Transfer functions of piezoelectric transducers for underwater applications and their inverse problems

1988 ◽  
Vol 83 (S1) ◽  
pp. S20-S20
Author(s):  
Shuchu Ren
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 06029-1-06029-6
Author(s):  
S. A. Naida ◽  
◽  
T. M. Zheliaskova ◽  
A. S. Naida ◽  
H. A. Kliushnichenko ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Kroll ◽  
Iain L. Grant ◽  
Eric Javel

The Totally Implantable Envoy® System is currently undergoing clinical trials in both the United States and Europe. The fully implantable hearing device is intended for use in patients with sensorineural hearing loss. The device employs piezoelectric transducers to sense ossicle motion and drive the stapes. Programmable signal processing parameters include amplification, compression, and variable frequency response. The fully implantable attribute allows users to take advantage of normal external ear resonances and head-related transfer functions, while avoiding undesirable earmold effects. The high sensitivity, low power consumption, and high fidelity attributes of piezoelectric transducers minimize acoustic feedback and maximize battery life ( Gyo, 1996 ; Yanagihara, (1987) and 2001 ). The surgical procedure to install the device has been accurately defined and implantation is reversible.


2006 ◽  
Vol 326-328 ◽  
pp. 593-596
Author(s):  
Joon Hyuk Song ◽  
Hee Yong Kang ◽  
Chai Won Kim ◽  
Sung Mo Yang

The inverse problem to identify the load is normally based on the measurement of frequency response transfer functions. In this paper, the dynamic response due to external load of vehicle structure is described with inverse problem in terms of strain from experimental and analytical response. The function of the practical dynamic load is a combination of the analytical and experimental method with analyzed strain by quasi-static finite element analysis under unit load and with measured strain by strain gage under driving load, respectively. The regularization technique is adopted to alleviate the ill-posedness of the inverse problems. To examine the proposed method, the external load applying on bus frame is identified. The load of bus is identified by the combination of the analytical and experimental method with analyzed strains. In order to get analytical strains, a quasi-static finite element analysis under unit load is performed. Road simulation test is conducted to get measured strains with strain gages. The sparseness and the noise in the measurements should be considered properly in the load identification. In this study, the regularization method is adopted to alleviate the ill-posedness of the inverse problems. This procedure can be used to get the transferred load to use an input data of fatigue analysis for a substructure of which the experimental response is difficult to get directly.


Author(s):  
Sinyeob Lee ◽  
Seongbin Jeong ◽  
Junhong Park

A diagnostic method of inspecting structural integrity using vibration, which is generated and monitored by piezoelectric transducers, is presented. When damage occurs in structures, the flexural-wave propagation characteristics change because of discontinuities in structural properties. To monitor this change, frequency-dependent variation of the wavenumber is measured from the piezoelectrically actuated harmonic vibration of a structure. The theoretical model was proposed to analyze the wave propagation and standing-wave pattern in the structure. Its prediction was compared to the measured vibration response on the basis of which the theoretical model was verified. Using the predicted response, the sensitivity of the potential energy to damage is obtained. With damages of different sizes and locations induced on the beam, the change in the wavenumber and equivalent dynamic stiffness was obtained from the measured transfer functions. The location and size of damage was identified from the damage index accurately. The correlation coefficient between the sensitivity of the potential energy and the variation of the dynamic stiffness was used in estimating the damage index. Analysis of the flexural-wave propagation from piezoelectric actuation allowed continued and precise structural health monitoring.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2131 (3) ◽  
pp. 032109
Author(s):  
A Verlan ◽  
M Sagatov

