This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-166251, filed Jul. 23, 2010, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a transducer such as a piezoelectric element, and an ultrasonic motor including the transducer.
2. Description of the Related Art
Recently, attention has been paid to an ultrasonic motor using the vibration of a transducer such as a piezoelectric element as a new motor replacing an electromagnetic type motor. This ultrasonic motor is superior to a conventional electromagnetic type motor in low-speed high thrust without gears, high holding force, high resolution, low noise, no magnetic noise, and the like. More specifically, there is known an ultrasonic motor which excites elliptic vibration in a transducer by applying a predetermined alternating voltage to it, and frictionally drives a driven member by using the elliptic vibration as a driving source.
As a technique associated with such an ultrasonic motor, for example, the following technique is disclosed in Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 5-146171. That is, Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 5-146171 discloses an ultrasonic transducer formed by joining a first multilayer member (to be referred to as a bending vibration multilayer member hereinafter), formed by alternately stacking first and second stacked members, in series with a second multilayer member (to be referred to as a stretching vibration multilayer member hereinafter), formed by stacking a plurality of piezoelectric elements each having inner electrodes on its two surfaces, in the stacking direction.
In this case, the first stacked member is a member formed by stacking two piezoelectric elements, obtained by dividing an internal electrode on one of two surfaces on which internal electrodes are formed into two parts, so as to make the divided surfaces of the internal electrodes face each other. The second stacked member is a member formed by stacking two piezoelectric elements, obtained by dividing an internal electrode on one of two surfaces on which internal electrodes are formed into two parts in a direction perpendicular to the above dividing direction, so as to make the divided surfaces of the internal electrodes face each other. External electrodes for electrically connecting the internal electrodes are formed on the outer surface of the ultrasonic transducer.
The ultrasonic transducer disclosed in Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 5-146171 has the above structure, and outputs elliptic vibration by combining the vibration of the bending vibration multilayer member with the vibration of the stretching vibration multilayer member.
Installation spaces for ultrasonic motors vary in shape and size depending on the applications of products in which the ultrasonic motors are to be mounted. More specifically, the installation space of an ultrasonic motor may be a small flat space. As described above, various restrictions are imposed on installation spaces for ultrasonic motors, and hence the ultrasonic motors need to be reduced in size to increase their versatility.
Note that the ultrasonic transducer disclosed in Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 5-146171 has a certain thickness in the stacking direction, and hence some limitations are imposed on products (applications) in which the transducer is to be mounted.
The present invention has been made in consideration of the above situations, and has as its object to provide a transducer and an ultrasonic motor which has a shape and size that impose light restrictions on installation spaces.
To achieve the above object, according to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a transducer comprising:
a first transducer member including a piezoelectric element in which longitudinal vibration and bending vibration are excited by application of a predetermined alternating signal;
a second transducer member which is placed to make a predetermined angle with the first transducer member and in which longitudinal vibration and bending vibration are excited by application of a predetermined alternating signal; and
a coupling member configured to hold one end of the first transducer member in a longitudinal direction and one end of the second transducer member in a longitudinal direction.
The prevent invention can provide a transducer and an ultrasonic motor which has a shape and size that impose light restrictions on installation spaces.
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 advantages of the invention may be realized and obtained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out hereinafter.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
An embodiment of the present invention will be described below with reference to the views of the accompanying drawing.
As shown in
The transducer 10 includes two piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b, a coupling member 14 to which one end of each of the two piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b in a longitudinal direction is coupled, and a friction member 16 which frictionally drives the driven member 30. Note that another part of each of the two piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b may be coupled to the coupling member 14, in stead of the one end in the longitudinal direction.
As shown in
More specifically, the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b of the transducer 10 are coupled to each other through the coupling member 14 such that a center axis C1 of the piezoelectric body 12a makes a right angle with (is perpendicular to) a center axis C2 of the piezoelectric body 12b. In this case, the center axes C1 and C2 of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b are axes each extending through the centers of the two end faces of each of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b in the longitudinal direction.
Note that if the center axes C1 and C2 of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b are not flush with each other, the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b are configured such that a projection of the center axis C1 of the piezoelectric body 12a on an x-y plane makes a right angle with (is perpendicular to) a projection of the center axis C2 of the piezoelectric body 12b on the x-y plane.
The arrangement in which the center axis C1 of the piezoelectric body 12a makes a right angle with (is perpendicular to) the center axis C2 of the piezoelectric body 12b at the coupling member 14 is a preferred arrangement from the viewpoint of easiness of driving control. However, this is not an essential arrangement. In other words, the center axis C1 may make an arbitrary angle with the center axis C2.
For the sake of descriptive convenience, this embodiment will exemplify an arrangement in which the center axis C1 of the piezoelectric body 12a makes a right angle with (is perpendicular to) the center axis C2 of the piezoelectric body 12b at the coupling member 14.
