of the sensor differences (automatic detection of sensor and sensitivity), as well as a measuring range compensation. The correction factor of the crystal is compensated (percentage error), and the measuring range of the crystal can be measured from outside.
If a start is made from equation 4, and if the aim in this case is not to overshoot a 1 volt voltage, the resistance would be only 25 KΩ. This means that, given a 0.1% measuring error, a 25 MΩ resistance may be connected in parallel with the line, and this constitutes a value that is inconceivable for the present piezoelectric amplifiers. No amplifier produced using the prior art could still undertake measurements given a cable resistance of 20 MΩ.
File reference: P3208/PCT Date: Dec. 8, 2005 W/HU
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 2004 042 668.6 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |
| 10 2005 006 806.5 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP05/08816 | 8/12/2005 | WO | 2/28/2007 |