This application is a National Phase application of International Application No. PCT/FI2005/050321 filed Sep. 19, 2005, which claims priority based on Finnish Patent Application No. 20045348, filed Sep. 20, 2004, which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method for microwave measurement of an object to be measured, at least the surface of which is made of an electrically conductive material. The invention also relates to a measuring device and an oscillator.
2. Description of the Related Art
In an electrically conductive, usually flat piece the thickness of the piece and/or also some other dimension parallel with its thickness may be measured using microwave measurement in which the resonance frequency of the measurement resonator depends on a thickness dimension of the piece to be measured. For example, a cylindrical resonator or a Fabry-Perot resonator may be used for this purpose. The resonator frequency can be found by scanning the frequency of an oscillator producing microwave radiation over a measurement band. The thickness dimension of the piece to be measured can then be determined as a function of the found resonator frequency.
However, frequency scanning involves a number of problems. A measuring device based on frequency scanning is complicated and expensive, because it requires scanning electronics that change the oscillator frequency. In addition, frequency scanning is time-consuming, because the measurement must be carried out at all measurement band frequencies and thus it takes time before the measurement results are obtained. Measuring the thickness of a moving and shaking plate by means of a frequency scanning application is problematic, because it is not possible to carry out a rapid, synchronic and perfectly simultaneous measurement of distance on both sides of the plate.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved method for microwave measurement, a measuring device and an oscillator. This is achieved by a method for measuring an object to be measured by means of microwave radiation, comprising producing oscillation energy for an oscillator by means of an active feedback coupled unit. The method comprises generating resonance to at least one oscillator, each oscillator comprising at least one open resonator, each resonator being coupled to at least one active unit, by using the object to be measured as a functional part of the resonator, whereby the object to be measured causes a resonance frequency dependent on the location of a surface of the object to be measured to be generated in each oscillator; and determining at least one characteristic of the object to be measured on the basis of the oscillator resonance frequency by using a measurement part.
The invention also relates to a measuring device for measurement at a microwave frequency, the measuring device comprising at least one oscillator operating at a microwave frequency, each oscillator comprising a feedback coupled active unit for generating oscillation energy. The oscillator comprises at least one open resonator, each resonator being coupled to at least one active unit; each active unit supplies oscillation energy to each resonator at the moment of measurement, the object to be measured being meant as a functional part of the resonator and the object to be measured being configured to cause resonance in the oscillator; each open resonator is configured to determine the resonance frequency of each oscillator on the basis of the location of a surface of the object to be measured; and the measuring device comprises a measurement part configured to determine at least one characteristic of the object to be measured on the basis of the resonance frequency of each oscillator.
The invention further relates to an oscillator for measurement at a microwave frequency, the oscillator comprising a feedback coupled active unit for generating oscillation energy. The oscillator comprises at least one open resonator coupled to the active unit; the active unit supplies oscillation energy to the resonator, the object to be measured being meant as a functional part of the resonator and the object to be measured being configured to cause resonance in the oscillator; and the open resonator is configured to determine the resonance frequency of an oscillator on the basis of the location of a surface of the object to be measured.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.
The method and arrangement of the invention provide a number of advantages. Resonator frequency can be determined without frequency scanning, which renders the solution fast, simple and cost-effective in this respect. In addition, the measurement can be used for measuring a characteristic of a shaking plate.
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to preferred embodiments and the accompanying drawings, in which
The disclosed solution is applicable to the measurement of objects having an electrically conductive surface. Its applications include, although are not restricted to, objects made of metal, such as plates of steel, copper or aluminium, or insulating plates coated with an electrically conductive substance.
With reference to
Oscillator feedback coupling is usually implemented using positive feedback coupling. The transfer function T(ω) of the coupling of
T(ω)=A(ω)/[1−H(ω)A(ω))], (1)
where ω2πf, f is frequency, π≈3.1415926, A(ω) is the amplification/transfer function of the active component as a function of frequency, H(ω) is the transfer function of the feedback coupling element as a function of frequency. The coupling of
where n is an integer 1, 2, . . . and λ is the wavelength. The shape of the mirror may be a curved spherical surface, although a paraboloid or some other surface shape directing microwave radiation to the object to be measured is also possible.
