Title
Design and Performance of a Metal-Shielded Piezoelectric Sensor.
Abstract
In certain circumstances when acoustic measurements are required in the presence of explosive atmospheres the sensor must be placed inside a Faraday Cage. Piezoelectric active materials are suitable for this purpose as they do not need an electrical power supply, although the metal shielding can considerably reduce sensor sensitivity, which is already low at the acoustic frequency range (<20 kHz). This paper describes a metal-shielded piezoelectric sensor designed to work in the range of frequencies between 1 and 2 kHz and in these environmental conditions. The main idea was to add a thin material layer to the front face of the piezoelectric ceramic in order to force the system to vibrate in flexure mode at low frequencies. The resonant frequency and sensitivity of the system was studied as a function of the radius, thickness, and material of the thin layer. The study includes a comparison of theoretical model, FEM simulation, and real data measured using three aluminum and three steel prototypes of different sizes.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.3390/s17061284
SENSORS
Keywords
Field
DocType
acoustic sensor,piezoelectric ceramic,encapsulated transducer,piezoelectric FEM simulation,sensitivity,explosive atmospheres
Shielded cable,Piezoelectric accelerometer,PMUT,Electromagnetic shielding,Electronic engineering,Piezoelectric motor,Piezoelectric sensor,Engineering,Piezoelectric coefficient,Piezoelectricity
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
17
6.0
1424-8220
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
2
Authors
5