VCSO Mechanical Shock Compensation

Similar documents
VCSO Mechanical Shock Compensation

Voltage Controlled SAW Oscillator Mechanical Shock Compensator

Voltage Controlled SAW Oscillator Mechanical Shock Compensator

Voltage Controlled SAW Oscillator Mechanical Shock Compensator

UNIT 2. Q.1) Describe the functioning of standard signal generator. Ans. Electronic Measurements & Instrumentation

Multi-Stage Power Conversion Proposal

Vibration Isolation for Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

LINEAR IC APPLICATIONS

Dev Bhoomi Institute Of Technology Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION SHEET REV. NO. : REV.

Amplitude Modulation Methods and Circuits

University of Michigan EECS 311: Electronic Circuits Fall 2009 LAB 2 NON IDEAL OPAMPS

Capacitive Touch Sensing Tone Generator. Corey Cleveland and Eric Ponce

Improving CDM Measurements With Frequency Domain Specifications

University of North Carolina-Charlotte Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering ECGR 3157 Electrical Engineering Design II Fall 2013

Experiment 5.A. Basic Wireless Control. ECEN 2270 Electronics Design Laboratory 1

Hydra: A Three Stage Power Converter

10 GHz Microwave Link

EE 233 Circuit Theory Lab 4: Second-Order Filters

Chlorophyll a/b-chlorophyll a sensor for the Biophysical Oceanographic Sensor Array

THE AMAZING BARLOW WADLEY XCR-30 CRYSTAL CONTROLLED 30 BAND TRANSISTOR RADIO. (A method to set the AGC) H. Holden, 2018.

Definitions. Spectrum Analyzer

9 Feedback and Control

BENE 2163 ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHARLOTTE Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Chapter 9: Operational Amplifiers

4. Digital Measurement of Electrical Quantities

Instrumental Considerations

High-Speed Interconnect Technology for Servers

The steeper the phase shift as a function of frequency φ(ω) the more stable the frequency of oscillation

Lecture 8: More on Operational Amplifiers (Op Amps)

EE 233 Circuit Theory Lab 3: First-Order Filters

Assist Lecturer: Marwa Maki. Active Filters

Dual-Axis, High-g, imems Accelerometers ADXL278

Q.P. Code : [ TURN OVER]

Communication Circuit Lab Manual

6.101 Project Proposal April 9, 2014 Kayla Esquivel and Jason Yang. General Outline

Department of Electronic Engineering NED University of Engineering & Technology. LABORATORY WORKBOOK For the Course SIGNALS & SYSTEMS (TC-202)

Federal Urdu University of Arts, Science & Technology Islamabad Pakistan THIRD SEMESTER ELECTRONICS - II BASIC ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONICS LAB

LINEAR MODELING OF A SELF-OSCILLATING PWM CONTROL LOOP

ANALOG COMMUNICATION

Testing Power Sources for Stability

Sampling and Reconstruction

University Tunku Abdul Rahman LABORATORY REPORT 1

Department of Electronics & Communication Engineering LAB MANUAL SUBJECT: DIGITAL COMMUNICATION LABORATORY [ECE324] (Branch: ECE)

Getting Started. MSO/DPO Series Oscilloscopes. Basic Concepts

Akiyama-Probe (A-Probe) simple DIY controller This technical guide presents: simple and low-budget DIY controller

Capacitive Sensing Project. Design of A Fully Differential Capacitive Sensing Circuit for MEMS Accelerometers. Matan Nurick Radai Rosenblat

Single-Axis, High-g, imems Accelerometers ADXL193

Chapter 8: Field Effect Transistors

Experiment 1: Instrument Familiarization (8/28/06)

UNIT-3. Electronic Measurements & Instrumentation

EE 368 Electronics Lab. Experiment 10 Operational Amplifier Applications (2)

Ballistocardiograph 1

Spectrum analyzer for frequency bands of 8-12, and MHz

Exercise 1: RF Stage, Mixer, and IF Filter

Final Project Report E3990 Electronic Circuits Design Lab. Wii-Lock. Magic Wand Remote Unlocking Device

