The invention concerns a process for the serial transmission of digital measurement data from a transmitter to a remotely disposed receiver.
Hereinafter a conceptual distinction is made between values which are actually measured (=measurement values) and calculated values (=exact values), in which respect the latter are identified in that fashion for the reason that, as will be shown in detail hereinafter, within the respectively required range of measurement accuracy, they coincide with the associated, actually measured values, and can thus be correctly referred to as ‘exact’.
The expression that the physical parameter whose measurement values are to be transmitted is ‘continuously measured’ is intended to identify both measurement processes which continuously supply measurement values and also those in which the measurement values occur discontinuously at very short time intervals.
German laid-open application (DE-OS) No 44 43 959 discloses such a process in which the transmitter is arranged directly at a sensor and serves to transmit measurement data which are supplied by the sensor and which are prepared for transmission in digital form to a remotely disposed receiver, in such a way that a minimum level of complication and expenditure in respect of the connecting lines has to be involved. In that case, the sensor is a measuring device for permanently detecting a physical parameter, for example a temperature, a pressure and so forth.
A particularly important area of use for these processes is represented by positional and in particular rotational pickup senders or sensors, in which the physical parameter to be detected is the angular position of a rotating shaft. In that situation, the shaft may be stationary and it may also rotate at a high speed of rotation, for example 12000 rpm.
If, for a situation of use of that kind, there is a requirement for a high resolution capability of for example 22 bits for a full revolution of 2 Π and if levels of acceleration or deceleration respectively of up to 1×105 s−2 are permitted, then difficulties are incurred with the known process insofar as it is necessary to select an extremely high transmission frequency or rate in order individually to transmit the very high number of increments including their sign, which occur at high speeds, in such a way that the receiver can construct the respectively current angular position practically in real time as a progressive measurement value by addition of the increments, with the correct sign, to afford the last, completely ascertained absolute value.
In comparison therewith, the object of the present invention is to develop a process of the kind set forth in the opening part of this specification, in such a way that serial transmission of the measurement data is made possible even at very high rates of change of alteration in the physical parameter to be detected, practically in a real-time mode, without extremely high transmission frequencies being required for that purpose.
To attain that object, the invention provides, according to a first aspect thereof, a process for the serial transmission of digital measurement data from a transmitter to a remotely disposed receiver, wherein at the transmitter end at least one absolute value of a continuously measured physical parameter and correction values describing alterations in said parameter are prepared in digital form and transmitted to the receiver which forms updated measurement values from the transmitted values, wherein on the part of the transmitter as well as on the part of the receiver, using mathematical equations which describe the alterations in time of the parameter which is to be measuring detected, on the basis of exact measured values αTx−1, αTx−2, αTx−3 . . . which the transmitter obtains at moments in time Tx−2, Tx−1, Tx which are of equal spacings in respect of time and are accurately known both on the part of the transmitter and also on the part of the receiver, predicted exact values αT(x−2)b, α(Tx−1)b, αTxb are calculated in advance for moments in time for which the receiver does not vet have an exact measured value {steps 13, 17, 21, 25 and 31, 32, 34, 35, 37, 38, 40 in FIG. 1}, said predicted exact values αT(x−2)b, αT(x−1)b, αTxb being used as updated measurement values on the part of the receiver, wherein on the part of the transmitter, when a measured value αTx−2, αTx−1, αTx belonging to a moment in time Tx−2, Tx−1, Tx is present, its difference δαTx−2, δαTx−1, δαTx in relation to the predicted exact value αT(x−2)b, αT(x−1)b, αTxb is calculated {steps 11, 15, 19, 23 In FIG. 1} and at least one correction value δαTx−2, δαTx−1, δαTx representing such a difference is transmitted to the receiver {steps 12, 16, 20, 24 in FIG. 1} receiving this at least one correction value {steps 30, 33, 36, 39 in FIG. 1}, and wherein on the part of the transmitter as well as on the part of the receiver the calculation of a predicted exact value αT(x−2), αT(x−1), αTxb {steps 13, 17, 21, 25 and 31, 32, 34, 35, 37, 38, 40 in FIG. 1} involves so many known exact measured values αTx−1, αTx−2, . . . each of which was obtained for an earlier one of said moments in time Tx−3, Tx−2, Tx−1, . . . {steps 10, 14, 18, 22 in FIG. 1}, that said correction value δαTx−2, δαTx−2, δαTx can be encoded with such a small number of bits to be transmitted, that the deviation between each calculated value and the respective measured value permanently remains within the required level of measurement accuracy.
