Publication | Closed Access
State switched transducers: A new approach to high-power, low-frequency, underwater projectors
55
Citations
11
References
1998
Year
EngineeringUnderwater Acoustic CommunicationUnderwater ProjectorsUnderwater SystemUnderwater AcousticMarine EngineeringRadio Frequency CommunicationsUnderwater TransducerOcean AcousticsInstrumentationUnderwater CommunicationLarge Volume DisplacementAcoustic MethodsElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingUltrasonicsAcoustic PropagationUltrasoundAcoustic TechnologyUnderwater VehicleTransducer PrincipleNew ApproachResonance StateOcean AcousticUnderwater TechnologyUnderwater SensingUnderwater Ranging
In order to produce high-amplitude, low-frequency signals, an underwater transducer must generate a relatively large volume displacement. Since water exerts a large reaction force back on the transducer, “conventional wisdom” dictates that such a transducer would have to be a high Q resonant device and thus not be broadband. However, a transducer does not have to be broadband in the conventional sense to meet the requirements of communication and sonar systems. A transducer that is capable of instantaneously switching between two discrete frequencies is adequate for communication and transmission of coded signals; one that is capable of switching among several frequencies could produce the chirp signals commonly used in active sonars. Ordinarily, a broadband transducer is needed to accomplish the frequency switching rapidly. A way around this difficulty is the “state-switched” source concept originally proposed by Walter Munk in 1980 which permits instantaneous frequency switching of a high Q resonant transducer while always maintaining the resonance state. The objective of this research has been to investigate this novel approach to the design of high-power, low-frequency, broadband transducers for use in long-range underwater communication, active sonar, and underwater research applications. This paper presents a practical realization of a “state-switched” source.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1