The present invention relates to a vibration sensor comprising a reference mass, a resilient element supporting the reference mass, and a base supporting the resilient element, and further comprising a displacement sensor for determining the distance between the reference mass and the base.
The present invention also relates to an active vibration isolation system to isolate vibrations by using a vibration sensor.
The mechanical design of vibration sensors like seismometers, and the principle of active vibration control is well described in literature, see e.g. P. G. Nelson, “An active vibration isolation system for inertial reference and precision measurement”, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 62 (9), September 1991, pp. 2069-2075. Basically a seismometer, geophone or other type of vibration sensor comprises an reference mass (often called inertial mass) supported by a base, frame or housing. The reference mass is attached to the base by a resilient element, preferably a spring with a low stiffness. With such vibrations sensors it is not possible to measure vibrations below the resonance frequency. This resonance frequency that is determined by the stiffness and the damping factor of the spring and by the mass, is in practice not lower than 1 Hz. As a consequence it is not possible to measure vibrations with a frequency well below this value. In addition to the mass and the spring, the vibration sensor comprises a displacement sensor for measuring the relative displacement of the vibrating base and the reference mass. It is a challenge for designers of vibration sensors to meet the demands concerning accuracy, sensibility and compactness.
Basically all active vibration isolation system comprise a vibration sensor and an actuator to move the payload that has to be isolated from vibrations. The displacement sensor can be placed on the payload or on the source of the disturbing vibrations, usually the floor. The output signal of the sensor is used to adjust the position of the payload with respect to the floor. The state of the art can found in US 2007/0223314 A1 that discloses a geophone with mass position sensing. A disadvantage of this known geophone and other vibration sensors based on the same principle is that the lower limit of the frequencies that can be detected is limited by the mechanical properties of the spring and the mass. To obtain the lowest possible limit special attention is paid to the design of the spring supporting the reference mass. In particular the stiffness is chosen as low as possible.
WO2005/073592 A1 discloses a system for active vibration isolation that differs from the most common approach described above. In this known arrangement a reference mass that is much less than the mass of the payload is mounted on an actuator. The payload is mounted on this small mass by a spring. This known arrangement comprises two displacement sensors instead of one. The first displacement sensor measures the displacement between the payload and the base on which the actuator is placed. The second sensor measures the distance between the small mass and the payload. A controller receiving the output signals of both displacement sensors controls the movement of the actuator. The function of the displacement sensors is to isolate the payload from earth vibrations. This known arrangement does not contain a vibration detection part that can be used separately from the complete system. In addition, this system is sensitive to vibrations originating from the payload itself, i.e. equipment containing moving parts or persons handling the equipment.
It is the objective of the present invention to provide a vibration sensor that measures the vibrations of the base on which the sensor is mounted accurately, also at low frequencies. Such a vibration sensor can be used in for example a seismometer or geophone to measure seismic activity or other earth vibration, or to measure vibrations in civil structures like buildings and bridges. The vibration sensor is also suited for measuring variations in the earth gravity.
It is another objective of the present invention to provide an active vibration isolation system by using a vibration sensor. Such systems are used in, among others, optical tables, equipment for lithography, atomic force microscopy and scanning tunnelling microscopy. In addition the vibration sensor is suited for vibration isolation in for instance vehicles and cameras.
The first objective of the invention is obtained by a vibration sensor according to the invention characterised in that the vibration sensor further comprises an actuator that is situated between the resilient element and the base, a second displacement sensor, and a controller for providing an output signal to the actuator. In this vibration sensor the controller reduces the stiffness of the system (comprising mass, spring, and actuator) considerably. This reduction of the stiffness allows detection of vibrations with lower frequencies than without such a controlled actuator. Many types of displacement sensors can be used, although it is preferred to use sensors that measure an absolute length or distance. However, also velocity or accelerations sensors satisfy. In principle it is also possible to place a force actuator between the base and the mass, viz. in parallel with the spring, to reduce the stiffness. However, the stiffness can be reduced in a better and more accurate way by placing a position actuator in series between the base and the spring. It is an advantage of the vibration sensor according to the invention that it can be constructed in a compact way; the mass needs not to be large to obtain a low resonance frequency. Actually, the vibration sensor of the invention can be realised in a compact construction.
