BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Tnvention
[0001] The present invention relates to an electromechanical transducer and, more particularly,
to a transducer type commonly known as a double piston transducer in which energy
can be selectively radiated from opposite ends of the transducer device.
Description of the Related Art
[0002] A device commonly known as a double piston transducer is an electromechanical or
electro- acoustical transducer known in the prior art. In its simplest form the device
consists merely of a tnin piece of active material in contact with a radiating medium
on both sides and which can be driven electrically to induce a planar motion therein.
For example, a flat disk or ring made of piezoelectric ceramic (such as a lead zirconate
titanate formulation) which has electrodes on its flat faces and is polarized in the
direction normal to the flat surfaces may act as such a vibrator. This type of device
is commonly operated at frequencies near its first longitudinal resonance frequency
to achieve a higher output. To achieve a reasonably low resonance frequency and a
well controlled response in a compact device, it is common practice to mass load the
two sides of the active material with inactive material pieces.
[0003] An example of a prior art mass loaded double piston transducer is shown in Fig. 1(a).
Piezoelectric material rings 1 are bonded to form a composite piezoelectric stack
2 and electrically wired in parcel so that when a voltage is applied between the electrical
loads, all of the individual rings 1 expand or contract in unison along the longitudinal
axis of the device. At each end of the ceramic stack are bonded identical head mass
elements 3 each having an outer face 4 which is in contact with the radiating medium
5. A stress rod or pretension bolt 6 and an associated nut 7 are used to join the
components and to provide a compressive bias stress to the stack 2 of active elements.
For simplicity of explanation the electrodes which are positioned between the rings
1, and the insulating washers which are positioned at the ends of the stack 2 of rings
are not shown. Such details are within the knowledge of the ordinarily skilled in
the art.
[0004] The device of Fig. 1(a) may be used as either a generator or receiver of mechanical
or acoustic energy and is normally operated in a frequency band approximately centered
on its primary resonance frequency. Tn this frequency band, the two head masses 3
move in opposite relative directions while the stack of active material 2 alternately
expands and contracts along its length.
[0005] It will be recognized by those of ordinary skill in the art that the performance
of the device in Fig. 1(a) can be approximated by the analogous behavior of the simplified
electrical equivalent circuit of Fig. 1(b). Tn the circuit, the two inductors m
h represent the two head masses, and the compliance of the ceramic stack is represented
by the capacitor C. The two inductors m
e1 and m
e2 represent the effective mass contribution of the two ends of the ceramic stack 2.
C
o is the electrical clamped capacitance of the ceramic stack 2, and 0:1 is the transformation
ratio of the electromechanical transformer representing the transduction property
of the piezoelectric stack 2. The open boxes in the outer legs of the equivalent circuit
represent the equivalent radiation impedance Z
rad seen by the radiating faces of the transducer. The equivalent currents u, and u
2 in these impedances represent the velocities of the moving faces of the transducer.
[0006] Because of the symmetry of the device of Fig. 1(a) the energy radiated from its two
ends is equal. In the equivalent circuit representation, this symmetry makes it evident
that the equivalent currents u and u
2 are equal. In an acoustic device this means that sound energy is radiated equally
to the far field in both directions along the longitudinal axis of the device. Tn
some applications this is advantageous. However, in other applications it is necessary
to employ a device which can radiate in either direction along the longitudinal axis
without significant radiation in the other direction. In these applications, the prior
art double ended longitudinal vibrator is not acceptable.
[0007] Tn an application requiring unidirectional radiation, it is possible to employ two
separate devices each having only a single radiating face in contact with the medium
5. Such an arrangement is shown in Fig. 2(a) where two identical longitudinal vibrator
devices are mounted back to back. Eacn of these devices is similar to the double ended
radiator except that it has only one head mass 3 in contact with the radiating medium.
The second head mass is replaced by a tail mass 8 which is free to vibrate. The electrical
equivalent circuits for this pair of devices are shown in Fig. 2(b). Each of tne two
circuits is similar to the one circuit of Fig. 1(a) except for the replacement of
one of the two equivalent head mass inductors m
h by the equivalent inductance of the tail mass m
t, and the elimination of the radiation impedance z
rad in series with this equivalent tail inductance.
[0008] The two transducers in this arrangement are separately driven, and each radiates
in only one direction along their common longitudinal axis. In the equivalent circuit
representation, it is evident that the equivalent currents u and u
2 in the radiation impedances are completely independent. The two transducer arrangement
is suitable for use in situations requiring unidirectional radiation. A disadvantage
of this arrangement is that it is larger, heavier, more complex and more expensive
than a single device which could fill the same function.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0009] It is an object of the present invention to provide a double piston transmitting
transducer and a method of electrically driving the transducer wnicn together are
capable of producing unidirectional radiation in either direction along the transducer
longitudinal axis without significant radiation in the opposite direction.
[0010] Tt is another object of the present invention to produce a device capable of changing
the direction in which the radiation is projected from one end to the other without
moving or rotating the transducer.
[0011] It is an additional object of the present invention to provide a device capable of
any desired ratio of the radiated energy in the two directions along its longitudinal
axis by simply changing the parameters of the electrical signals to the device.
[0012] It is another object of the present invention to provide a double piston receiving
transducer tnat can selectively have a high receiving signal sensitivity to signals
arriving from one direction along its longitudinal axis and little or no sensitivity