Those features according to the invention are based on the realisation that, if the alteration in respect of time of a physical parameter is steady, that is to say, can be continuously described by mathematical equations, there exists an n-th order derivative whose alteration within suitably selected measurement intervals only influences the measured value in such a way that the required level of measurement accuracy is maintained.
If the measured values of such a physical parameter are to be detected and transmitted from the transmitter to the receiver, then, instead of a transmission in accordance with DE-OS No 44 43 959, within a measurement interval which has commenced, for each future time Tx which is in that interval or at its end, an ‘exact value’ αTxb can be calculated simultaneously both on the part of the transmitter and also the receiver by resolving the appropriate mathematical equation which generally involves an (n-1)-th order differential equation, wherein the expression ‘exact value’ is used to denote a value whose deviation from the value αTx which is actually measured at the future time Tx is so small that it coincides therewith, within the limits defined by the level of measurement accuracy required.
In accordance with that measurement accuracy and having regard to the possible options in terms of change or alteration, in particular the possible or intended maximum values of the time derivatives of the physical parameter to be measured, the length of the measurement intervals, that is to say the distance between the times at which the measured values are detected, as well as the n-th order number are established, in respect of which it can be assumed that within a measurement interval it does not alter beyond a predeterminable maximum value. That ordinal number n then defines the number of previously obtained, measured values αTx−1, αTx−2, αTx−3 . . . which, jointly with the exactly known times Tx−3, Tx−2, Tx−1, at which they have occurred, to solve the calculation equations, have to be inserted into same. The higher the order n of the time derivative of the measurement parameter (and thus the differential equations to be resolved), whose alteration influences the measurement parameter within the measurement interval within the limits of the required level of measurement accuracy, the greater must be the number of earlier measured values included in the calculation.
If for example in a situation involving monitoring and measuring the rotation of a shaft, the alteration in the angular acceleration can be deemed to be constant, it is theoretically sufficient, after ascertaining a starting measurement value, with ongoing calculation of new exact values, to rely once on three measured values. Further measurements and correction value transmissions would then no longer be required. That theoretical case can be envisaged, but in practice constancy of angular acceleration will persist only over some measurement intervals; it is therefore necessary to continuously implement measurement steps and in the ongoing calculations to rely in each case on three earlier measured values.
If in accordance with the invention the above-specified parameters are correctly established, then the predicted exact value αTxb coincides with the value αTx which was actually measured at the time Tx, within the limits given by the defined level of measurement accuracy.
The assumption that the time derivative of n-th order of the measurement parameter does not alter over a few measurement intervals is realistic, but it does not apply for just any number of successive measurement intervals. If now an alteration which is occurring begins to become effective, then the predicted exact value αTxb is closer to one of the limits of the measurement accuracy range than would be the case without the occurrence of that alteration. In accordance with the invention, it is prevented from running out of the measurement accuracy range by virtue of the fact that, immediately after the end Tx of each measurement interval, at the transmitter end, the correction value δαTx=αTxb−αTx which can be encoded in a few bits and generally even in only two bits (namely +1, 0, −1) between the calculated exact value and the actually measured value is ascertained and transmitted to the receiver. The sign of that correction value can be negative or positive; the essential consideration is that the correction value 0 is also transmitted.
The influence, contained in that correction value, of the n-th order time derivative which in a measurement interval is admittedly constant but which nonetheless under some circumstances changes over a longer period of time, that is to say including a plurality of measurement intervals, on the measurement value, is therefore continuously detected and transmitted to the receiver which then, just like the transmitter, can take it into account in the subsequent calculations, so that the further predicted exact values αT(x+1)b, αT(x+2)b, and so forth are still identical within the measurement accuracy range to the associated actually measured values αT(x+1), αT(x+2), and so forth only occurring after the respective calculation, and they can thus be correctly identified as ‘exact’.