The second objective is obtained by using the vibration sensor according to the invention in an active vibration isolation system. The reference mass of the vibration sensor used in active vibration systems is small in comparison to the mass of the platform that has to be isolated, typically a reference mass is 0.1 kg. To obtain a resonance frequency of 0.1 Hz, the stiffness of a mechanical spring needs to be 0.003 N/m. For such a low stiffness, gravity force would result in an elongation of the spring of more than 200 meters. Special type of springs (such as constant force springs) may be used to achieve a lower stiffness without significant elongation. However, resonance frequencies well below the 1 Hz that are compact as well are difficult to achieve using mechanical springs. It is well known that for the feedback of the signal supplied by the displacement sensor to the actuator, common PID control can be used. Noise, parasitic effects and actuator nonlinearities, however, prevent effective vibration isolation below 0.5 Hz in practice. The best performance claimed until now seems to be a resonance frequency of 0.2 Hz in a system where the actuator and the sensor are located substantially close to each other. Using the vibration sensor according to the invention allows a good vibration isolation below this value with a relatively simple construction.
The actuator is placed on or fixed to the base. This actuator can be a piezo-electric actuator e.g. of a piezoceramic type, a magnetostrictive motor, a Lorentz motor or any type of position actuator or motor. The distance (d1) between the position zs of the reference mass and the position zp of the actuator in the direction of the elongation axis, viz. the length of the spring is measured by a second displacement sensor (15). It is understood that the distance d1 can also be derived from the distance d2 and the length of the actuator d2−d1. Preferably, displacement sensors are used that measure an absolute distance or relative position, viz. zb−zs and zs−zp. Examples of such sensors are an interferometer, a capacitor and an eddy-current type of sensor. However, it is also possible to use one or more velocity sensors or acceleration sensors. When velocity or acceleration sensors are used, the distances can be obtained by single or double integration of the output signal, respectively. The output signal of the second displacement sensor is sent to a controller (16). The controller might consist of a low pass filter, a lead filter, a lag filter and an amplifier in series. However, also other controllers as known to those skilled in the art can be used. The controller sends the appropriate signal to the position actuator allowing the actuator to expand or contract. Preferably the actuator is a piezo-electric actuator, but it is also possible the apply another type of motor like for example a linear servo or an electrostrictive actuator.
The controller can be designed by (robust) model based control methods, such as e.g. LQG, H2, H∞, mixed H2/H∞, control or mu-synthesis or by pole-placement, However, standard loop-shaping techniques based on root-locus or bode plots suffice. Following the standard loop-shaping design philosophy, the controller might consist of a low pass filter D3, a lead filter D2, a lag filter D1 and an amplifier K in series. The function of the low-pass filter is to limit the bandwidth of the system and to prevent spill-over due to high frequent spurious resonances. The function of the lead filter is to increase the phase at the high frequency cross-over frequency which will increase the robustness as well as reduces the overshoot of the controlled system. Similarly, the function of the lag filter is to reduce the phase at the low frequency cross-over frequency, which also will increase the robustness and reduce the overshoot of the controlled system.
The principle of operation is discussed below in more detail to elucidate the way in which the stiffness is reduced by the vibration sensor according to the invention.
