The present invention relates to a transducer and, in particular, a flexible, unitary electret film transducer for converting mechanical stress, such as mechanical vibrations, into electric signals, and to a method for its fabrication. The transducer is especially applicable for use for example in musical instruments, such as stringed musical instruments (guitars etc.), and other applications.
Transducers for example pickups for acoustic guitars designed to transform string vibrations into electric signals, have a transducer part typically containing different layers of electromechanical transducer elements, dielectric material and electrically conductive electrode layers, and a connection cable part in which the signals are taken to a signal processing unit. Transducers may typically have a one or more transducer element layers. Transducers are typically positioned between a vibrating member and fixed part, for example in acoustic guitar between saddle (vibrating member) and saddle slot (fixed part). Contact transducers are also commonly used for measuring vibration, for example amplifying musical instruments sound, being positioned onto a vibrating member, like for example guitar top, attached by using some sort of adhesive. Typically they consist a piezo ceramic disk or piezoelectric film such as polarized pvdf film.
As electromechanical transducer elements, piezoelectric crystals, piezoelectric film (e.g. polyvinylidene fluoride PVDF) and piezoelectric cable are prior art. In the commonest transducer structures, the connecting cable part is implemented using screened coaxial cable, which is connected to the electrode layers of the transducer part by soldering. Such a transducer is presented e.g. in U.S. Pat. No. 5,319,153. One drawback with this type of structures is the difficulty of fabrication of the transducer and relatively high manufacturing costs, because much of the work has to be done manually. Moreover, the prior art structures typically have separate transducer part and connection cable which means the connections to the preamplifier either have to be made by soldering or by using a mini-plug soldered to the cable. This causes handwork and higher costs.
One major drawback of prior art transducers using crystalline piezoelectric materials is their certain characteristic to produce more of odd harmonic overtones and resonance peaks. In case of acoustic guitar that results to unpleasant sound that is not quite in keeping with the instruments own acoustic sound. Further, the prior art transducers structures comprising many different materials and being relatively thick, the transducers themselves affect to instruments own acoustics sound and thus also to amplified sound.
A dielectric cellular or porous electret film and manufacturing process for same, applicable for use as electromechanical material for a transducer, such as stringed musical instrument transducer, is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,654,546, said dielectric film comprising permanently charged, biaxially oriented, foamed, usually homogenous film layer containing flat lens-like, shredded or cavitated gas bubbles which can also be called as voids or cells. The electret field, or the permanent electric charge, is achieved by injecting charges into dielectric material. The term “dielectric cellular electret film” is used here to refer to generally cellular type electromechanical films having a permanent electric charge injected into material.
WO-publication 96/06718 presents a procedure for pressure inflation of a pre-foamed plastic film, that makes it possible to manufacture strongly foamed film products, involving a high foaming degree and allowing the thickness of the product to be increased without increasing the amount of plastic material. The improvement in increased velocity of the gas voids from 30% up to 60 and even up to 70% of the thickness results up to 10 fold stronger electromechanical response. This means significantly better signal-to-noise ratio. The term “dielectric swelled cellular electret film” or “pressure inflated prefoamed cellular electret film” is used herein to refer to a foamed film-like plastic product as described in that WO-publication and which is permanently charged in strong electric field i.e. electric charge injected into material.
The object of the present invention is to eliminate the drawbacks of prior art and achieve an improved transducer of a completely new type, in which a dielectric swelled cellular electret film is used to transform the vibrations or other type mechanical stress into electric signals, instead of piezoelectric materials such as films or crystals. Flat lens-like gas bubbles in the electret film effectively limit the mobility of electret charges in the dielectric material, because the gases have an electric resistance five decades better than the best solid insulating materials have. Compared to hard structure of piezoelectric materials, they act as an elastic soft layer during the conversion of for example string vibrations into electric signals allowing pressure variations caused by vibrations to cause microscopic changes in its thickness. The change in thickness causes the opposite charges on the opposite sides of the voids to get closer or further which causes so called mirror charge over the electrodes arranged over the cellular electret film and thus an measurable electrical output voltage proportional to the force change.