Thus when the distance between the resonator mirror 208 and the upper surface 212 of the object to be measured 210 changes due to changes in the thickness of the object to be measured 210, for example, also the wavelength λ of the resonant microwave radiation changes without outside measures. A generalized statement would be that the wavelength of a resonant microwave radiation changes when a characteristic of the object to be measured or affecting the object changes. For example, the object to be measured may be subjected to a force pulling the object further away from (or closer to) the resonator mirror. If the distance between the object to be measured and the resonator mirror changes, a physical characteristic of the object or a characteristic affecting the object, such as force, can be determined. In this solution resonance frequency does not need to be searched for by means of scanning or any other way either, but the resonator 200 directly determines the oscillation frequency/frequencies of the oscillator. The open resonator 200 may thus be a Fabry-Perot type resonator. The resonant microwave radiation is received for example on a transfer line 214 and after a phase shift possibly carried out in a phase shifter 216 the received microwave radiation is coupled back to the active unit 100 that generates oscillation energy to maintain resonance in the oscillator. Part of the resonant frequency signal from the output 202 of the active unit 100 can be further transferred to measurement, for example, by means of a directional coupler 218, for example.
As shown in
f=c(q+1+((2p+l+1)/p))arctan((d1/(r0−d1))1/2)) (2)
where f is the resonance frequency of microwave radiation, c is the speed of microwave radiation, r0 is the radius of the spherical surface of the mirror, and p, I and q are indices of the resonance form, q+1 being the number of half-waves in the resonator.
The output signal of the active unit 101 may be connected to the measurement part 420 comprising a digital signal processing unit 436, for example, by means of a directional coupler 434. The signal processing unit 436 determines a distance d2 on the basis of the resonance frequency. This may be carried out similarly as for the distance d1. The measurement data of the signal units 406, 436 may be entered into a computer 450 that may form a thickness dimension of the object to be measured 210.
In practice, separate signal processing units 406, 436 are usually not needed in the measurement part 420, but signal processing may take place in a common signal processing unit. In fact separate signal processing units 406, 436 and a separate computer 450 are often not necessarily used, but signals coming from the directional couplers 404, 434 may be processed for example in a digital signal processing device functioning as the measurement part 420 and producing the necessary measuring results.
Assuming that a distance D between the resonator mirrors 400, 430, which is usually kept as an invariable to the extent possible, is known at the moment of measurement, a thickness dx of the object to measured can be determined in the computer 450 for example by applying the following equation:
dx=D−(d1+d2), (3)
where d1 is the distance of the mirror 400 from the upper surface 212 of the object to be measured 210 and d2 is the distance of the mirror 430 from the lower surface 213 of the object to be measured 210. If the distance D between the resonator mirrors changes due to thermal expansion, for example, resonance frequency f may be calculated from the resonator formed by two mirrors facing each other by applying the following formula:
f=c(q+1+((2p+l+1)p)arccos(1−D/Ro))/2D (4)
Automated calibration of a measuring device based on the above will be described further below.
Instead of or in addition to thickness, also the profile of the object may be measured. In this case the object to be measured is measured at several points in accordance with a predetermined straight line, similarly as in thickness measurement. Each profile is measured by taking into account the dimensions d1 and d2, whereby the variation in thickness and shape of the surface on the line of measurement is obtained.
An object can also be measured with regard to its flatness, which may be determined as longitudinal variation in the back line of the object to be measured.
A measuring device comprising parallel resonators, such as the one in
When two resonators facing each other are used, as in
Next, the disclosed solution will be further examined with reference to the flow diagram of
Instead of a computer program the measuring part 420 may be implemented using a hardware solution for example in the form one or more ASIC circuits (Application-Specific Integrated Circuit) or an operational logic consisting of dedicated components.
Although the invention is disclosed above with reference to the examples of the accompanying drawings, it is obvious that the invention is not restricted thereto but may be varied in many ways within the scope of the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20045348 | Sep 2004 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2005/050321 | 9/19/2005 | WO | 00 | 3/9/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/032730 | 3/30/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070268024 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |