This application claims priority and benefit from Swedish patent applications Nos. 0400362-0, filed Feb. 17, 2004, and 0400579-9, filed Mar. 8, 2004, the entire teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention is concerned with position transducers for sensing the position of a rotating part such as a motor shaft. The present application is related to art disclosed in pending U.S. patent application having the title “Actuator and movement linkage system”, filed Jan. 28, 2005 for the same applicant as the present application, in published International patent application No. WO 2004/034550 and U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,084,234 and 6,191,415 for the same applicant.
Many motor systems with very high reliability requirements require position transducers that have a very low probability for failure. In some cases such as the system shown in the cited U.S. patent application “Actuator and movement linkage system”, the same shaft may be run by more than one processor. Each of these processors is capable of controlling the same motor windings. In the case where a first processor fails, a stand-by processor may take the control. In order reduce the likelihood of failure of a common part, it is advantageous to have electrically separate angular transducer systems with a minimum of common parts.
Most motors have a protruding shaft in one end of the rotor and a bearing in the other, behind which position transducers having small diameters can be assembled. Some motor systems have a large shaft or a bore through the rotor that is occupied by cables, pipes for cooling fluid, transmission shafts that carry torque from an internal combustion engine on one side of the motor to a gears on the other side of the motor or, as shown in the cited International patent application No. WO 2004/034550, an actuator roller screw. Many position transducer principles that perform well for small diameters becomes less attractive when designed to permit a large diameter shaft.
Position transducers having high resolutions are often designed for limited humidity and have reduced or no performance if contaminated by products such as condensed water, oil, grease or particles from wear in friction brakes or gears.
Many position transducers have small air gaps which can be filled with condensed water that in vehicles and aircraft may freeze. Moving motors including transducers in which ice is formed in thin air gaps may cause the parts of the transducers to break or be distorted or be turned away from their calibrated position.
In the case where there is a need to know how many turns the rotor has moved, in most industrial motors space is available for mechanic devices of small diameters that can use cog wheel gears to record a limited number of turns. Industry standard devices can often record movements in within 2048 full turns. Such devices scale badly and may easily break if forced to move with frozen water in the mechanic parts.
It is an object of the invention to provide a position encoder system that permits at least two redundant encoder systems in a compact package.
It is another object of the invention is to provide an encoder system that can operate inside a hot motor enclosure.
It is another object of the invention is to provide a very compact multi-channel encoder system.
It is another object of the invention to provide a very compact encoder exhibiting a low sensitivity to contamination.
It is another object of the invention to provide a very compact encoder exhibiting a low sensitivity to humidity and to temperatures below the freezing point of water.
It is another object of the invention to provide a very compact encoder permitting that several turns are detected or recorded.
It is another object of the invention to provide a very compact encoder that operates without multiple tracks, thus permitting a single track having large dimensions.
It is another object of the invention is to provide a compact, low cost encoder system having a high resolution.
Thus, generally, a position encoder system for a rotary member such as the rotor of a motor is disclosed, the position encoder system having a rotating encoder disc and one or more flat, disc-shaped elements which interact with the encoder disc to produce position dependent signals. The encoder disc has an element or elements such as metal surfaces or metal areas configured so that signals derived from one of several portions of the encoder system are not transferred to another portion, thus permitting the encoder system to be split into several position transducers in the different portions. Hence the individual position transducers can operate independently of each other without having signals from one transducer affecting the signals from other transducers. The different portions can include adjacent angular sectors or parallel annular regions. Further, the components, in particular the encoder disc and disc-shaped elements which can be parallel boards, of the encoder system can be assembled with substantial air gaps therebetween, and they can be made from materials that are not easily destroyed by corrosion and contaminants like dust particles, water, oil or lubricant grease. The encoder system permits the recording or detecting of multiturn rotations without additional mechanic parts.
Generally, the encoder disc has a track including variations in the properties of the disc or of a material in or upon the disc, the variations appearing periodically in the circumferential direction of the disc with a definite period or pitch. The varying property of the encoder disk that forms the track detected by detector heads or electrodes of the position transducers can include various electrical and/or magnetic properties and the geometrical extension and shape of areas having electrical and/or magnetic properties. The variations can e.g. appear as a substantially sinusoidal variation, the property then e.g. being represented as a quantity or amount that varies periodically in the angular direction.
The property can be basically electrical, such as the radial extension or width of an annular electrically conducting area for allowing detection derived from e.g. the capacitive coupling between opposed electrodes. The track can include variations in the magnetic permeability of the encoder disc that are obtained from materials having different magnetic permeability at low frequencies. It can also include variations in the magnetic permeability of the encoder disc due to eddy current losses in electrically conducting materials of the code disc.
Additional objects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description which follows, and in part will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and obtained by means of the methods, processes, instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
While the novel features of the invention are set forth with particularly in the appended claims, a complete understanding of the invention, both as to organization and content, and of the above and other features thereof may be gained from and the invention will be better appreciated from a consideration of the following detailed description of non-limiting embodiments presented hereinbelow with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a–k are timing diagrams for signals in various parts of the position transducer device shown in
a is fragmentary view showing in an enlarged scale the region at the periphery of the encoder disc including electrode surfaces of the encoder of
b is fragmentary view showing in an enlarged scale the region at the periphery of the encoder disc including buried electrodes for the encoder of
The modulation disc 201, also called encoder disc, can be a metal screen disc, i.e. an electrically shielding disc, or be made from an electrically non-conducting material having a high dielectric constant.
