Three-axis digital compass
09797721 · 2017-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R33/0011
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A three-axis digital compass comprising two X-axis magnetic sensors, two Y-axis magnetic sensors, a flux concentrator, a signal sampling unit, a signal processing unit, and a signal output unit is disclosed. The X-axis and Y-axis magnetic sensors are arranged along a periphery of the flux concentrator. An external magnetic field is distorted when passing through the flux concentrator. An Z axis component of the external magnetic field is converted into X-axis or Y-axis magnetic field components when passing through the flux concentrator, and the so converted components of the external magnetic field act on the X-axis and Y-axis magnetic sensitive sensors. An output signal of the X-axis and Y-axis magnetic sensitive sensors is sent to the signal processing unit through the signal sampling unit, and it is used to calculate the three orthogonal components of the external magnetic field. These calculated external magnetic field components are output in a digital format through the signal output unit. The three-axis digital compass has a novel structure and an elegant computation algorithm. The design is compatible with AMR, GMR, TMR or other magnetoresistive sensor technology.
Claims
1. A three-axis digital compass, comprising: a flux concentrator, which distorts the external magnetic field such that the Z-axis component of the external magnetic field is turned into X-axis and Y-axis magnetic field components; two X-axis magnetic sensors, where the X-axis magnetic sensors are respectively located near the edges of the flux concentrator on both sides along the X-axis direction, and each of the X-axis magnetic field sensors has a sensing direction parallel to the X axis; two Y-axis magnetic sensors, where the Y-axis magnetic sensors are respectively located near the edges of the flux concentrator on both sides along the Y-axis direction, and each of the Y-axis magnetic field sensors has a sensing direction parallel to the Y axis; a signal sampling unit, which is connected to the output terminal of each of the magnetic sensors, for use in sampling the output signals of the magnetic sensors; a signal processing unit, which is connected to the output of the sampling unit, and the signal processing unit is used to calculate the corresponding X-axis, Y-axis, and Z-axis magnetic field components from the sampled signals; and a signal output unit, which sends out a digital signal representing the calculation performed by the signal processing unit.
2. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein each of the X-axis magnetic sensors and the Y-axis magnetic sensors are deposited on the substrate surface and senses a magnetic field component parallel to the substrate surface.
3. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the X-axis magnetic sensors and the Y-axis magnetic sensors are composed of AMR, GMR, or TMR magnetic sensor elements.
4. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the X-axis magnetic sensors and the Y-axis magnetic sensors are spin-valves that have an X-axis magnetic sensing element with a pinned layer magnetization direction and a Y-axis magnetic sensing element with a pinned layer magnetization direction that are aligned in mutually orthogonal directions.
5. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the X-axis magnetic sensors and the Y-axis magnetic sensors each include at least a sensing element and a reference element, where the reference element is located under the flux concentrator, and the sensing elements are located along the edges of the flux concentrator.
6. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the X-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the sum of the two output signals from the X-axis magnetic sensors, and the Y-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the sum of the two output signals from the Y-axis magnetic sensors.
7. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the Z-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the difference between the two output signals from the X-axis magnetic sensors, or it correlates to the difference between the two output signals from the Y-axis magnetic sensors, or it correlates to the difference between the sum of the X-axis magnetic sensor signal outputs added to the difference between the Y-axis magnetic sensor outputs.
8. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the flux concentrator is composed of a high permeability soft magnetic material NiFe, CoFeSiB, CoZrNb, CoFeB, FeSiB or FeSiBNbCu.
9. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the thickness of the flux concentrator is 1 to 20 mm.
10. The three-axis digital compass of claim 1, wherein the substrate contains CMOS, and the X-axis magnetic sensor and the Y-axis magnetic sensors are lithographically patterned on top of the substrate.
11. The three-axis digital compass of claim 10, wherein the X-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the sum of two output signals from the X-axis magnetic sensors, and the Y-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the sum of two output signals from the Y-axis magnetic sensors.
12. The three-axis digital compass of claim 10, wherein the Z-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the difference between the two output signals from the X-axis magnetic sensors, or it correlates to the difference between the two output signals from the Y-axis magnetic sensors, or it correlates to the difference between the sum of the X-axis magnetic sensor signal outputs added to the difference between the Y-axis magnetic sensor outputs.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In order to more clearly illustrate various implementations of the proposed technical solution, the following figures and text introduce simple examples in order to provide an introduction to the technical solution, obviously, the description below does not describe all possible cases, and the average person skilled in this technology, without any additional creativity, can using the appended drawings produce additional figures.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(12) The figures below combined with preferred embodiment examples are used to describe the invention in detail.
First Embodiment
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Second Embodiment
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Third Embodiment
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(16) Assuming that in the linear range, the sensor response has the following relationship with respect to an external magnetic field:
V.sub.ij=S.sub.ijB.sub.ij+Vo.sub.ij
(17) Where i=1 or 2, and j=x or y. S.sub.ij represents the magnetic sensor sensitivity, and it has the following range of values:
S.sub.ij: O<S.sub.ij<100 mV/V/G;
(18) B.sub.ij represents the magnetic field at the location of each sensor location.