For the cases which are of particular interest here, involving measurement tracking of the translatory or rotational movement of a body, for example angular measurement of a rotating shaft, the three prerequisites can be specifically stated in summarised form for applicability of the process according to the invention, as follows:
that both on the part of the transmitter and also the receiver, all calculations according to the invention are implemented in accordance with the same laws and relationships which describe the physical procedures involved;
that for each measured value αTx which is fed to a further processing step, the time Tx for which it reproduces the respective instantaneous value of the detected physical parameter is exactly known; and
that the time spacings Tx−3−Tx−2, Tx−2−Tx−1, Tx−1−Tx and so forth between two successive times Tx−3, Tx−2 and Tx−2, Tx−1 and Tx−1, Tx, respectively are ascertained for the measured values αTx−3, αTx−2, αTx−1, αTx and subjected to further processing in accordance with the invention, are so small that in them the respective contribution afforded by the third time derivative of the physical parameter to be monitored (that is to say for example in a situation involving angular measurement, the alteration in respect of time of angular acceleration), to the instantaneous value, is no greater than the desired level of measurement accuracy or resolution.
For security reasons which will be discussed in greater detail hereinafter, it may also be important to satisfy a fourth prerequisite, more specifically, that the above-specified time spacings Tx−3−Tx−2, Tx−2−Tx−1, Tx−1−Tx and so forth are sufficient such that in them the respective contribution which is made by the second time derivative of the physical parameter to be monitored (that is to say in the case of angular measurement, the angular acceleration), to the instantaneous value, can be transmitted in encoded form within such a time spacing.
Then, the deviation ascertained by the transmitter of the calculated exact value αTxb from the measured value αTx which occurs when the time Tx being considered occurs remains so small that it can be transmitted as a correction value δαTx in encoded form to the receiver even in a very short time, and the receiver then immediately corrects the value αTxb which is also calculated thereby and which has been used hitherto.
In a particularly preferred alternative form of the process according to the invention the times which are involved in the procedure for ascertaining measurement values, that is to say both the past times Tx−3, Tx−2, Tx−1 for which a measured value αTx−3, αTx−2, αTx−1 is already known at both ends, that is to say at the transmitter and at the receiver, and also the time Tx for which firstly an exact value αTxb is calculated and when the transmitter knows the associated new measured value αTx a correction value δαTx to be transmitted is ascertained, involve exactly identical time spacings which are known at both ends.
By virtue of those exactly identical time spacings (that is to say Tx−3−Tx−2=Tx−2−Tx−1=Tx−1−Tx and so forth), it is possible for the calculated exact value αTxb already to be calculated in advance, that is to say before the occurrence of the time Tx, by virtue of the fact that an intermediate value is calculated from the two last-measured values αTx−2, αTx−1, preferably by linear extrapolation to the future time Tx, and added to that intermediate value with the correct sign is an alteration value ΔαTx−1 which is ascertained for the last time Tx−1 which has already passed, which alteration value was in turn determined by a procedure whereby linear extrapolation was effected from the two measured values αTx−3, αTx−2 which are associated with the times Tx−3, Tx−2 which precede the time Tx−1 preceding the time Tx being considered, to the preceding time Tx−1, and the difference was formed between the intermediate value obtained in that way and the measured value αTx−1 associated with the preceding time Tx−1.
The exact value αTxb calculated in that way differs from the measured value only when the contribution which is afforded by the second time derivative of the physical parameter to be monitored to the instantaneous value has altered in the period Tx−Tx−1. The maximum error can only be equal to the deviation, corresponding to the correction value δαTx, of the future alteration value ΔαTx which occurs for the time Tx being considered, from the already known alteration value ΔαTx−1, and therefore when the above-mentioned third condition is met, it is within the limits of the desired level of measurement accuracy.
When then the time Tx has occurred, for which the prediction being considered was implemented, this then involves the newest measured value αTx and its deviation from the predicted exact value αTxb, that is to say the newest correct value δαTx, which alone must be transmitted to the receiver so that it can exactly calculate the actually measured value αTx.
As, when the three prerequisites stated above apply, the correction value δαTx is considerably smaller than each of the alteration values ΔαTx−1, ΔαTx which are small in any case, it can be transmitted in such a short time, even at a comparatively low transmission frequency, that, by means of that correction value δαTx the receiver can calculate not only the measured value αTx applicable for the time Tx, but also the measurement values, with the required level of accuracy and resolution, in real time, and make them available to a user, which occur for all times which are between the time Tx and the next time Tx+1 for which a new correction value δαTx+1 is supplied by the transmitter. That applies in particular also for the time at which transmission of the correction value δαTx is ended. For calculation of intermediate values which represent the physical parameter for times which are between the times Tx and Tx+1, inter alia the last alteration value ΔαTx is split up into a linear and a quadratic component.
In principle therefore it would suffice to transmit only a single time an absolute measured value and an alteration value and then only also correction values, by means of which the alteration values are updated at the receiver end, in which case the updated alteration values in turn serve to update the absolute measurement values.