The total charge injected in the code disc 201 is basically zero. For example, there is a high coupling between the transmitter electrode 101 (drive signal phase a′) and the code disc. There is however an equally good coupling between the code disc and the transmitter electrode 104 (drive signal phase a). As the drive signal phases a and a′ are 180° out of phase in relation to each other, the electrical charges injected from the two drive signal phases in the code disc balance each other.
a–5m show signals corresponding to the code disc position illustrated in
The sensors electrodes S1 and S2 provide sensor signals s1 and s2 and are connected to differential inputs of a first phase sensitive rectifier 403, that will create the difference between the signals on the sensor electrodes S1, S2, shown as “s1−s2”, see
The sensors S1 and S2 are also connected to differential inputs of a second phase sensitive rectifier 404, that will create the same difference between the signals s1 and s2, on the sensor electrodes S1, S2, again shown as “s1−s2”, see
After low pass filtering, not shown, to suppress the high frequency content, the output signals of the phase sensitive rectifiers 403, 404 will have two DC levels as long as the code disc is static. In the case where the encoder disc rotates with a constant speed, the signals may be two sine waves with 90° phase difference. The signal shape will depend on the geometry of the code disc and on the track thereof. The shapes shown in the figures give signals close to sinusoidal.
e and 5f may be considered to illustrate the electric charge injected in the sensor electrodes S1, S2. In the case where they are connected to a charge amplifier, their voltages will remain close to zero. It can also be noted that the sum of the two signals in
As the net charge from each transducer to the code disc is substantially zero, the corresponding four position transducers can have a common metal disc. The four position transducers can be galvanically completely insulated from each other or have a common ground but separate power supplies, oscillators, etc.
The primary signals used in the encoders have frequencies in the magnitude of order of 20 MHz. This is far higher than the expected frequency of the output signals. The transmitter set shown in
There is preferably one period of the code disc for every 4 transmitter electrodes. Therefore a set of 40 electrodes as shown in
The code disc shown has two electrically conducting areas 801 and 802. The code disc area 802 closest to the unintended electrodes in the connectors like 703 or an assembly screw in a hole 803 has a circular shape, i.e. the outer periphery or contour of the radially outermost electrically conducting area is circular, corresponding to a full circle, thus giving a capacitance between the code disc conductor 802 and the connector pins like 704 that is basically independent of the rotational position of the code disc.
The outermost electrically conducting part 802 does not have to be electrically connected to anything as the electrical charge injected to it cancels out. The same is true for the inner electrically conducting part 801.
The encoder disc 910 is schematically shown assembled on the shaft 901 by screws 911 and the static part is kept together by screws 909. There are many established ways to assemble transducer parts to motor rotors and frames. Screws have been shown in the embodiment to stress the importance of an angularly very rigid assembly in environments where ice or very cold oil may have entered into the air gaps in the encoder.
For applications in which the motor system may be affected by condensing water, the boards 904 and 905 can be supplied with heaters 912 to permit the temperature to be sufficiently higher than the dew point of the surrounding air, such heaters being of the electrical resistive type including one or more electrical resistors or resistive paths. Alternatively, the motor may be initially heated by electrical currents selected to give no net torque to the motor. Such heating can evaporate condensing water between the encoder disc 910 and the transmitter/sensor boards 904, 905. It can also evaporate ice in the motor air gap if required.
By some additional means the system can obtain information on the angular position within one whole turn. Such means can include an additional encoder track or some crude device such as an opto reflector 913 mounted on the processing board 906 to detect the screws 911 securing the encoder disc. If the number of protruding screws like 911 is equal to m and the periods on the code disc are n and n and m has no common factor, i.e. are relatively prime, the angular position can be determined as soon as a screw like 911 has been detected. For example, for a 10 period code disc, the number of protruding screws can be 1, 3, 7 or 9.
a is an enlargement of the disc part of
The distance between the sensor and processing boards 905, 906 should be large enough to reduce the capacitance between the sensor electrodes 1002 and the processor board 906. It can be filled with air or a compound with a preferably low thermal conductivity and low dielectric constant.
The transmitter, sensor and processor boards 904, 905, 906 are interconnected, for example by connectors like 703 of
b shows an alternative arrangement in which the electrode surfaces are made as internal layers in multilayer printed circuit boards. This provides protection against corrosion and against mechanical damage such as in the case where it has occurred that a sharp object has entered in the air gaps between the rotating encoder disc 910 and the stationary transmitter and sensor boards 904, 905. The surface electrodes 1001, 1003 and 1004 of
If the four encoders of
A faulty position transducer, also called detector device, should preferably have its supply voltage disabled because, in order to obtain the electrical charge balance described above, it is assumed that all drive signal phases a, a′, b and b′ have the right phase and amplitude. If an error has occurred, incorrect signals from one transducer may to some extent interfere with the signals of the remaining transducers.
