Claims
- 1. A roto-oscillator comprising:
a driver accepting at least one control input and producing an output; at least one coil producing a magnetic field, said coil connected to the output; a permanent magnet mounted rotatably with respect to said coil; spring linkage means for constraining an angular position of the permanent magnet with respect to the coil, such as to substantially optimize a vibratory torque generation in response to said output; a housing; and a coupling for transmitting said vibratory torque from the housing to skin whereby causing vibrotactile skin stimulation.
- 2. The roto-oscillator of claim 1wherein said coil comprises a stator coil of a single phase motor, when energized, producing a plurality of magnetic poles; and wherein said permanent magnet comprises a permanent magnet cylindrical shell fastened on a shaft, said shaft rotating in bearings fastened to a stator enclosure said permanent magnet interacting with said plurality of magnetic poles to produce a roto-oscillating torque.
- 3. The roto-oscillator of claim 2 wherein said housing comprises a bracket rotatably supporting the motor, thereby allowing an initial rotational adjustment of said spring linkage means.
- 4. The roto-oscillator of claim 3 wherein the housing further comprises a top and a bottom cover attached to said bracket.
- 5. The roto-oscillator of claim 4 wherein at least one of said top and bottom covers is made to support a resonance mode substantially at a desired vibrotactile frequency.
- 6. The roto-oscillator of claim 2 wherein said spring linkage means comprises a flat spring, one end of said spring disposed radially with respect to the shaft, a resonator comprising a plate having cutouts and a slot in the center, the other end of said flat spring protruding through said slot and said edges attached by elastic vanes to the housing.
- 7. The roto-oscillator of claim 1 wherein said coil is placed in an inside periphery of a magnetic circuit formed by casings of soft magnetic material, extending into upper magnetic extensions and lower magnetic extensions, and creating coil current induced magnetic field between the extensions.
- 8. The roto-oscillator of claim 1 wherein said permanent magnet comprises a permanent magnet annular disk magnetized in segments of opposite magnetic polarity, said disk supported on its periphery by springs in a manner that allows said disk to roto-oscillate with respect to the housing.
- 9. The roto-oscillator of claim 1 wherein said spring linkage means comprises a torsional spring coupling the permanent magnet and the housing.
- 10. The roto-oscillator of claim 1 wherein the coupling for transmitting said vibratory torque from the housing to the skin comprises a band pressing lightly on the top cover against the bottom cover resting against the skin thereby reactively transmitting a vibration of a vibrating mass through the bottom cover to the skin.
- 11. A method of producing a controlled vibrotactile stimulus, which comprises
applying at least one control signal to a driver; connecting the driver to a stator coil configuration producing a current—induced magnetic field; placing a permanent magnet in the current -induced magnetic field so as to produce roto-oscillation of the magnet; coupling the roto-oscillation of the magnet to a spring linkage that maintains a substantially optimal angle for torque generation, produces roto-oscillation at a desired frequency, limits amplitude of angular oscillation, and converts angular oscillation into vibration of a housing; and coupling the vibration of the housing to skin, whereby producing a controlled vibrotactile stimulus.
- 12. A method of producing a controlled vibrotactile stimulus as recited in claim 11 wherein the step of connecting the driver to the stator coil is accomplished through a sampling impedance, a value of said sampling impedance being a fraction of coil impedance.
- 13. The roto-oscillator as recited in claim 12 comprising further steps of
measuring voltage across said sampling impedance; measuring voltage across the coil; and processing and comparing the above said voltages to derive a signal proportional to angular velocity of roto-oscillation.
- 14. The roto-oscillator as recited in claim 13 comprising further steps of
comparing the angular velocity signal and an input signal representing a desired value of angular velocity to generate an error signal; and applying the error signal as a driver control signal.
- 15. The roto-oscillator as recited in claim 12 comprising further steps of
measuring voltage across said sampling impedance; and application of a signal derived from this voltage as a positive feedback signal to the driver in a manner causing a self-resonance of the roto-oscillator.
Government Interests
[0001] This invention was made with Government support under a grant awarded by the National Institutes of Health. The Government has certain rights in this invention.