to signals arriving from the opposite direction.
[0013] It is still another object of the present invention to provide a device capable of
changing the direction of high receiving sensitivity from one end to the other without
moving or rotating the transducer.
[0014] It is another object of the present invention to provide a transducer and transducer
control system capable of any desired ratio of the receiving sensitivity from the
two directions along its longitudinal axis by simply changing the parameters of the
electrical signals from the transducer.
[0015] It is still a further object of this invention to achieve the preceding objects in
a relatively compact, lightweight and inexpensive device.
[0016] The oresent invention achieves the above objects by the addition of an extra mass
placed in the center of the piezoelectric stack of a double piston transducer and
appropriate electrical drive or receive circuitry connected to the two ceramic stacks
thus created. The extra mass divides the stack into two separate stacks which are
not connected electrically, although the individual ceramic rings in each stack are
electrically connected in parallel as in the prior art devices. By proper selection
of the relative magnitude and pnase of the drive voltage excitation applied to the
two oiezoelectric stacks, it is possible to acnieve a broad range of acoustic performance
characteristics.
[0017] These, together with other objects and advantages, which will be subsequently apparent,
reside in the details of construction and operation as more fully hereinafter described
and claimed, reference being had to the accompanying drawings forming a part hereof,
wherein like numerals refer to like parts throughout.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018]
Fig. 1(a) depicts, in longitudinal cross section, the elements and construction of
a prior art double ended longitudinal vibrator;
Fig. 1(b) is the equivalent circuit for the transducer of Fig. 1(a);
Fig. 2(a) depicts, in longitudinal cross section, the elements and construction of
a pair of prior art longitudinal vibrator transducers capable of independent radiation
in two directions along their common longitudinal axis;
Fig. 2(b) is a pair of equivalent circuits for the transducers of Fig. 2(a);
Fig. 3(a) depicts, in longitudinal cross section, the elements and construction of
? transducer according to the present invention;
Fig. 3(b) is the equivalent circuit for the transducer of Fig. 3(a);
Fig. 3(c) is the equivalent circuit of the device of Fig. 3(a) when driven to produce
unidirectional radiation according to the method described herein;
Fig. 4 illustrates an electrical circuit suitable for operating the transducer of
the present invention as a unidirectional transmitter; and
Fig. 5 shows an electrical circuit suitable for operating the transducer of the present
invention as 3 unidirectional receiver.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0019] The present invention achieves selectable unidirectional response in a double piston
transducer element by including an additional mass in the center of the piezoelectric
stack, and by appropriate driving of the two ceramic stacks thus created. Fig. 3(a)
illustrates a double ended transducer with an extra mass 9, which will hereafter be
called the center mass. The center mass 9 is positioned between active transducer
stacks 2' and 2" and head masses 3' and 3". The active stacks 2' and 2" are compressively
biased by stress rods 6' and 6" and nuts 7' and 7". The center mass 9 allows vibration
to be transferred between the stacks 2' and 2" and the masses 3' and 3". The transferred
vibration can enhance the vibration on the opposite side, nullify the vibration on
the opposite side or any combination in between. The two head masses 3' and 3" may
be of identical construction as is the case for the head masses 3 of the prior art
device, or they may be different to provide differing radiation properties to the
two sides of the device. Likewise the two active stacks 2' and 2" may be identical
materials or they may be different to tailor the response in the two directions. The
transducer of Fig. 3(a) is assembled in a manner substantially identical to the assembly
of one of the prior art transducers of Fig. 2(a). The active transducer elements 1
can be piezoelectric elements manufactured from a piezoelectric ceramic material,
such as a lead zirconate titanate formulation and can be obtainea from Vernitron,
Inc. in Bedford, Ohio. The head masses 3' and 3" and center mass 9 can be tungsten,
steel or aluminum. Stress rods 6' and 6" can be a copper beryllium, one-quarter hard,
alloy No. 172 in accordance with ASTM B-196 artifically aged to obtain Rockwell C39-42
after machining. The nuts 7' and 7" can be of aluminum or steel, but must have a flat
surface against the head masses 3' and 3" so that no rocking of the nuts occur. The
entire transducer can be assembled either by using epoxy and then tensioning the stress
rods 6' and 6" or loosely assembled and held together by the stress rods 6' and 6".
The adjustment of the compressive bias using the stress rods 6' and 6" is within the
ordinary skill in the art. Other features of typical transducers such as insulating
washers, wiring, electrical contacts etc. are well known to those of ordinary skill
in the art and can be found in, for example, U.S. Patent No. 3,309,654 to Miller.
[0020] The solid lines of the stress rods 5' and 6" in Fig. 3(a) indicate the rods 6' and
6" are fixed to the respective head masses 3' and 3" and to the center mass 9. However,
it is possible to have a single stress rod connecting the two head masses 3' and 3"
and passing through a hole in the center mass 9. The extension of the single rod through
the center mass 9 is illustrated by the dashed lines in Fig. 3(a).
[0021] The simplified equivalent circuit representation for the transducer of Fig. 3(a)
is shown in Fig. 3(b). This circuit includes two piezoelectric stacks, each of which
is represented by the combination of the equivalent electrical components C
0, C
1, C
2, m
1, m
2, m
e1' m
e1 and the electromechanical transformer whose transformation ratio is φ. The equivalent
inductor m
c in the circuit represents the center mass 9.
[0022] The equivalent circuit of Fig. 3(b) makes it evident that the transducer device of
Fig. 3(a) may be viewed and analyzed as a two input, two output linear system. Tf
the device is used as a transmitting transducer, the input parameters are the voltage
E
1 and E
2 at the electrical connections to the two ceramic stacks 2, and the output parameters
are the velocities u
1 and u
2 of the two radiating head masses 3.
[0023] The electroacoustic transfer matrix for the element can be represented as:

where u
1 and u
2 are tne velocities of head masses 3' and 3" respectively, and E
1 and E
2 are' the drive voltages applied to ceramic stacks 2' and 2", respectively, and c
11-c
22 represent transfer matrix elements. The transfer elements C
11-C
22 are determined as follows:



where





w is the angular frequency of operating and w+2 f where f is the operating frequency.
[0024] All variables in equations (1) - (10) are complex numbers which carry both amplitude
and phase information. Details concerning the manipulation of such complex numbers
in a matrix format can be found in Foundations of Acoustics by Eugen Skudrzyk, published
in 1971 by Springer - Verlag of Wein Austria and New York.
[0025] Given any desired values for the radiating head velocities, equation (1) allows the
calculation of the two complex stack voltages which will produce them. In order to
constrain u
? to zero, these equations can readily be used to show that the required ratio of drive
voltages is

[0026] The voltage ratio in equation (11) provides high power acoustic radiation from the
head mass 3' and no radiation from the head 3". In a similar manner, equation (1)
may be used to provide high radiation from head 3" and no radiation for head 3' with
an applied voltage ratio of

[0027] With the voltage ratio selected according to equation (1) to provide zero velocity
u
2 to the element head mass 3", the circuit node 10 in Fig. 3(b) is held at zero equivalent
voltage. As a consequence, the dynamic situation is identical to that shown in Fig.
3(c) where the virtual ground point 10 in Fig. 3(b) is redrawn to explicitly show
its ground potential. The portion of Fig. 3(c) to the right of the dotted line is
identical to one of the equivalent circuits of the conventional transducer shown in
Fig. 2(b) with the exception that the equivalent tail mass m
t in Fig. 2(b) is replaced by the combination of the equivalent center mass m and the
equivalent mass of the ceramic m
e2. Consequently, the electrical, mechanical, and acoustical behavior of the right half
of Fig. 3(c) is identical to that of a conventional element in Fig. 2. Significant
acoustic energy is radiated from head mass 3' just as would be the case for a conventional
element. By changing the drive voltage ratio from that in equation (11) to that of
equation (12) it is possible to change the direction of the radiation without moving
the transducer device.
[0028] In fact it is possible to adjust the relative drive voltages to the two piezoelectric
stacks to provide any relative radiation ratio between the left and right directions
from the maximum rightward ratio (equation 11) described above, through equal radiation
produced by both sides, and finally to the maximum leftward radiation ratio (equation
12) described above. If we let

be the desired ratio of the radiating velocities of the two head masses, then the
required drive voltage ratio to create this situation can be determined from equation
(1) to be

For a device which possesses reflective symmetry about the center mass, the electroacoustic
transfer matrix elements are related by