As, in the case of a pure updating process, transmission errors as occur for example due to faults which have been incurred in the transmission path can give rise to considerable deviations between the updated and the actual values, although the error probability is slight due to the very small time spacings, preferably the procedure also involves repeatedly transmitting measured values and alteration values as such, so that it is possible to implement a compensating adjustment at the receiver end. In that case then the above-mentioned fourth prerequisite must be satisfied.
That transmission is preferably effected in bit-wise or bit group-wise fashion in interlaced or shared relationship with transmission of the correction values so that the above-mentioned conditions are still satisfied.
It should be emphasised once again that, when a new correction value δαTx occurs at the receiver, it is not only possible to calculate back to the measured value αTx present at the transmitter at the time Tx being considered which has occurred in the meantime, but it is also possible, for at least one time Tx+1 after the time Tx being considered, and all times therebetween, to predict a respective exact value in real time. The only condition in that respect is that this later time Tx+1 also involves the same spacing in respect of time in relation to the preceding time Tx which also separates the other times from each other.
The required exact time correlation between the various times can be implemented in a particularly simple fashion by those times being derived from a quartz-accurate frequency which is preferably generated at the receiver end and transmitted to the transmitter.
In that respect this frequency can be so established in per se known manner that it forms on a two-wire line serving for transmission purposes, a standing wave which is current-modulated in such a fashion that each of the half-waves thereof can represent a bit of the data to be transmitted, as is described in EP 716 404 A1.
The transmitted correction values which have been expressly referred to hereinbefore involve encoded differences in respect of values of the parameter to be measured, that is to say angular differences in the case of a rotating shaft. By virtue of the fixed time raster or grid which is predetermined in the present embodiment (exactly identically sized measurement intervals), that is equivalent to the transmission of correction values which directly represent alterations in a higher derivative such as for example the angular speed or angular acceleration and so forth. In the alternative configuration which is also described hereinafter, without a fixed time raster or grid, it may be advantageous, instead of the differences of the ‘local values’, to transmit such differences of higher time derivatives as correction values.
By means of the prediction procedure it is also possible to take account of signal transit and other delay times in the system. If for example at the receiver end there is a regulator which, on the basis of the measurement data supplied by the sensor, is intended to regulate the physical parameter to be monitored, to a value which can be predetermined in a variable fashion, then for example the time spacing between a time Tx being considered and a subsequent time, for which an exact value is predicted at the receiver end and transmitted to the regulator, can be altered until that time spacing corresponds to the system delay times, which can be recognised from the fact that the regulator operates in a stable mode and no longer oscillates.
According to a further aspect thereof the invention provides a process for the serial transmission of digital measurement data from a transmitter to a remotely disposed receiver, wherein at the transmitter end at least one absolute value of a continuously measured physical parameter and correction values describing alterations in said parameter are prepared in digital form and transmitted to the receiver which forms undated measurement values from the transmitted values, wherein the transmitter, obtaining exact measured values α0, αT1, αT2, αT3 at moments in time T0, T1, T2, T3 {steps 50, 51, 54, 59 in FIG. 2} which do not necessarily involve equal time spacings, measures for each of said moments in time T0, T1, T2, T3 its position in respect of time and generates a time stamp signal characterising said position, which time stamp signal is then transmitted to the receiver {steps 53, 55, 59 in FIG. 2} which starts at the beginning T0 with the same measured value α0 {step 70 in FIG. 2} as the receiver and receives and decodes said time stamp signal {steps 71, 73, 77 in FIG. 2} after each of said moments in time T1, T2, T3 wherein, using mathematical equations which describe the alterations in time of the parameter which is to be measuringly detected, a predicted exact value αT2b is, in advance for moments in time for which the receiver does not vet have an exact measured value, calculated at the transmitter immediately after the occurrence of that moment in time T2 {steps 56, 59 in FIG. 2} and at the receiver immediately when it has received from the transmitter the time stamp signal marking the moment in time T2 being considered {steps 72, 74, 75, 76 in FIG. 2}, on the basis of exact measured values αT1, αT2, αT3 . . . said predicted exact value αT2b being used as updated measurement value on the part of the receiver, wherein on the part of the transmitter, when a measured value αT2 belonging to a moment in time T2 is present, its difference in relation to the predicted exact value αT2b is calculated {step 57 in FIG. 2} and at least one correction value δαT2 representing said difference is transmitted to the receiver {step 58 in FIG. 2}, which receives said correction value δαT2 {step 76 of FIG. 2} and wherein on the part of the transmitter as well as on the part of the receiver the calculation of a predicted exact value αT2b {steps 56 and 75 in FIG. 2} involves so many known exact measured values αT1, . . , each of which was obtained for an earlier one of said moments in time T1 that said correction value δαT2 can be encoded with such a small number of bits to be transmitted, tat the deviation between each calculated value and the respective measured value permanently remains within the required level of measurement accuracy.
