Optical data system for torque sensor
10341025 ยท 2019-07-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B10/803
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
An optical system for wireless data communication between the sensor electronics on a rotary shaft and the fixed data processor is disclosed. A first ring carrying IR LEDs is mounted to rotate with the shaft. A second ring carrying a photodetector is mounted adjacent to the first ring but does not rotate with the shaft. In the disclosed embodiment, both rings have LEDs and a photodetector so data and/or information can be transferred both to and from the shaft.
Claims
1. A system for transferring data from a rotatable member to a stationary receiver comprising: a first carrier ring mounted to rotate with the rotatable member, the first carrier ring carrying a plurality of angularly spaced IR LEDs capable of operating in a pulsed mode; a source of data signals including a plurality of strain gages carried by said member and connected to activate the LEDs in a pulse mode so as to transmit data in the form of IR light pulses; a second carrier ring fixedly mounted in spaced, coaxially and parallel relationship to the first carrier ring; and a first photo detector mounted on the second carrier ring in a location to receive IR pulses from the IR LEDs on the first carrier ring and produce a data stream corresponding to the data carried by said IR pulses from the IR LEDs on the first carrier ring; wherein the first carrier ring also carries, in addition to the IR LEDs, a second photo detector for producing electronic signals in response to IR incident light pulses, the second carrier ring also has mounted thereon in optical communication with the first photo detector on the first carrier ring, wherein the second carrier ring comprises a plurality of angularly spaced IR LEDs capable of being operated in a pulsed mode to transmit commands to the second photo detector on the first ring; whereby the first and second carrier rings can operate in a repeating handshake mode wherein the second ring transmits a command for data to the photo detector on the first ring and the first ring responds by transmitting data back to the photo detector on the second ring.
2. The system as defined in claim 1 wherein the IR LEDs on the second ring transmit commands to the second ring to the tell the signal processing electronics associated with the first ring the type of data that the second ring wants to receive.
3. The system as defined in claim 2 wherein the first and second rings have generally planar mounting surfaces for the IR LEDs and photodetectors, which surfaces face one another and are plated with a reflective metal.
4. The system as defined in claim 3 wherein the metal is gold.
5. The system as defined in claim 1 wherein the rotatable member is a driven shaft configured to transmit torque.
6. The system as defined in claim 5 wherein the plurality of strain gages are mounted on the shaft to produce signals representing flex in the shaft caused by transmitted torque.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT
(9)
(10) Mounted on the shaft is a strain gage section 16 consisting of foil type strain gages 24 and 26 connected into a Wheatstone bridge configuration as shown in
(11) The data from block 16 is transmitted as appropriate to the optical data transfer module 18 which will be described in greater detail hereinafter. Module 18 is capable of taking for example, the strain gage torque signals from the shaft 12 and delivering them to the processor module 22 which may include a display. Electrical power is provided to the units 16 and 18 by means of a power source 20 such as a battery pack, generator or AC line.
(12) Referring to
(13) Referring now to
(14)
(15) A first annular printed circuit board member in the form of a ring 30 is shown coaxially mounted around but not in contact with the shaft 12. It is mounted to a housing (not shown) so as to be stationary relative to the shaft 12. Spaced to the right of the ring 30 is a second substantially identical printed circuit board ring 38 which is coaxial with the ring 30 as well as the shaft 12 and is mounted to the shaft for rotation therewith. The confronting annular surfaces of the two rings are shown in
(16) Mounted on the surface 34 of ring 30 is a set of IR LEDs 32 all at the same radial distance from the center of the ring and shaft and uniformly spaced in 60 intervals. The IR LEDs are capable of being turned on and off in pulsed fashion at a very high rate as hereinafter described in greater detail.
(17) Between two of the IR LEDs and at the same radial distance from the center of the ring 30 is a photodetector 36 which is capable of producing a current signal when light from an IR LED; i.e., light in the infrared portion of the wavelength spectrum, is incident thereon.
