The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefore.
Not applicable.
(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to methods of processing piezoceramic transducer arrays, and more particularly to a new method for processing piezoceramic acoustic transducer arrays based on the mosaic arranging of piezoceramic materials with urethane.
(2) Description of the Prior Art
Piezoceramic acoustic transducer material has found its applications in underwater acoustic sonar transducers and arrays and has shown promising performance.
Currently, the great majority of the sonar transducer arrays are composed of piezoceramic transducer elements that are identical with respect to their physical sizes, to their shapes and to the type of materials used to manufacture them. The advantage of maintaining uniform size, shape and material is to maintain control in the quality of the transducer characteristics. There is, however, a disadvantage in maintaining a rigid uniformity. The trade-off is a loss in the flexibility of sonar array design that is limited to specific shapes and sizes.
There is a need for a new method of manufacturing underwater acoustic transducer arrays. Such a method should provide the means to manufacture piezoceramic transducer arrays with predetermined specific attributes and performance expectations. It should encompass any arbitrary surface geometry possible using numerical simulation techniques, and should not be restricted to only certain shapes of piezoceramic materials in order to optimize the acoustical performance in a controllable fashion when such piezoceramic materials are at the preliminary stage of manufacturing the transducer array. What is needed is a mosaic process for the fabrication of acoustic transducer arrays.
It is a general purpose and object of the present invention to provide a method for fabricating acoustic transducer arrays made of piezoceramic material.
A still further object of the invention is to provide a method for fabricating acoustic transducers of shaped piezoceramic material elements in which the shape of the piezoceramic elements conforms to a given array geometry.
A still further object of the invention is to provide a method for fabricating acoustic transducer arrays that only uses the minimum amount of piezoceramic material necessary to limit excess piezoceramic material that would otherwise interfere with the function of the transducer array.
These objects are accomplished in accordance with the present method according to the following. A desired performance level for a proposed acoustic transducer array is established. A geometric shape for the array is derived, based on the established performance specifications, such as the array beam pattern, side lobe suppression, sensitivities and impedance. Basic elements of the array are formed from piezoceramic materials of varying shapes rather than the using a uniform shape. These basic elements are then arranged in a mosaic method into the geometric shape for the array that was derived. The interstices are filled with urethane to link the basic elements together, thereby forming the entire piezoceramic transducer array.
The first step of the method is to determine the utilization and performance expectations of the acoustic transducer array. In the preferred embodiment, the utilization will be for acoustic transducer arrays utilized in underwater sonar applications. The performance expectations will be linked to the type of acoustic beam pattern sought, the degree of side lobe suppression, the weighting, the impedance, the transmitting voltage response and the receiving response. Once a determination of utilization and performance expectations has been made, a unique geometry can be derived through both physical prototyping and computer modeling that satisfies these expectations. For example, in referring to
The next step is to choose the appropriate types of piezoceramic materials to use. The selections are based on which piezoceramic materials best satisfy the performance expectations and can include PZT-5. Once the materials are selected, electrodes (not shown) are applied to the top and bottom surfaces of the material. In the preferred embodiment, electrodes are applied before the mosaic fabrication of the acoustic transducer. The electrode surfaces may be formed using techniques currently known in the art such as copper or silver plating and the like.
The next step is to cut the selected piezoceramic material into various smaller shapes to fabricate the transducer array. These smaller shapes as illustrated in
The basic elements are arranged in a mosaic method using mechanically adjustable frames 28 as illustrated in
The main advantage of the present invention over the prior art is that by arranging piezoceramic basic elements into a mosaic to fabricate a larger piezoceramic transducer array of a predetermined derived geometric shape there is a dramatic increase in flexibility with regard to the derived geometric shapes that can be used to suit the needs of a sonar application. Rather than taking a large block of piezoceramic material and attempting to shape it to suit the needs of the sonar application, or rather than using different shaped electrodes on a single large block of piezoceramic material where parts of the block have no electrode contact, a mosaic arrangement of piezoceramic materials ensures a precise geometric shape and ensures that there is no “extra” piezoceramic material (i.e. material having no electrode contact). By modifying the actual shape of the piezoceramic material itself (rather than the electrodes) there is no extra piezoceramic material that would otherwise interfere with the performance. In this way there is better isolation of the piezoceramic material and only the desired areas are excited. Thus, the mosaic method of arranging basic elements allows a mixture of different cross sectional geometry patterns for optimization of acoustic transducer array performance such as side lobe suppression, bandwidth manipulation and increases or decreases in sensitivities.
This invention has been disclosed in terms of certain embodiments. It will be apparent that many modifications can be made to the disclosed apparatus without departing from the invention. Therefore, it is the intent of the appended claims to cover all such variations and modifications as come within the true spirit and scope of this invention.
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