The equation of motion of the mass m is given by
ms
2
z
s
=k(zp−zs+zo)−mg (1)
where k the stiffness of the spring and zo=mg/k the steady-state position of the mass. The elongation of the piezo-actuator is given by
where d31 the strain coefficient [m/V], l the length [m], d the thickness [m], and V the voltage supplied over the piezo-actuator. The voltage V is controlled by feedback of zs−zp, measured by a displacement sensor:
V=−C(zp−zs) (3)
where C is the controller gain. Substituting equation (3) in (2) and adding zb−zs on both sides yields
From this expression, it can be observed that the higher the controller gain C is, the smaller the elongation of the spring, viz, the distance zp−zs. Filling in (3) and (4) into equation (2) yields the elongation zp−zb of the piezo-actuator in terms of zb−zs
Hence, for C→∞, it follows that for the elongation it holds that zp−zb=zb, i.e., the piezo-actuator perfectly compensates for the variation in the base position zb.
To obtain the equation of motion of the mass m in terms of the base position zb, equation (4) is filled in equation (1), which yields
Hence, it is observed that the stiffness is scaled down by the factor 1+d31l/dC.
It is an advantage of the vibration sensor according to the invention that the sensitivity of the sensor with regard to nonlinear behavior and variations due to for instance aging in the spring and damper is suppressed viz. scaled down by the controller.
For a vibration sensor with a reference mass of 0.5 kg and a spring with a spring constant k equal to 0.02N/mm (e.g. E0240-018-2750-M from SPEC Stock Precision Engineering Components, Associated Spring Raymond, Catalogue 2007, http://www.asraymond.com/spec/download.asp, page 69), the resonance frequency is 1 Hz.
Then, the elongation of the spring will be mg/k=g/40=0.25 m, neglecting the pre-tension of the spring. To reduce the resonance frequency by a factor √{square root over (1000)}, the stiffness has to be reduced by a factor 1000. Hence, following from (6), it should hold that d31l/dC≈1000. The piezo-ceramic actuator P-249.20 from Physik Instrumente (Miniature Open-Loop Piezo Actuators (HVPZT), http://www.physikinstrumente.com/en/products/prdetail.php?sortnr=100300) has an elongation of 10 μm at 1000V, such that d31l/d=10. 10−9m/V. Hence, changes of 1V in the actuator voltage results in changes in the elongation of 10 nm. Hence, the controller gain need to be 1000/10·10−9=1011V/m. Hence, for every nm RMS variation in the distance zp−zs the actuator voltage will have an RMS value of 100V. The resolution of the steering electronics for this piezo-actuator that is supplied by PI is 0.1 nm (in fact the piezo has an infinite resolution). The first resonance frequency of the piezo is at 18 kHz, which is sufficiently high for the purpose of the vibration sensor.
The bandwidth of the controller needs to be limited to prevent excitation of high frequency parasitic resonances and saturation of the amplifier, without reducing the gain around 1 Hz. This is accomplished by means of a second order low-pass filter with cut-off frequency at about 2 Hz. Since the cross-over frequency, the highest frequency at which the magnitude of the loop-gain is 1, is at 240 Hz, the resulting bandwidth of the closed loop system is less than 2×240=480 Hz, and actually the bandwidth is 513 Hz. Using a lag-filter at 17 mHz with phase lag of 60 degree, i.e.,
and a lead-filter at 240 Hz with phase lead of 60 degrees, i.e.,
the phase margins are increased such that the robustness and damping are improved. In
The vibration sensor according to the invention and the use of this sensor in an active vibration isolation system has the advantage over other sensors and systems that the reference mass can be completely isolated from external disturbances, including acoustic vibrations. In addition, the sensor is as compliant as the internal noise sources and bandwidth of the controller allow. By measuring the relative position of the mass, instead of the absolute acceleration, vibrations of 1 μm at 1 Hz could be measured with an accuracy of 1 nm.
It is noted that any terms used in this document should not be construed so as to limit the scope of the present invention. In particular, the words “comprise(s)” and “comprising” are not meant to exclude any elements not specifically stated. Single (circuit) elements may be substituted with multiple (circuit) elements or with their equivalents.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments illustrated above and that many modifications and additions may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appending claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08156276.1 | May 2008 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL09/50256 | 5/14/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/8/2011 |