Rate sensor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rate sensors are devices that directly measure angular rate, without integration in conditioning electronics. Gyroscopes also measure angular rate. Generally gyroscopes are able to measure a constant rotation rate, while rate sensors also include devices with a low cut off frequency that is other than zero.

Technologies

Main technologies for rate sensors:

  • Electromechanical (various types),
  • MEMS (gyroscope),
  • Laser (RLG).
  • Fiber optic gyros,
  • MHD-sensors based on utilization of the Magnetohydrodynamics effect, and
  • Electrochemical sensors(based on Molecular Electronic Transducer Technology (MET)).

There are two types of MET rate sensors that directly measure angular rate: one that is able to measure constant angular rate (DC sensitive) and the one that is not.

The non-DC sensitive angular rate sensor has a design consisting of a toroid filled with a special electrolyte that moves when the device is rotated about its measurement axis. When this happens the electrolyte flows through the sensing element, which is rigidly fixed inside the channel, and the motion is detected. The output signal is proportional to the angular rate due to internal integration that occurs inside of the sensing element. The cutoff frequency for measurements can be as low as 0.005 Hz.

A DC sensitive angular rate sensor or gyroscope has a more complex design and uses measurement of Coriolis acceleration to determine angular rate.

Uses

Modern cars typically contain a Yaw-rate sensor.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.