Abstract Based on the analysis and systematization of the inverse problems of dynamics, the study of the properties and features of the types of dynamic models under consideration, an approach is proposed for the development of appropriate methods of mathematical modeling based on the use and implementation of integral models in the form of Volterra equations of the I and II kind, their functional capabilities are determined in the study of various classes of problems, and also formulated the features that affect the choice of methods for their numerical solution. Methods for obtaining integral models are proposed, which are the basis for constructing algorithms for solving inverse problems of dynamics for a fairly wide class of dynamic objects. Integral methods for the identification of dynamic objects have been developed, which make it possible to obtain stable non-optimization algorithms for calculating the parameters of mathematical models. Recurrent methods of parametric identification of transfer functions of dynamic objects with an arbitrary input action are proposed (the obtained parameters of the transfer functions are also coefficients of the corresponding differential equations, which makes it possible to obtain equivalent mathematical models in the form of integral equations). The study of algorithms that implement the proposed identification methods allows us to conclude about their efficiency in terms of the amount of computation and ease of implementation, as well as the high accuracy of calculating the model parameters.


Author(s):  
K.-H. Herrmann ◽  
E. Reuber ◽  
P. Schiske

Aposteriori deblurring of high resolution electron micrographs of weak phase objects can be performed by holographic filters [1,2] which are arranged in the Fourier domain of a light-optical reconstruction set-up. According to the diffraction efficiency and the lateral position of the grating structure, the filters permit adjustment of the amplitudes and phases of the spatial frequencies in the image which is obtained in the first diffraction order.In the case of bright field imaging with axial illumination, the Contrast Transfer Functions (CTF) are oscillating, but real. For different imageforming conditions and several signal-to-noise ratios an extensive set of Wiener-filters should be available. A simple method of producing such filters by only photographic and mechanical means will be described here.A transparent master grating with 6.25 lines/mm and 160 mm diameter was produced by a high precision computer plotter. It is photographed through a rotating mask, plotted by a standard plotter.


Author(s):  
Peter Rez

In high resolution microscopy the image amplitude is given by the convolution of the specimen exit surface wave function and the microscope objective lens transfer function. This is usually done by multiplying the wave function and the transfer function in reciprocal space and integrating over the effective aperture. For very thin specimens the scattering can be represented by a weak phase object and the amplitude observed in the image plane is1where fe (Θ) is the electron scattering factor, r is a postition variable, Θ a scattering angle and x(Θ) the lens transfer function. x(Θ) is given by2where Cs is the objective lens spherical aberration coefficient, the wavelength, and f the defocus.We shall consider one dimensional scattering that might arise from a cross sectional specimen containing disordered planes of a heavy element stacked in a regular sequence among planes of lighter elements. In a direction parallel to the disordered planes there will be a continuous distribution of scattering angle.


Author(s):  
Hannes Lichte

Generally, the electron object wave o(r) is modulated both in amplitude and phase. In the image plane of an ideal imaging system we would expect to find an image wave b(r) that is modulated in exactly the same way, i. e. b(r) =o(r). If, however, there are aberrations, the image wave instead reads as b(r) =o(r) * FT(WTF) i. e. the convolution of the object wave with the Fourier transform of the wave transfer function WTF . Taking into account chromatic aberration, illumination divergence and the wave aberration of the objective lens, one finds WTF(R) = Echrom(R)Ediv(R).exp(iX(R)) . The envelope functions Echrom(R) and Ediv(R) damp the image wave, whereas the effect of the wave aberration X(R) is to disorder amplitude and phase according to real and imaginary part of exp(iX(R)) , as is schematically sketched in fig. 1.Since in ordinary electron microscopy only the amplitude of the image wave can be recorded by the intensity of the image, the wave aberration has to be chosen such that the object component of interest (phase or amplitude) is directed into the image amplitude. Using an aberration free objective lens, for X=0 one sees the object amplitude, for X= π/2 (“Zernike phase contrast”) the object phase. For a real objective lens, however, the wave aberration is given by X(R) = 2π (.25 Csλ3R4 + 0.5ΔzλR2), Cs meaning the coefficient of spherical aberration and Δz defocusing. Consequently, the transfer functions sin X(R) and cos(X(R)) strongly depend on R such that amplitude and phase of the image wave represent only fragments of the object which, fortunately, supplement each other. However, recording only the amplitude gives rise to the fundamental problems, restricting resolution and interpretability of ordinary electron images:


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