Other object of the invention is to produce a new type of transducer which, due to its elastic charged cellular electret film, is capable of converting mechanical stress, such as string vibrations, into electric signals which, when processed or converted into sound, compared to prior art piezoelectric transducers, results to cleaner signal without resonance peaks based on transducer itself. Because of the elastic swelled cellular core, the young's modulus of the transducer is significantly lower and thus the impedance matching with for example wood is better than with hard piezoelectric materials. This results in cleaner signal which for example in case of acoustic instrument produces acoustic sound without any harshness or “quacking” as typically with piezoelectric materials or in case of analog to digital conversion, easier processor algorithms and more accurate reading.
Another object of the invention is to produce a transducer of a construction thin and flexible to conform both flat and curved surfaces depending on use and application.
Still another object of the invention is to produce a transducer having multiple areas each of them producing own electric signal.
A further object of the invention is to produce a transducer as simple as possible, having no separate transducer part and no separate conductor for connecting it to a signal processing device, but which has a unitary, flexible and laminated structure and connections for connecting it to a signal processing unit.
Also further object of the invention is to produce a new kind accelerometer type contact transducer.
The transducers of the innovation can be very economically fabricated for example by screen-printing the required electrodes with silver paste on sheets of dielectric film (e.g. polyester) and/or directly to electret film, placing several electrodes side by side on the same sheet. By laminating such sheets and dielectric cellular electret film, preferably swelled, on top of each other so that charged dielectric cellular electret film is only placed on a desired area at one end of the sheet while the other end is provided with a connector part with different electrode layers side by side, a laminate sheet is obtained from which the transducers can be cut out e.g. by punching. After that, it is only necessary to join a suitable connector to the electrodes at the connector end of the transducer by pressing mechanically.
With this method, it is possible to produce ultra thin and flexible transducers of desired length, design, shape and width, in which the electrodes in the transducer part are continuous extending from the transducer part to the connecting part and which are unitary, flexible and thin laminate in construction. Fabrication is faster and more economic than with conventional methods. The innovation thus allows an effective and economic production technique of transducers with charged cellular electret film as active material.
In one embodiment of the invention, no dielectric firm plastic layer, where the young's modulus value typically is significantly higher than with cellular electret film, to carry the conductive electrodes, would be needed in the transducer structure adjacent to instrument saddle. Thus the transducer becomes thinner and the acoustic properties become better because the firm plastic layers are not absorbing and dampening the vibration energy. Further, because of saved thickness exclusive firm plastic films, the amount of transducer elements can be increased, without adding too much thickness, and thus the output voltage and therefore the signal-to-noise ratio are further improved. Further, due possible increase in thickness of elastic soft dielectric cellular layers the structure becomes softer which, in case of acoustic guitar transducer, improves the string-to-string balance. Also in this embodiment the electrodes become more durable than screen-printed electrodes and the connectors in the preamplifier end can be easily connected to the transducer so that the there is no plastic layers in between and thus the electrical properties of connections become better and also more durable. Further, it is possible to simultaneously arrange the screening for the connection end and even soldering directly to the electrodes.
