Follow industrialanaly on Twitter

Total engineering and manufacturing

Comparison of Non-Contact Displacement Sensor Technologies

With any displacement measurement application, there is often a trade-off between the benefits and limitations of each measurement technology. Here, Micro-Epsilon compares four types of non-contact displacement measurement technology, advising on the pros and cons of each.
 
The use of non-contact displacement technologies in precision measurement is growing rapidly. Customers need to measure more accurately, to sub-micron or nanometre resolutions, and against difficult surfaces or materials that cannot be touched during measurements. These materials include silicon, glass, plastics, miniature electronic and medical components, as well as food-based surfaces.

 This growth has pushed the development of new technologies, including the adaptation of existing technologies to meet these new measurement requirements and to improve measurement accuracy and resolution. Non-contact displacement sensors come in a wide variety of shapes, sizes and measurement principles. In practice, as well as eddy current and laser triangulation sensors, capacitive and confocal sensors are now popular. So it is critical that engineers have a greater understanding of the strengths and limitations of each principle when selecting the most appropriate one for the application.
 
The Eddy Current Principle
The eddy current measurement principle is an inductive measuring method. A coil is supplied with an alternating current, which causes a magnetic field to form around the coil. If an electrically conducting object is placed in this magnetic field, eddy currents are induced, which form an electromagnetic field according to Faraday's Induction Law. The controller calculates the change in energy transferred from the sensor coil to the target material and converts this into a displacement measurement.
 
The advantages here are that this method can be used on all electrically conductive, ferromagnetic and non-ferromagnetic metals. The size of the sensor is relatively small compared to other technologies and the temperature range is high due to the resistance measurement of the sensor and cable. The technology is high accuracy and is immune to dirt, dust, humidity, oil, high pressures and dielectric materials in the measuring gap.
 
However, output and linearity depend on the electric and magnetic features of the target. Therefore, individual linearisation and calibration is required. Maximum cable length is 15m and the diameter of the sensor increases as the measuring range increases.
 
The Capacitive Principle
With the capacitive principle, sensor and target operate like an ideal parallel plate capacitor. The two plate electrodes are formed by the sensor and the opposing target. If an AC current with constant frequency flows through the sensor capacitor, the amplitude of the AC voltage on the sensor is proportional to the distance between the capacitor electrodes. An adjustable compensating voltage is simultaneously generated in the amplifier electronics. After demodulation of both AC voltages, the difference is amplified and output as an analogue signal.
 
Because the sensor is constructed like a guard ring capacitor, almost ideal linearity and resolution against metal targets is achieved. The technology also offers high temperature stability, as changes in the conductivity of the target have no effect on the measurement. Capacitive sensors can also measure insulators.
 
The technology is sensitive to changes in the dielectric sensor gap and so operates most effectively in clean, dry applications. Cable length is also relatively short due to the effect of cable capacitance on the oscillating circuit tuning.
 
The Laser Triangulation Principle
In this principle, a laser diode projects a visible point of light onto the surface of the object being measured. The back-scattered light reflected from this point is then projected onto a CCD array by a high quality optical lens system. If the target changes position with respect to the sensor, the movement of the reflected light is projected on the CCD array and analysed to output the exact position of the target. The measurements are processed digitally in the integral controller and then converted into a scaled output via analogue (I/U) and digital interface RS232, RS422 or USB.
 
Benefits of laser triangulation sensors include a small beam spot, very long measuring ranges are possible, the sensor operates independent of the target material, and a high reference distance between sensor and target.
 
The method is limited by a relatively large sensor design and a relatively clean optical path is required for the sensor to operate reliably. In addition, for direct reflecting targets, specific sensor alignment/calibration is required. 
 
The Confocal Principle
The technology works by focusing polychromatic white light onto the target surface using a multi-lens optical system. The lenses are arranged in such a way that the white light is dispersed into a monochromatic light by controlled chromatic deviation. A certain deviation is assigned to each wavelength by a factory calibration. Only the wavelength that is exactly focussed on the target surface or material is used for the measurement.
 