These signals are read by a microprocessor or signal processor 1205. It is known in prior art, see e.g. the cited U.S. Pat. No. 6,084,234 for Stridsberg, that a processor like 1205 can follow the movements of the code disc during normal operation and in a low power mode can energize the detector devices 1201, 1202, 1204 with a low duty cycle using for example a battery or a super capacitor supported energy supply.
Batteries, super capacitors and other energy supplies that can be built into a motor system have a limited energy content and cannot easily supply the power necessary for a low power system for long periods of time.
Assuming that the motor rotor and the code disc cannot move if there is not a sufficient voltage over the coil 1210 to attract part 1207 against the force given by the springs, there is no need to have a low duty cycle control of the position of code disc when the voltage over the brake coil 1210 is below a certain value. The encoder and its processor 1205 will get power, on power lines 1211, 1212, if either the system power is supplying “encoder V+” or the brake coil voltage is up. In normal operation the brake coil is only energized after the system power has been switched on, and the brake coil current will be switched off before the system power is down. If a service technician would release the brake by connecting a separate supply to the brake, the encoder and processor part will be activated. The processor 1205 can monitor the brake voltage over a line 1213, wait until the brake has been locked and the movement stopped and can then store the position, including the whole number of turns moved, in a non-volatile memory 1214.
At system power up, the processor will find the previous position in memory 1214 and can verify this against the position measured using the parts 1201–1204. A high level control system, not shown, can use the data channel through a buffer 1223 to get the position data from the processor 1205, including the number of whole turns. The processor 1205 can perform other tasks, such as adjusting the signal amplitude by setting the gain of two multiplying DA-converters like 1215. They can be used to compensate for system gain variations due to temperature and/or to replace trim potentiometers, the setting being stored in the memory 1214 during a motor system final test. It can also read temperature and, if required, increase it using resistors, not shown in
The power supply system shown is only intended as an example, as many alternative solutions are obvious. The buffers and drivers to the higher order control system are fed by the supply voltage 1216, 1217, which is fed by the “encoder V+” supply only. The core system power 1211, 1212 is supplied by a stabilizer 1218 that is supplied either by the encoder V+ supply over the diode 1219 or from the brake +24 V over the diode 1220 and a resistor 1221, in order to avoid that the brake supply will be disturbed by the capacitor 1222. The diode 1224 is to eliminate the potential high voltage peak when the brake supply is switched off.
For systems in which the number of encoder periods is an integer fraction of the number of motor pole pairs, the encoder data can directly be used for commutation purposes.
The electronic multiturn arrangement shown in
By adding some means to obtain an angular position indicator for one turn, the system can use calibration data stored in the memory 1214 to use measured data on signal shape, wobbling etc. in the primary signals from detectors like 1204 to obtain a more linear relation between real angular movement and estimated position as described in the cited U.S. Pat. No. 6,191,415.
By having the electronic parts, i.e. oscillators and other heat sensitive parts, placed at a some distance from the electrodes, the transmitter and sensor electrodes can be located in a very hot area thermally close to the motor windings and the electronic circuits in a less hot part of the motor enclosure. The phase sensitive rectifier front stages that preferably should be assembled close to the sensor electrodes can be made of commonly available components that operate at temperatures close to 150° C.
A rotating encoder disc has metal areas 1306 such as copper surfaces in, or on, a printed circuit board disc. A changing magnetic field passing perpendicularly through a conducting surface will cause eddy currents that weaken the rate of change of the magnetic field. Therefore, for the encoder disc in the position shown in
The variations of the encoder permeability can be obtained by copper surfaces like 1306 of the type used on printed circuit boards causing eddy currents that reduce the effective permeability at high frequencies to be lower that of air. The code disc can also contain materials such as a ferrite with a permeability that is higher than that of air even at high frequencies. It can be observed that ferrites and iron sheet have both a high permeability at very low frequencies, but an iron sheet will at high frequencies also cause eddy currents. A combination is possible, having for example electrically conducting copper areas like 1306 with thin ferrite areas in the sectors between the metal sectors, but it is difficult to produce such a structure with the required robustness and cost.
As for the capacitive position transducers shown in
The different encoders shown use different sectors of the available board space and the whole radial width of the available board space. An obvious alternative is to let each encoder use a fraction of the radial width over a whole turn. This may be advantageous for a system including two independent encoders, but would give very small distances for a hex encoder system as shown in
The different encoders shown above use different sectors of the available board space and the whole radial width of the available board space. An obvious alternative is to let each encoder use a fraction of the radial width over a whole turn as shown in
For angular sector transducers that do not need any redundancy or for concentric redundant encoders the grounded electrodes G can be omitted. The transmitter electrodes being connected to the drive signals according to the connection sequence . . . g-a-b-a′-b′-a′-b′-a-b-g . . . is then replaced with . . . a-b-a′-b′-a′-b′-a-b . . . as shown in
While specific embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, it is realized that numerous additional advantages, modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative devices and illustrated examples shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents. It is therefore to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within a true spirit and scope of the invention.
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