In the example shown in
Note that the piezoelectric bodies 12a1 and 12a2 have shapes obtained by dividing the piezoelectric body 12a into two equal parts in the center axis C1 direction (x-axis direction). Likewise, the piezoelectric bodies 12b1 and 12b2 have shapes obtained by dividing the piezoelectric body 12b into two equal parts in the center axis C2 direction (y-axis direction).
In the example shown in
Note that the piezoelectric bodies 12a1′ and 12a2′ have shapes obtained by dividing the piezoelectric body 12a into two equal parts in a direction (z-axis direction) perpendicular to an x-y plane. Likewise, the piezoelectric bodies 12b1′ and 12b2′ have shapes obtained by dividing the piezoelectric body 12b into two equal parts in a direction (z-axis direction) perpendicular to the x-y plane.
In the example shown in
In the example shown in
Note that the sizes of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b may be properly set so as to allow to excite elliptic vibration in the coupling member 14. In addition, the order of the vibration mode to be used for driving is decided, and the longitudinal effect or lateral effect of each piezoelectric body is selected to be used for driving. In accordance with the selection results, proper electrodes are provided on the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b, and signal lines for inputting driving signals are extracted from the electrodes. Note that the piezoelectric bodies 12a1, 12a2, 12b1, and 12b2 shown in
The coupling member 14 holds one end of each of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b and holds the above positional relationship between the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b.
The friction member 16 is a member provided on the coupling member 14 so as to come into contact with the driven member 30, and frictionally drives the driven member 30 by using the elliptic vibration excited in the transducer 10 as a driving source.
Note that the friction member 16 is not an essential constituent element, and the coupling member 14 may frictionally drive the driven member 30 by itself. Alternatively, the friction member 16 may be provided on an end face of one of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b.
The fixing members 50a and 50b are members each configured to fix one end of a corresponding one of the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b which is not coupled to the coupling member 14. This arrangement allows to use the elliptic vibration excited in the coupling member 14 for driving (to transfer the elliptic vibration to the driven member 30).
A method of driving the ultrasonic motor including the transducer according to this embodiment will be described below.
The piezoelectric bodies 12a1, 12a1′, 12a2, 12a2′, 12b1, 12b1′, 12b2, and 12b2′ each are provided with a vibration excitation unit (not shown, ditto for the following) for inputting an alternating signal as a driving signal. In this embodiment, the vibration excitation units of the respective piezoelectric bodies will be referred to as follows:
It is possible to excite elliptic vibration in the transducer 10 by applying alternating signals with the following phase differences to the vibration excitation units of the respective phases while using one of the A-phase, B-phase, C-phase, and D-phase vibration excitation units as a reference vibration excitation unit. The following shows driving method examples:
Using each <<Driving Method>> can drive the driven member 30, for example, in the following manner.
The direction indicated by an arrow d1 in
The direction indicated by an arrow d2 in
Note that the fixing members 50a and 50b are not necessarily essential constituent elements. If, for example, the fixing member 50b is not provided, it is possible to use, for driving, elliptic vibration excited in one end face of the piezoelectric body 12b which is not coupled to the coupling member 14.
As described above, this embodiment can provide a transducer which has a shape and size that impose light restrictions on installation spaces. More specifically, the transducer and ultrasonic motor according to this embodiment can obtain, for example, the following effects:
The embodiment described above can be variously modified. For example, it is possible to provide modifications like those shown in FIGS, 9, 10, 11, and 12.
The transducer 10 shown in
More specifically, the respective pairs of piezoelectric bodies (the piezoelectric bodies 12a and 12b, the piezoelectric bodies 12b and 12c, the piezoelectric bodies 12c and 12d, and the piezoelectric bodies 12d and 12a) are respectively coupled by the coupling members 14a, 14b, 14c, and 14d such that the center axes of the respective piezoelectric bodies make right angles with each other (perpendicular to each other). When viewed from above, the overall transducer 10 has a hollow square shape. The direction indicated by an arrow d4 in
Note that the shape of the driven member 30 is not limited to the planar shape shown in
In the example shown in
Note that the numbers of piezoelectric bodies and coupling members which constitute the transducer 10 are arbitrary. It is therefore possible to further increase the driving force by making the transducer 10 include eight piezoelectric bodies 12a, 12b, 12c, 12d, 12e, 12f, 12g, and 12h, as shown in
When forming ultrasonic motors using the transducers in the forms shown in
The above embodiments include inventions of various stages, and various inventions can be extracted by proper combinations of a plurality of disclosed constituent elements. When, for example, the problem described in “Description of the Related Art” can be solved and the effects described in “BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION” can be obtained even if several constituent elements are omitted from all the constituent elements in each embodiment, the arrangement from which these constituent elements are omitted can be extracted as an invention.
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details and representative embodiments 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.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-166251 | Jul 2010 | JP | national |