Both diffuse and specular surfaces can be measured. With transparent materials such as glass, a one-sided thickness measurement can be achieved along with the distance measurement. Also, because the emitter and receiver are arranged in one axis, shadowing is avoided.
 
Confocal offers nanometre resolution and operates almost independently of the target material. A very small, constant spot size is achieved. Miniature radial and axial confocal versions are available for measuring drilled or bored holes.
 
Restrictions of the technology include the limited distance between the sensor and target. In addition, the beam requires a clean environment.
 
Key Selection Criteria
1)
Define clearly what it is that you need to measure and why? 2) What type of environment will the sensor need to operate in (harsh, vacuum, high pressure, dusty, etc.)? 3) Are there space restrictions? 4) Custom versus standard off-the-shelf sensors? 5) Compromising on resolution and accuracy may save you time and money, but will the sensor perform well enough in the application? 6) When considering standard versus custom sensors, improved sensor accuracy often comes from re-calibration, intelligent integrated sensor software, improving the mechanical mounting or by manufacturing the sensor from better components or materials.

For further information, www.micro-epsilon.co.uk or email: chris.jones@micro-epsilon.co.uk 
Refer to page 29

SKF's latest alignment tools offer quick and simple operation

SKF, the knowledge engineering company, has enhanced its range of shaft alignment tools with the introduction of two new models that use the latest laser technology to achieve pin-point accuracy. Designed for quick and easy use, the new TKSA 60 and TKSA 80 offer a built-in step-by-step alignment process that can help significantly cut machinery breakdowns, ultimately leading to improved rotating machine reliability and performance, as well as increased productivity and profitability.

Correct alignment of shafts in both horizontal and vertical plane is vitally important in rotating machinery components, such as bearings and shafts. The new TKSA 60 and TKSA 80 provide precision alignment that effectively eliminates machine vibration and noise, therefore reducing the stress placed on couplings, bearings and seals. The smooth running of rotating machinery used in many applications, including coupled shafts, pumps, motors, mixers, gearboxes and compressors, will considerably reduce energy consumption and increase life span, ensuring a quick return on investment for this instrument.
By comparison with traditional methods of shaft alignment, the new compact TKSA devices now offer technicians a fail-safe method through a series of built-in, pre-defined steps necessary to perform the alignment process in the most effective and efficient sequence. This procedure takes into account the preparation, inspection, evaluation, correction, reporting and, finally, the analysing aspects to produce satisfactory alignment in the shortest possible time.

Both the TKSA 60 and TKSA 80 incorporate clear and easy to understand function symbols and use built-in wireless technology that can reference information to store machine alignment setup data, saving valuable time in subsequent use. Both devices feature swap view graphics that correspond with the user's position from either side of the machine and display real time configuration values, allowing the results of alignment corrections to be seen as they are being performed. The instruments record horizontal and vertical alignment, as well as an energy efficiency indicator.

For applications requiring a greater degree of functionality and feedback, the TKSA 80 has a larger, seven-inch colour touchscreen with extra standard alignment programs, including multiple machine train alignment jobs, an enhanced database and fast template storage capability.

Developed for universal use, these latest alignment tools can prevent errors caused by ineffective alignment practices through a process of clear, uncomplicated and predetermined task sequencing that operators will find simple and effective to carry out.

SKF in profile
SKF is a leading global supplier of bearings, seals, mechatronics, lubrication systems and services which include technical support, maintenance and reliability services, engineering consulting and training. SKF is represented in more than 130 countries and has 15,000 distributor locations worldwide. Annual sales in 2010 were SEK 61,029 million and the number of employees was 44,742.

For further information, e-mail: phil.burge@skf.com or view website: www.skf.co.uk   
Refer to page 92

INDUSTRIAL ANALYTICAL INSTRUMENTATION  PAGE 20