For unidirectional radiation in which u
1 is zero, r=0 and equation (14) reduces to equation (12). For unidirectional radiation
with u
2 as it approaches zero, equation (14) reduces to equation (11). For equal radiation
from the two heads, r=1 in equation (
14) and hence E
1=E
2.
[0029] Fig. 4 shows a representative configuration for the transducer and driving electronics
to provide the performance possibilities discussed above. This figure shows an electrical
signal generator 11 which provides the system input. This signal is sent through the
independent channels of gain and phase adjustment units 12 which adjust the amplitude
and phase of the input signal in accordance with the desired complex drive voltage
E for each channel. The complex drive voltages are applied to power amplifiers 13,
amplified and then applied to the two piezoelectric stacks of the transducer 14 of
Fig. 3(a). By properly selecting the amplitude and pnase adjustment in the two channels,
as described previously, it is possible to vary the performance of the system throughout
the range of possibilities.
[0030] Fig. 5 is an example of the use of the new device as a receiving sensor. The electrical
signals produced in the two piezoelectric stacks are buffered and amplified by separate
preamplifiers 19. The preamp output signals are then fed to separate gain and phase
adjustment circuitry whose effect on the signals can be manually or automatically
adjusted to provide the proper directional response for the system in accordance with
equation (1). These signals are then added togetner in a summing circuit 20 to provide
a final output signal 21 having the desired directional sensitivity..
[0031] All of the preceding discussion has explicitly assumed that the transducer device
is symmetric about the center mass 9. When the transducer is symmetric about the center
mass 9, the center mass 9 should be at least as massive as one of the head masses
3' or 3". When unbalanced head masses 3' and 3" are used, the center mass 9 should
be as massive as the most massive of the head masses 3' and 3". An additional alternative
embodiment of the present invention can achieve further performance enhancement in
some applications by providing somewhat different dimensions and/or materials for
the left and right transducer elements. The effect of sucn modifications can be determined
by substituting the desired values into equation (1) as represented by Fig. 3(b).
Modifications of this type could allow the rightward and leftward radiation to be
optimized for somewhat different operating frequency bands, and thus increase the
total operating bandwidth of the transmitting system.
[0032] The prior art methods of electrical stack termination, the use of impedance matching
layers on the radiating faces, and the use of resonant head mass structures, as described
in pending U.S. Patent Application 626,784 (by the present inventor and assigned to
the assignee of the present application), are all compatible with the present invention
and may advantageously be used in conjunction therewith, as will be recognized by
those skilled in the art.
[0033] The many features and advantages of the present invention are apparent from the detailed
specification and thus it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features
and advantages of tne device which fall within the true spirit and scope of tne invention.
Further, since numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled
in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact description and
operation illustrated and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and
equivalents may be resorted to falling within the scope of the invention.
1. A double mass loaded transducer, comprising:
first and second head masses in contact with an acoustic medium;
first and second active transducer elements respectively abutting said first and second
head masses; and
transfer means, abutting said first and second transducer elements, for transferring
vibration between said first and second transducer elements, and allowing vibration
by one of said first or second head masses to be enhanced or nullified by the vibration
of the other of said first or second head masses.
2. A transducer as recited in claim 1, wherein said transfer means is a center mass.
3. A transducer as recited in claim 1, wherein said first and second head masses are
of unequal mass.
4. A transducer as recited in claim 1, wherein said first and second active transducer
elements comprise different active transducer materials.
5. A transducer as recited in claim 1, further comprising drive means, electrically
connected to said first and second active transducer elements, for electrically driving
said first and second active transducer elements with an amplitude and phase relationship
therebetween.
6. 4 transducer as recited in claim 5, wherein said drive means drives the first and
second active transducer elements in accordance with

where u
1 and u
2 are velocities of the first and second head masses respectively, c
11-c
22 are electroacoustic transfer constants, and E
1 and E
2 are drive voltages of said first and second transducer elements respectively.
7. A transducer, comprising:
a first head mass in contact with an acoustic medium;
a first active transducer element abutting said first head mass;
a center mass abutting said first active transducer element;
a second active transducer element abutting said center mass; and
a second head mass abutting said second active transducer element and in contact with
the acoustic medium.
8. A transducer as recited in claim 7, further comprising drive means, electrically,
connected to said first and second active transducer elements, for driving said first
and second active transducer elements with variable amplitude and phase drive voltages.
9. A transducer as recited in claim 7, further comorising receive means, electrically
connected to said first and second active transducer elements, for amplifying, varying
the phase of and summing voltages produced by said first and second active transducer
elements.
10. A transducer as recited in claim 7, further comprising:
a fixed stress rod connected between said first head mass and said center mass; and
a second stress rod connected between said second head mass and said center mass.
11. A transducer as recited in claim 7, wherein said center mass has a hole therethrough
and said transducer further comprises a stress rod connected between said first and
second head masses through the hole in said center mass.