In this alternative configuration of the process according to the invention the time spacings between the times Tx−2, Tx−1, Tx and so forth being considered do not have to be identically equal; the conditions however still apply that the transmitter and the receiver use the same calculation bases and that each of the variable time spacings is so small that in same the respective contribution which is afforded by the third time derivative of the physical parameter to be monitored to the instantaneous value is no greater than the desired level of measurement accuracy or resolution.
In this configuration of the process according to the invention, the calculated exact value αTxb for a time Tx being considered can be calculated only after the occurrence thereof and after the transmitter has transmitted to the receiver a time stamp signal which characterises the absolute position in respect of time of that moment in time. As that transmission can take place within a very short time and transmission of the correction value calculated by the transmitter follows such transmission also very quickly, in this case also, in spite of the use of a comparatively low transmission frequency, the receiver is in a position to follow in a real-time mode the actual variation in the physical parameter to be monitored, by virtue of prediction procedures.
For attaining the object of the invention, it would be counter-productive to use as time stamp signals, complete encoded time measurement values because the amount of data entailed in that case would require a very high transmission frequency.
It is therefore preferable for the transmitter to measure the spacing in respect of time of the respective moment in time Tx from a predeterminable, periodically recurring significant point, preferably from the next following zero-passage of a quartz-accurately periodic reference signal which is available at both ends, and that it transmits that time spacing ΔtSx as a time stamp signal to the receiver which, when it recognises the position in respect of time of the significant point in question of the reference signal, can form an exact time measurement value.
So that the receiver receives the required information relating to the position in respect of time of the significant point in question of the reference signal, it is sufficient if the transmitter sends to the receiver at the time Tx in question a signal of very short time length, in which case for example the leading edge of a signal bit can serve as that signal, and the receiver measures the time spacing ΔtEx of that signal relative to the next occurring significant point in the reference signal, which generally, that is to say when the signal transit time on the transmission section is greater than half a period of the reference signal, is admittedly not identical to the significant point to which the time stamp signal ascertained by the transmitter refers, but is separated therefrom by a whole number of half-periods of the reference signal.
That number of half-periods also depends on the signal transit time, which can be presumed to be known, on the transmission path. On the assumption which can always be implemented that the fluctuations in the signal transit time are not more than ±¼ of the period length of the transmission frequency, the receiver can ascertain from ΔtEx, ΔtSx and the approximate value of the signal transit time and the period length of the reference signal, the exact time Tx at which the respective measurement value was obtained, without the receiver having been transmitted from the transmitter more than the flank or edge of the signal bit and the associated time stamp signal ΔtSx which can be encoded with a few bits, as in fact it only serves to resolve a half-period of the reference signal with the required level of accuracy.
These and other advantageous embodiments and developments of the process according to the invention are set forth in the appendant claims.
The invention will be described hereinafter by means of an embodiment.
For that purpose, consideration is given to a rotary pickup sender or sensor which measuringly traces the rotation of a shaft with a degree of resolution of 22 bits absolute and a further 26 bits per full revolution, wherein the shaft can reach a maximum speed of rotation of 12000 rpm and the maximum acceleration is ±1×105 s−2.
The measurement data produced are transmitted by the transmitter in digital form to the receiver on a twisted two-wire line, into which there is impressed from the receiver, as described in EP 0 716 404 A1, an ac voltage wave which at the same time also serves for the power supply at the transmitter end and whose frequency is tuned with quartz accuracy to the line length in such a way that there is a standing wave at least for a binary state which is to be impressed by current modulation. With a line length of 150 m, with a suitable relative dielectric constant, the frequency is for example 329.5 kHz, this affording an oscillation period of about 3 μs, within which 2 bits can be transmitted.
Transmission is effected in a procedure such that bits which represent an angle absolute value are interlaced with bits which represent correction values, change or alteration values, protocol data, angular acceleration values, elements of an identification mask and further items of information.