(19) The external magnetic field along the X-axis, the Y-axis, and the Z-axis has three components B.sub.x, B.sub.y, and B.sub.z which become distorted after passing through the flux concentrator. At X1, X2, Y1, and Y2 magnetic sensors positions 1-4, the magnetic fields B.sub.1x, B.sub.2x, B.sub.1y, and B.sub.2y may be expressed:
B.sub.1x=αB.sub.x+γB.sub.z
B.sub.2x=αB.sub.x−γB.sub.z
B.sub.1y=αB.sub.y+γB.sub.z
B.sub.2y=αB.sub.y−γB.sub.z
(20) The sensor's output voltage is related to a linear combination of magnetic field component B.sub.x, B.sub.y, and B.sub.2:
V.sub.1x=S.sub.1x(αB.sub.x+γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.1x
V.sub.2x=S.sub.2x(αB.sub.x−γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.2x
V.sub.1y=S.sub.1y(αB.sub.y+γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.1y
V.sub.2y=S.sub.2y(αB.sub.y−γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.2y
(21) Wherein, α and γ are the magnetic field gain coefficients of the flux concentrator 5 for the external magnetic field, and they are a function of its length (L), width (W), and thickness (t).
α=α(L,W,t)
γ=γ(L,W,t)
Where,
α: 0<|α|<100
γ: 0<|γ|<100
(22) In order to solve these Linear equations for the sensor output, we can take the four output voltage signals V.sub.1x, V.sub.2x, V.sub.1y, V.sub.2y and solve them for a unique set of magnetic field values B.sub.x, B.sub.y, B.sub.z:
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(24) For simplicity, calibration constants can be defined:
V.sub.0x=Vo.sub.1x+Vo.sub.2x
S.sub.x=α(S.sub.1x+S.sub.2x)
where
B.sub.ox=V.sub.ox/S.sub.x
V.sub.0y=Vo.sub.1y+Vo.sub.2y
S.sub.y=α(S.sub.1y+S.sub.2y)
where
B.sub.oy=V.sub.oy/S.sub.y
V.sub.0z=(Vo.sub.2x−Vo.sub.1x)+(Vo.sub.2y−Vo.sub.1y)
S.sub.z=γ(S.sub.1x+S.sub.2x+S.sub.1y+S.sub.2y)
where
B.sub.oz=V.sub.oz/S.sub.z
(25) Thus, by solving the following three simple equations, using 3 sensitivity and 3 offset calibration coefficients, you can obtain the three magnetic field components B.sub.x, B.sub.y, and B.sub.z. Therefore the calibration of this three-axis compass is the same complexity as the prior art designs.
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Fourth Embodiment
(27)
V.sub.1x=S.sub.1x(αB.sub.x)+Vo.sub.1x
V.sub.2x=S.sub.2x(αB.sub.x)+Vo.sub.2x
V.sub.1y=Vo.sub.1y
V.sub.2y=Vo.sub.2y
(28) From the above four equations, it can be seen that V.sub.1x, V.sub.2x are related to the external magnetic field, and V.sub.1y, V.sub.2y are unrelated to the external magnetic field, and
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V.sub.1x=Vo.sub.1x
V.sub.2x=Vo.sub.2x
V.sub.1y=S.sub.1y(αB.sub.y)+Vo.sub.1y
V.sub.2y=S.sub.2y(αB.sub.y)+Vo.sub.2y
(31) From the above four equations, it can be seen that V.sub.1x, V.sub.2x have no dependence on the external magnetic field, and V.sub.1y, V.sub.2y depend on the external magnetic field, such that
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V.sub.1x=S.sub.1x(γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.1x
V.sub.2x=S.sub.2x(−γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.2x
V.sub.1y=S.sub.1y(γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.1y
V.sub.2y=S.sub.2y(−γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.2y
(34) From this it can be seen V.sub.1x, V.sub.2x, V.sub.1y, and V.sub.2y are related to the external magnetic field, and
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Fifth Embodiment
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Sixth Embodiment
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V.sub.1x=S.sub.1x(αB.sub.x+γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.1x
V.sub.2x=S.sub.2x(αB.sub.x−γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.2x
V.sub.1y=S.sub.1y(αB.sub.y+γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.1y
V.sub.2y=S.sub.2y(αB.sub.y−γB.sub.z)+Vo.sub.2y
(40) Wherein, α and γ are the magnetic field gain coefficients of the flux concentrator 5 for the external magnetic field, and they are a function of its length (L), width (W), and thickness (t).
α=α(L,W,t)
γ=γ(L,W,t)
(41) Then by using the following equations the voltage signals can be converted into the three magnetic field components:
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(43) The result of the three dimensional magnetic field calculations is transferred to the signal output unit 19, enabling the three-axis digital compass to output the components of the external magnetic field measurement.
(44) The Z-axis component of the magnetic field correlates to the difference between the two output signals from the X-axis magnetic sensors, or it correlates to the difference between the two output signals from the Y-axis magnetic sensors, or it correlates to the difference between the sum of the X-axis magnetic sensor signal outputs added to the difference between the Y-axis magnetic sensor outputs. In this embodiment of the present invention, the other methods can ultimately be described in a corresponding manner, but the first two methods have no substantial difference, and people skilled in the art can after seeing these implementations immediately and without the slightest doubt, conclude this from the first two methods, therefore the above detailed description of the methods will not be repeated.
(45) The foregoing presents preferred embodiments of the present invention, but it does not limit the invention. For technical personnel skilled in the art, the present invention can be made to have various modifications and changes. Any changes, equivalent replacements, or improvements, within spirit and principles of the present invention, should be included within the scope of the present invention.