Publication | Closed Access
Time domain characterization of oscillating sensors: Application of frequency counting to resonance frequency determination
64
Citations
12
References
2002
Year
EngineeringOscillatorsMeasurementTime Domain CharacterizationEducationMagnetic SensorCharacteristic Resonance FrequencyNoiseTimefrequency AnalysisInstrumentationResonance FrequencyMechatronicsStructural Health MonitoringSignal ProcessingHigh-frequency MeasurementSensorsFrequency Counting TechniqueRandom VibrationSensor DesignNonlinear ResonanceVibration ControlFrequency DeterminationNonlinear Oscillation
A frequency counting technique is described for determining the resonance frequency of a transiently excited sensor; the technique is applicable to any sensor platform where the characteristic resonance frequency is the parameter of interest. The sensor is interrogated by a pulse-like excitation signal, and the resonance frequency of the sensor subsequently determined by counting the number of oscillations per time during sensor ring-down. A repetitive time domain interrogation technique is implemented to overcome the effects of sensor damping, such as that associated with mass loading, which reduces the duration of the sensor ring-down and hence the measurement resolution. The microcontroller based, transient frequency counting technique is detailed with application to the monitoring of magnetoelastic sensors [C. A. Grimes, D. Kouzoudis, and C. Mungle, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 71, 3822 (2000)], with a measurement resolution of 0.001% achieved in approximately 40 ms.
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