A suitable protocol can be for example of the following form:
k/k/a/a/a/a/a/p/m/r/ k/k/a/a/a/a/a/p/m/r/ k/k/a/a/a/a/a/p/m/r/ k/k/a/a/a/a/a/p/m/r/
wherein k denotes a correction value bit, a denotes an alteration or change value bit, p denotes an absolute value position bit, m denotes a mask bit and r denotes a reserve bit for further information. In this respect the blocks in actual fact are in directly adjoining relationship; the spaces are only inserted hereinbefore for the sake of clarity.
The reserve bits can be used for example in order to transmit permanently interlaced incremental values or in between times repeatedly angular acceleration values which can be formed by multiple difference formation from the position measurement values of the rotary sensor or which can be supplied by a specific acceleration sensor.
In comparison, the mask bits which can be provided in each block at any location which however is always the same after establishment thereof has been effected serve for identification of the beginning of the word.
Here the block k/k/a/a/a/a/a/p/m/r/ is of a length of 10 bits and can be transmitted by means of 5 periods of the frequency of 329.5 kHz, that is to say in about 15 μs. The starting time of the transmission of each such block is referred to hereinafter as the ‘transmission time’ Tx, for which a new measured value αTx is to occur on the part of the transmitter.
As each block contains only a single bit for the absolute value in respect of the angular position, 48 such blocks must be transmitted until the receiver has received a complete absolute value which however, when the last bit reaches the receiver, is already about 720 μs ‘old’, that is to say it can differ considerably from the instantaneous position value.
In order to be able to make available in a real-time mode measurement values which are updated at the receiver end and which differ as little as possible from the actual angular position, the procedure involved is therefore as follows:
It will be assumed that at least three values αTx−3, αTx−2 and αTx−1 measured at earlier transmission times Tx−3, Tx−2 and Tx−1 are already known both at the transmitter end and also at the receiver end. Then, at both ends, there is also an alteration or change value ΔαTx−1 which has been ascertained for the time Tx−1, so that both the transmitter and also the receiver can already predict at the time Tx−1 an exact value αTxb for the time Tx in accordance with the recursion formula:
αTxb=2 αTx−1−αTx−2+ΔαTx−1 (1)
It will be seen that an intermediate value 2 αTx−1−αTx−2 is formed from the values αTx−2 and αTx−1 by linear extrapolation to Tx, and summed with the alteration value ΔαTx−1 which was formed for the last transmission time Tx−1 and which can be positive or negative.
That alteration value ΔαTx−1 which like all other alteration values ΔαT at a predetermined maximum acceleration ε and a predetermined spacing in respect of time Δt cannot exceed the value εΔt2, had in turn been ascertained in accordance with an equation corresponding to formula (1), using the measured values αTx−3, αTx−2, αTx−1 for the times Tx−3, Tx−2, Tx−1;
ΔαTx−1=αTx−1−(2 αTx−2−αTx−3). (1a)
Until the occurrence of the time Tx at which and for which there is a new correct measured value αTx at the transmitter, the calculated exact value αTxb is used as a substitute for the future measured value αTx.
When then the time Tx occurs, then initially only the transmitter knows the new measured value, by means of which without a relevant time delay it calculates the new correction value δαTx in accordance with the equation:
δαTx=αTx−αTxb. (2)
As soon as that correction value including its sign is transmitted to the receiver by the first two bits k/k/ of the protocol block which is just beginning, that is to say in the present example after 3 μs, the receiver is therefore also in a position, without relevant time delay, to calculate the current, updated, exact measured value αTx and the alteration value ΔαTx, in accordance with the following equations:
αTx=αTxb+δαTx (2a)
and
ΔαTx=ΔαTx−1+δαTx. (3)
It should be expressly pointed out that this is already possible after 3 μs, that is to say still before the current alteration value ΔαTx which is also ascertained by the transmitter is transmitted to the receiver. Theoretically therefore ΔαTx would no longer have to be transmitted at all. For security reasons however transmission thereof is preferably implemented in each protocol block in order to be able to detect any transmission errors which may occur and possibly correct them.
It can be shown that each correction value δαT, due to rounding errors, can only occur in each case in the range of between 0 and −3 increments (in the case of the present example which with an acceleration gradient of 108/s3 is based on maximum conditions, in actual fact however it can also alter within <32 μs at best by 1 increment); therefore its representation including sign is always possible with only two bits and a transmission within 3 μs. As this third time derivation of the angular position which is to be measuringly tracked scarcely alters in that time even at maximum angular speed and/or acceleration, the updated values calculated by the receiver for the period from Tx to Tx+1 reproduce the respective actual measurement value in real time with an accuracy of ±1 increment.
