Experimental Evaluation of Three Designs of Electrodynamic Flexural Transducers

Three designs for electrodynamic flexural transducers (EDFT) for air-coupled ultrasonics are presented and compared. An all-metal housing was used for robustness, which makes the designs more suitable for industrial applications. The housing is designed such that there is a thin metal plate at the f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tobias J. R. Eriksson, Michael Laws, Lei Kang, Yichao Fan, Sivaram N. Ramadas, Steve Dixon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-08-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/16/9/1363
Description
Summary:Three designs for electrodynamic flexural transducers (EDFT) for air-coupled ultrasonics are presented and compared. An all-metal housing was used for robustness, which makes the designs more suitable for industrial applications. The housing is designed such that there is a thin metal plate at the front, with a fundamental flexural vibration mode at ∼50 kHz. By using a flexural resonance mode, good coupling to the load medium was achieved without the use of matching layers. The front radiating plate is actuated electrodynamically by a spiral coil inside the transducer, which produces an induced magnetic field when an AC current is applied to it. The transducers operate without the use of piezoelectric materials, which can simplify manufacturing and prolong the lifetime of the transducers, as well as open up possibilities for high-temperature applications. The results show that different designs perform best for the generation and reception of ultrasound. All three designs produced large acoustic pressure outputs, with a recorded sound pressure level (SPL) above 120 dB at a 40 cm distance from the highest output transducer. The sensitivity of the transducers was low, however, with single shot signal-to-noise ratio ( SNR ) ≃ 15 dB in transmit–receive mode, with transmitter and receiver 40 cm apart.
ISSN:1424-8220