(18) Ring 38 which is fixed to the shaft 12 for rotation therewith has an arrangement of LEDs 40 and a photodetector 42 in exactly the same spatial arrangement as the IR LEDs and photodetector found on the ring 30. Accordingly, because the two rings face each other as shown in
(19)
(20) At the same time and in this same mode the photodetector 32 on the stationary ring is disabled; i.e., unreceptive to light pulses, and the LEDs 40 on the shaft ring 38 are similarly disabled; i.e., turned off.
(21) After the TX buffer in
(22) Discussing the matter in greater detail, one should start with the principle that the LEDs 40 on the shaft mounted ring 38 will not provide data until they are first addressed by the signals from stationary ring.
(23) At start-up both the stationary and shaft mounted rotatory rings have their TIAs enabled by setting the TIA enable line high. This puts both rings in the receive mode. Both rings have their LED drivers disable by clearing the LED driver enable lines; i.e., in this case clearing means setting the control signal low.
(24) To begin the first transmission the TIA enable line is set low which shuts off the TIA on the stationary ring side shown in
(25) The photodetector 42 on the shaft ring in this first exchange captures the LED light pulses from the stationary ring and converts them into photo current pulses. The photo current pulses are then converted by the TIA on the rotary ring side into voltage pulses. These voltage pulses are passed through the signal conditioning device which operates as a comparator to remove noise and scale the voltage pulses to standard digital levels which in this case is 3.3 v since the MCU is powered at this voltage level.
(26) The signal conditioning output goes into the MCU UART RX line where the data is stored into the UART RX buffer. The MCU periodically checks the UART RX buffer for the presence of data. When there is data present in the RX buffer, the MCU disables the TIA and turns on the LED driver to place the unit in the transmit mode. The photo electric components on the stationary ring are ready for this as explained above.
(27) The MCU collects the data from the RX buffer and interprets the data and loads a response to the RX data; usually a command.
(28) It can be seen that from this detailed explanation that this is a handshake relationship between the two rings and it will continue until all desired data exchanges have been made.
(29) For purposes of the above explanation, the abbreviations GPIO stands for General Purpose Input Output; the abbreviation TX stands for the Transmit Data Buffer whereas the abbreviation RX stands for the Data Receive Buffer. The abbreviation UART stands for Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter; the abbreviation MCU stands for Micro Controller Unit and the abbreviation TIA stands for Trans Impedance Amplifier, the device that converts current signal into voltage signals.
(30) In the illustrated system, the LEDs are turned on and off at a 4 MHz rate. This means that the data is being transferred at 4 megabaud per second. This rate can be higher or lower but in the present embodiment is the upper speed limit of the on-board electronics.
(31) The light coming from the LEDs is not a point, but, rather, is a light spot with maximum intensity along the LED center axis. With the proper spacing the LED illumination spots overlap adjacent LEDs. This results in a circular illumination pattern projected onto the adjacent ring. That pattern will have maximums and minimums which are treated by the interpretation components as noise. The gold plating is highly reflective on both rings and increases the strength of the optical coupling and evens out the illumination thereby minimizing the aforementioned maximum and minimum light intensity pattern.
(32) Received light pulses are converted into photo current pulses by the photo diode and amplified by the TIA. Any left-over noise is removed by a Schmitt trigger comparator which sets a minimum level the signal must exceed in order to result in the creation of a data pulse. The output of the LED ring is, therefore, a digital data stream sent by the LEDs on the other ring when operating in the pulsed mode.
(33) The system may be described as operating as in a half-duplex mode; i.e., when the rotating rings LEDs are pulsing the photodetector on that ring is turned off and the photodetector on the opposite or receiving ring is turned on while the LEDs on that ring are turned off. When the handshake exchange is over the opposite condition obtains.
(34) As far as providing power to the electronics on the rotating ring is concerned, that may be achieved either with slip rings or, preferably, by inductive coupling wherein primary and secondary coils are stationary and rotary respectively. The transfer of power to the stationary ring is straight forward.
(35) While the invention has been described with respect to a specific and illustrative embodiment thereof, it is to be understood that various modifications and additions to the structures and electronics described can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as well as the basic operation thereof.