Twelve voice signals, each band-limited to 3 khz, are frequency -multiplexed using 1 khz guard bands between channels and between the main carrier

Experiment No. 2 Pre-Lab Signal Mixing and Amplitude Modulation

ELC224 Final Review (12/10/2009) Name:

Phase-Locked Loop Engineering Handbook for Integrated Circuits

1) Consider the circuit shown in figure below. Compute the output waveform for an input of 5kHz

Single-Axis, High-g, imems Accelerometers ADXL78

1. General Outline Project Proposal April 9, 2014 Kayla Esquivel and Jason Yang

ANALOG AND DIGITAL INSTRUMENTS

CHAPTER 4 MEASUREMENT OF NOISE SOURCE IMPEDANCE

Experiment 1: Amplifier Characterization Spring 2019

Model LIA100. Lock-in Amplifier

While the Riso circuit is both simple to implement and design it has a big disadvantage in precision circuits. The voltage drop from Riso is

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION

Digitally Tuned Low Power Gyroscope

PURPOSE: NOTE: Be sure to record ALL results in your laboratory notebook.

B.E. SEMESTER III (ELECTRICAL) SUBJECT CODE: X30902 Subject Name: Analog & Digital Electronics

Introduction to LIVM Accelerometers

Keysight Technologies 8 Hints for Making Better Measurements Using RF Signal Generators. Application Note

Introduction to Analog Interfacing. ECE/CS 5780/6780: Embedded System Design. Various Op Amps. Ideal Op Amps

Analog Circuits and Systems

Preliminary simulation study of the front-end electronics for the central detector PMTs

Test Your Understanding

Chapter 13 Oscillators and Data Converters

Lab 4. Crystal Oscillator

UNIVERSITI MALAYSIA PERLIS

ENGR 1121 Lab 3 Strain Gauge

The Effects of Crystal Oscillator Phase Noise on Radar Systems

Digital Applications of the Operational Amplifier


Enhancing the capability of primary calibration system for shock acceleration in NML

What are we looking at?

Troubleshooting accelerometer installations

Fluxgate Magnetometer

APP NOTE. Acceleration Sensitivity Characteristics of Quartz Crystal Oscillators

Question Paper Code: 21398

Electronic Instrumentation & Automation. ET-7th semester. By : Rahul Sharma ET & TC Deptt. RCET, Bhilai

Optical Delay Line Application Note

Analog & Digital Communication

Designing Nano Scale CMOS Adaptive PLL to Deal, Process Variability and Leakage Current for Better Circuit Performance

NPTEL Online Course: Control Engineering

Operational Amplifiers 2 Active Filters ReadMeFirst

An Investigation into the Effects of Sampling on the Loop Response and Phase Noise in Phase Locked Loops

Experiment No. 4 The LM 741 Operational Amplifier

Experiment 1: Instrument Familiarization

Transcription:

VCSO Mechanical Shock Compensation

Who are we? Team members: Max Madore Joseph Hiltz-Maher Shaun Hew Shalin Shah Advisor: Helena Silva Phonon contact: Scott Kraft

Original Goals Measure Instantaneous Frequency shifts and compare with accelerometer voltage output Design Compensation circuit based on frequency/voltage characteristics Test in and implement in 3 axis to determine the unique responses of each

Previous Work Last Year: Creation of Shock Tower for repeatable tests Comparison of two identical VCSOs Measurement Using Oscilloscope Problems: Unreliable Data Mismatched VCSO frequencies

A New Outlook Frequency Generator allows for precise matching of generator and test VCSO MATLAB code allows us to control Shock tower impulse, view multiple trials, filter results digitally Better understanding of VCSO components and their reaction to shock

Project Overview VCSO and mechanical vibration Analog filter for compensation of 20dB Expand compensation to three axes