In another process in accordance with the invention the condition that the times being considered, at which a respective new measured value occurs at the transmitter, must involve identical spacings, can be omitted. That however requires the position of those times to be accurately determined on an absolute time scale and characterised by a time stamp signal which must then be transmitted from the transmitter to the receiver. A specific operating procedure which makes it possible to transmit such a highly accurate time stamp signal at a comparatively low frequency will be described in greater detail hereinafter.
Admittedly, the time spacings between the times being considered no longer have to be of equal lengths, but the above-specified prerequisites nonetheless still apply, that the transmitter and the receiver execute their calculations on the basis of the same laws and that each of the time spacings which are now variable is so small that therein the respective contribution which is afforded by the third time derivative of the physical parameter to be monitored to the instantaneous value is no greater than the desired level of measurement accuracy or resolution.
Then, instead of the above-listed equations (1) to (3), somewhat different relationships apply:
It will be assumed that the system begins at a time T0 with a measured value αTo=0. The following then applies, for a new measured value αT1 which occurs at a time T1:
wherein Δt01 is the time difference between the two times T0 and T1. In accordance with the equations:
and
ω1=ε01Δt01 (4b)
the transmitter then calculates the mean acceleration ε01 which occurred in the period Δt01, and the speed {overscore (ω)}1 which prevails at the time T1, and sends firstly values αT1 and a time stamp signal (see below) characterising the time T1 to the receiver which can calculate therefrom on the one hand Δt01, and on the other hand, in accordance with foregoing equations (4a) and (4b), the mean acceleration ε01 and the speed {overscore (ω)}1.
When then at a time T2 the transmitter has a new measured value αT2, it does not send that value but only the time stamp signal which characterises the time T2 and which enables the receiver to calculate the time spacing Δt12 between the times T2 and T1.
On the basis of those values, both the transmitter and also the receiver can then calculate an exact value αT2b for the time T2 which has only just occurred, in accordance with the following equation:
It should be expressly emphasised once again at this point that all calculations which are to be executed in accordance with the invention can be implemented in such a short time that this computing time is negligibly small in comparison with the transmission times.
As the transmitter already has the new measured value αT2, it can calculate from the difference Δt12 between the times T1 and T2 and the measured value αT2 which was obtained at the time T2, the speed {overscore (ω)}2 prevailing at that time, the mean acceleration ε12 prevailing in the period Δt12, and the first correction value
δαT2=αT2−αT2b (6)
and transmit same to the receiver which, by means of that correction value δαT2, can calculate the measured value αT2 from the exact value αT2b previously used for the time T2.
The transmitter and the receiver now have all parameters in order to calculate from the equation for the actual measured value:
the mean acceleration ε12 prevailing in the period between T1 and T2.
For a time T3 which occurs later and in which the transmitter entails a new measured value αT3, the transmitter initially again transmits the associated time stamp signal so that both ends can calculate the time difference Δt23.
From the time difference Δt12 and the speed {overscore (ω)}1 prevailing at the time T1, and the mean acceleration ε12 ascertained in accordance with equation (7), the receiver, in accordance with the following equation:
ω2=ω1+ε12Δt12 (8)
calculates the speed {overscore (ω)}2 prevailing at the time T2, so that now, with the exception of the most recent measured value αT3 and the associated correction value δαT3, it now has the same information as the transmitter and it can calculate a new calculated exact value αT3b for the time T3, in accordance with an equation corresponding to equation (5).
If an inquiry for a measurement value which for example is associated with any time T2x between the times T2 and T3 comes to the receiver from a user, then by means of the data already available to the receiver, for that intermediate time T2x, the receiver can calculate an exact value in accordance with the following equation:
wherein Δt22x is the spacing in respect of time between the moments in time T2and T2x.
This calculated exact time αT2b also corresponds to the value, which is actually present at the time T2x in question, of the physical parameter to be monitored, with a high level of accuracy.
For further times T4, T5, T6 and so forth, the procedure just described above can be continued in a corresponding fashion.
It is important that the transmissions of the time stamp signal and the alteration value can be effected in a substantially shorter time than would be required for transmission of the complete measurement value. In actual fact, the transmission time required in accordance with the invention is so short that even in this alternative configuration, the receiver can follow the actual variation in the physical parameter to be monitored, by a predictive procedure, in real time.