In the following, the invention is described in more detail by the aid of examples by referring to the attached drawings, in which
a–1d present exploded perspective views illustrating the different components that comprise the transducer of the four different embodiments of the invention,
e presents top view of the embodiment of the invention presented in
a present the signal electrodes and
a–3d present signal electrodes and ground electrodes printed on a sheet of dielectric film of two different embodiments of the invention, the two transducers having different electrodes at the connector end arranged side by side,
a–4b present top view of the cutter blades of a punching unit of the transducer of the embodiment illustrated in
a presents an exploded perspective view illustrating the different components that comprise the transducer of the invention without extra dielectric layers carrying the electrodes at the transducer area, with connectors in preamplifier end arranged side by side,
b presents an exploded perspective view illustrating the different components that comprise the transducer of the invention without extra dielectric layers carrying the electrodes at the transducer area adjacent to saddle, with sequentially arranged connecting areas in preamplifier end,
In the embodiment of
Between the sheets 107, 108 there is transducer element 118. This element 118 is composed of three, preferably swelled, dielectric cellular electret films 119, 120, 121 having flat gas bubbles 301 inside the film material 300 (
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
Reference is now made to
Referring now to
The transducers of invention in
Referring now to
Cellular electret films 119, 120 in the transducer area may each comprise of several film layers. Each film 119, 120 is permanently. Preferably positive charges are injected onto the underside of sheet 119 and onto the top side of sheet 120. Negative charges may be injected onto the top side of sheet 119 and onto the underside of sheet 120 but it is not essential. The films 127, 128 in the connection part are preferably uncharged operating thus as isolating film layers between the electrodes. It is also possible to extend the cellular electret films 119, 120 all the way to the connector part 114 but preferably use only partially charged film so that there are no charges in the connection part 115, to avoid the connection part become microphonic and pick-up disturbing vibrations. The ground electrodes 211, 212 can also be sputtered, evaporated, chemically metallized or screen printed to the outer sides of the cellular electret film 119, 120. It is also possible to arrange the signal electrode 209 directly on the face of cellular electret film 119 or 120 by for example chemical metallizing process or simply by screen-printing with silver paste. It is possible to use hybrid structure, with ground electrodes arranged on the surfaces of for example polyester film and signal electrode on the surface of the electret films 119, 120, for example increase the output voltage. It is also possible to use two, or even more, signal electrodes 209 by using three or more transducer elements 119–120 and in between each said element having one signal electrode 209 and at the outermost faces of the outermost transducer elements having the ground electrodes 211–212. Further, by using two signal electrodes, two ground electrodes and three transducer elements, and having the two signal electrodes in connection part arranged side-by-side, an differential transducer can be obtained. It is also possible to arrange the signal electrode in the transducer area to be for example round shape, or oval, or square, or multiple round areas in line, depending on the preferred embodiment.
The
To make an contact transducer according to invention, simply the transducer area is arranged to be for example round 15 mm diameter disk-like, or multiple round areas in line, or one larger rectangular area, and an weigh, for example 0.1 mm thick copper plate of same shape is glued over the transducer area, on the opposite side of the side which attaches to the vibrating surface. The weigh, which can even be only the transducers polyester layer carrying the electrode, works as mass against which the instrument vibrates and which further causes signal output proportional to the vibration. The less mass, the higher is the transducers own resonance frequency, which is preferred to be above the necessary frequency response.
The transducers in
Cellular electret film elements 119, 120 size large enough, consisting typically a laminate of 1–3 dielectric cellular electret films, preferably swelled, and metal films 231, 232, 233 are glued together so that first against metal film 232 with ground electrodes, transducer element 119 and insulating layer 127 are glued, and next, on the other side of the transducer element 119 and insulating layer 127, the metal film 231 with signal electrodes is glued, and next, to the other side of metal film 231, second transducer element 120 and second insulating layer 128 are glued, and next, on the other sides of the transducer element 120 and insulating substrate 128, metal film 233 with second ground layers is glued. In this way a laminate is obtained from which the transducers can be cut away by for example by die-cutting, laser cutting or water cutting. Further the connectors 124 are connected by pressing them to connector end 114.
This procedure allows a considerably larger number of thin and flexible transducers of desired length and width and having a continuous structure without joints than by conventional methods to be fabricated by the same amount of work while the manufacturing costs remain low. Further, referred to the
It is also possible to arrange the electrodes 209, 211, 212 directly onto the cellular electret films 119, 120 by using for example screen-printing, evaporating, sputtering or chemical metallizing.
It is obvious to the person skilled in the art that different embodiments of the invention are not restricted to the examples described above, but that they can be varied within the scope of the claims presented below. The number of films and layers on top of each other can be chosen in accordance with the need in each case; there can be multiple transducer areas and area can also have a shape other than rectangular in top view. These transducers can be used in various applications such as musical instruments transducers.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/851,493, filed May 8, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,689,948 which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/553,566, filed Apr. 21, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,242,683, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/155,828, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,078,006.
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4382328 | Janszen | May 1983 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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7-160265 | Mar 1993 | JP |
WO 9606718 | Mar 1996 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040159224 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09851493 | May 2001 | US |
Child | 10759909 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09553566 | Apr 2000 | US |
Child | 09851493 | US | |
Parent | 09155828 | Oct 1998 | US |
Child | 09553566 | US |