Shock Tower Uses 24V solenoid to drive a rod against a metal plate VCSO and accelerometer sit on the plate and experience shock Important to eliminate all erroneous vibration Resonance Loose parts

Signal Generator Giga-tronics 6060B 10kHz-1.05GHz Provides a stable reference that can match the VCSO s normal output

Phase Frequency Detector Hittite HMC439QS16G Mixes the signals from the Signal Generator and VCSO Outputs a triangular waveform whose frequency is the difference in frequency of its inputs

Data Acquisition National Instruments X series USB-6353 Data Acquisition Card MATLAB 2009 on lab computer Filtration may be desired to remove high frequency noise Looking for changes in the hundreds of Hertz or less Sample Rate is not fast enough to collect data directly from the VCSO or signal generator Also used to fire the solenoid in the shock tower

Last Semester s Results Phase frequency detector output of uncompensated shock response

Start of Spring Semester

Start of Spring Semester

Current Data

Current Data

Repeatability

Remaining Tasks

Accurately Determine Acceleration Sensitivity Most important task to achieving compensation Data processing and noise filtering have paid off New accelerometers to move forward Test each axis and superimpose compensations Accelerometer Output Attenuation Equation: Γ = Acceleration Sensitivity F o = Oscillator Frequency m = Frequency Control Curve Slope S = Accelerometer Sensitivity

Investigate Magnitude of EM interference Solenoid produces large EM field while shocking the VCSO Has obvious effect on accelerometer May also affect VCSO output

Investigate Magnitude of EM interference Solution: Shock the VCSO manually

Secure Oscillator Firmly to Shock Tower To remove all acceleration other than shock pulse Currently using hand to hold oscillator Inconsistent Temperature Future options: Clamps Cloth/Leather Strap Introduce as little resonance as possible

Implement New Equipment SMD capacitors and resistors for ADXL evaluation board filters New shock tower ADXL377 3-axis Evaluation Board 3-axis Accelerometer/Oscillator Mount

Equipment to Buy ADXL001-500 Evaluation boards To replace current faulty one To test in 3 axis $90 each TLC2262CP Operation Amplifiers For 3 axis expansion Low noise $2.08 per chip 2 op amps per chip

Circuits to Implement Compensation test circuit Potentiometers for fine tuning attenuation level Operates around 1V on the VCSO control input Switches to toggle compensation Will be expanded to accommodate 3 axes Overall gain determined by VCSO acceleration sensitivity

Circuits to Implement Rational for 1V Operation Point: Most linear point on the control input Still not completely linear Non-linearity limits compensation

If time allows: Study delay mismatch Isolate each element and estimate its delay Greater delay decreases compensation Large delay could make compensation impossible Study other possible acceleration sensitivity factors, requiring higher filter orders Vibration Frequency dependence Resonance Control Voltage Temperature Further Study

Verification and Documentation Verify compensation at Phonon on larger equipment Calibrated accelerometers and vibration tables Phase noise measurements on spectrum analyzer Random vibration Record compensation levels and other data Interpret results Compose Final Paper Demonstrate at Senior Design Day and Phonon

- Recap Objective and Operation of Device - Tuning voltage used to regulate frequency output. - VCSO requires stable frequency output. - When VSCO is shocked the output of the device is shifted by a certain phase. - Phase instability causes frequency domain noise. - Objective is to suppress this noise with appropriate low pass filter.

Why stable frequency needed For example, in communication system a voltage control oscillator is used to create a stable frequency reference for passing information to a required frequency band. - Phase lock loop - Computer disk - Wireless electronics - Timers - Clock and data recovery

What are our Goals Continue to improve compensation by applying digital filter in matlab Apply 3 axis testing using triple axis mount provided by Phonon to further improve compensation if single axis compensation proves inadequate. Design analog filter according to digital model to provide final compensation. Test analog filter to see if compensation is in the range of 20db Assemble conclusive thesis for final presentation.

Timeline Budget: All Equipment Provided through Phonon