In that respect a point of essential significance is that the time stamp signal represents the respective moment in time in a form which is compressed in such a fashion that transmission is possible within a very short time.
In order to achieve this, a preferred alternative configuration of the process according to the invention provides that a periodic quartz-accurate reference signal serving as a time standard is available both for the transmitter and also the receiver, that reference signal preferably being sent from the receiver to the transmitter. At both ends, the periods or half-periods of that reference signal are counted starting from a zero point signal which the receiver sends to the transmitter in the same manner as is described hereinafter for time signal communication from the transmitter to the receiver.
If the transmitter involves a fresh measured value at a time Tn, then firstly it sends the receiver a signal bit whose leading flank or edge serves as a time marker. In addition the transmitter measures the time spacing ΔtnS of that time marker in relation to an agreed significant point, for example the next zero-passage of the reference signal, and transmits it as a time stamp signal in encoded form to the receiver.
When the receiver receives the time marker, it also measures its time spacing ΔtnE in relation to the next significant point, for example the next zero-passage of the reference signal. In that case, the two zero-passages referred to will generally not be identical, by virtue of the signal transit time on the transmission path.
On condition that the signal transit time on the transition path fluctuates by not more than ±¼ of the period length of the reference signal, the receiver can ascertain from the transmitted time stamp signal ΔtnS, the time spacing ΔtnE measured by the receiver itself and the signal transit time which is known apart from instantaneous fluctuations, to which zero-passage the time stamp signal ΔtnS of the transmitter relates. As that time stamp signal ΔtnS serves only for time resolution of a period length of the reference signal, it can be encoded with a few bits and transmitted in a very short time.
Here too the principle according to the invention is again applied, that both on the part of the transmitter and also the receiver, on the basis of the same mathematical and physical laws, calculations are carried out which make it possible on the part of the receiver to obtain information with a maximum degree of accuracy although only a minimum amount of information was transmitted by the transmitter.
In contrast to the first of the two processes set forth, in which a 2-wire line is sufficient for transmission between the transmitter and the receiver, the last-described process preferably uses a 3-wire line. Here one line serves as system ground. The second transmits the supply voltage and the reference signal (for example 10 MHz). The third is used for bi-directional data transmission.
That system then admittedly has one line more, but in return it affords the option of sending large amounts of data in both directions, this being almost simultaneously because of the extremely short time-sharing procedure. That means that only about 10 μs are required for the transmission of data from the transmitter to the receiver, which at latest must be effected every 32 μs. The remaining time can be used for the transmission of a similarly large amount of data in the opposite direction.
That affords the advantage that a large amount of data can also be transmitted at high frequency from the receiver to the transmitter, in which respect it is possible to use an ASSI-interface (asynchronous-synchronous-serial interface).
It will be noted from the foregoing description that the described processes can be used not only for rotary or angle sensors but also for linear sensors and quite generally sensor devices which measuringly detect and track other physical parameters.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
199 32 177 | Jul 1999 | DE | national |
199 33 491 | Jul 1999 | DE | national |
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/612,270 filed Jul. 7, 2000 now abandoned; the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3114900 | Anderson | Dec 1963 | A |
3686631 | Elliot | Aug 1972 | A |
3851302 | Schmitt | Nov 1974 | A |
4112264 | Abramson et al. | Sep 1978 | A |
4337457 | Tache | Jun 1982 | A |
4530088 | Hamstra et al. | Jul 1985 | A |
4759038 | Takahashi et al. | Jul 1988 | A |
4797902 | Nishiguchi et al. | Jan 1989 | A |
5384811 | Dickopp et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5402440 | Marbot | Mar 1995 | A |
5465270 | Beauducel et al. | Nov 1995 | A |
5550847 | Zhu | Aug 1996 | A |
5691714 | Mehnert et al. | Nov 1997 | A |
5726638 | Kobayashi | Mar 1998 | A |
5991842 | Takayama | Nov 1999 | A |
6138196 | Takayama et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6167079 | Kinnunen et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6256592 | Roberts et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6272446 | Baekke et al. | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6275782 | Mann | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6353868 | Takayama et al. | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6476615 | Marbot et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6690733 | Baumgartner et al. | Feb 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
716 404 | Nov 1995 | EP |
WO 96 11 457 | Apr 1996 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030204355 A1 | Oct 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09612270 | Jul 2000 | US |
Child | 10329755 | US |