rotation measurement
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

157
(FIVE YEARS 34)

H-INDEX

20
(FIVE YEARS 2)

Author(s):  
Jung-Ho Kim ◽  
Hwang-Hee Jung ◽  
Jae-Ryul Shin ◽  
Seung-Hwan Shin ◽  
Young-Hak Kwak ◽  
...  

Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 1457
Author(s):  
Ling Bu ◽  
Xinbao Hou ◽  
Lanxing Qin ◽  
Zhiwei Wang ◽  
Feng Zhang ◽  
...  

Self-powered triboelectric tachometers have wide application prospects in mechanical and electrical industries. However, traditional disc-type tachometers typically require large contact force, which burdens rotary load and increases frictional wear. To reduce the friction force of triboelectric tachometers, we present an alternative structure defined by flapping between rigid and flexible triboelectric layers. In this work, we further characterize this type of tachometer, with particular focus on the oscillating relationship between output voltage and rotation speed due to the plucking mechanism. This oscillating relationship has been demonstrated both theoretically and experimentally. For future self-powered triboelectric tachometers, the proved oscillating relationship can be applied as calibration criteria for further enhancing sensitivity and linearity in rotation measurement.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huilai Zhang ◽  
Meiyu Peng ◽  
Xun-Wei Xu ◽  
Hui Jing

Abstract Non-Hermitian systems can exhibit unconventional spectral singularities called exceptional points (EPs). Various EP sensors have been fabricated in recent years, showing strong spectral responses to external signals. Here we propose how to achieve a nonlinear anti-parity-time ($\mathcal{APT}$) gyroscope by spinning an optical resonator. We show that, in the absence of any nonlinearity, the sensitivity or optical mode splitting of the linear device can be magnified up to 3 orders than that of the conventional device without EPs. Remarkably, the $\mathcal{APT}$ symmetry can be broken when including the Kerr nonlinearity of the materials and, as the result, the detection threshold can be significantly lowered, i.e., much weaker rotations which are well beyond the ability of a linear gyroscope can now be detected with the nonlinear device. Our work shows the powerful ability of $\mathcal{APT}$ gyroscopes in practice to achieve ultrasensitive rotation measurement.


Author(s):  
Alan J. Ferguson ◽  
David Hester ◽  
Roger Woods

AbstractExisting work on rotation-based bridge monitoring has focused on indirect methods, such as bridge weigh-in-motion or influence line approaches. However, these approaches require increased instrumentation complexity, and require calibration, necessitating bridge closures. In this paper, we explore the potential of using rotation measurements to create a more practical and cost-effective monitoring system. To this end, we present a damage detection method which directly analyses bridge rotation data measured under live, free-flow traffic loading. We show how the Earth Mover’s Distance, typically used in statistics and image processing, can be applied directly on end-of-span rotation measurement data to achieve effective damage detection and localisation. Numerical simulation results demonstrate the approach’s robustness to the confounding effects of temperature variation and traffic diversity (vehicle type, loading, and velocity). The direct rotation measurement approach is applied to data from an in-service short-span bridge to demonstrate the technique’s capability with free-flow traffic loading.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Xu ◽  
Zongren Dai ◽  
Yifan Wang ◽  
Mingfang Li ◽  
Yidong Tan

<div> <p></p><p></p><p>In this paper, a novel optical rotary sensor based on laser self-mixing interferometry is developed for the full-circle rotation measurement. The proposed sensor is convenient to use for it does not need any contact with the target or a cooperative mirror. A prototype is fabricated and tested. The measured results demonstrate a good performance compared with other optical rotary sensors, in terms of the 0.1 μrad resolution, the 2.33×10<sup>-4</sup> linearity and 2 μrad stability over one hour. Additionally, the repeatability error is below 14.66 mrad under 9-group full-circle tests, which exhibits the potential to be instrumentalized reliably. Error analysis and limitation discussion have been also carried out. Although the accuracy needs further improvement compared with the best rotary sensor, this method has its unique advantages of high resolution, non-cooperative target sensing and electromagnetic immunity. Hence, the proposed optical rotary sensor provides a promising alternative in precise rotation measurement, tremor tracing and nano-motion monitoring.</p><p></p><p></p></div><p></p><p>In this paper, a novel optical rotary sensor based on laser self-mixing interferometry is developed for the full-circle rotation measurement. The proposed sensor is convenient to use for it does not need any contact with the target or a cooperative mirror. A prototype is fabricated and tested. The measured results demonstrate a good performance compared with other optical rotary sensors, in terms of the 0.1 μrad resolution, the 2.33×10<sup>-4</sup> linearity and 2 μrad stability over one hour. Additionally, the repeatability error is below 14.66 mrad under 9-group full-circle tests, which exhibits the potential to be instrumentalized reliably. Error analysis and limitation discussion have been also carried out. Although the accuracy needs further improvement compared with the best rotary sensor, this method has its unique advantages of high resolution, non-cooperative target sensing and electromagnetic immunity. Hence, the proposed optical rotary sensor provides a promising alternative in precise rotation measurement, tremor tracing and nano-motion monitoring.</p><p></p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuen-Lin Chen ◽  
Zih-Yan Yang ◽  
Chin-Wei Lin

Abstract Background In the past decades, different diseases and viruses, such as Ebola, MERS and COVID-19, impacted the human society and caused huge cost in different fields. With the increasing threat from the new or unknown diseases, the demand of rapid and sensitive assay method is more and more urgent. Results In this work, we developed a magneto-optical biochip based on the Cotton–Mouton effect of γ-Fe2O3@Au core/shell magnetic nanoparticles. We performed a proof-of-concept experiment for the detection of the spike glycoprotein S of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The assay was achieved by measuring the magneto-optical Cotton–Mouton effect of the biochip. This magneto-optical biochip can not only be used to detect SARS-CoV-2 but also can be easily modified for other diseases assay. Conclusion The assay process is simple and the whole testing time takes only 50 min including 3 min for the CM rotation measurement. The detection limit of our method for the spike glycoprotein S of SARS-CoV-2 is estimated as low as 0.27 ng/mL (3.4 pM). Graphic abstract


2021 ◽  
Vol 92 (10) ◽  
pp. 105004
Author(s):  
Jue Zhang ◽  
Xincai Zhao ◽  
Guanghua Chen ◽  
Qixian Peng

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raj Kolamuri ◽  
Zilin Si ◽  
Yufan Zhang ◽  
Arpit Agarwal ◽  
Wenzhen Yuan

2021 ◽  
pp. 193864002110291
Author(s):  
Pablo Wagner ◽  
Nicole Lescure ◽  
Noman Siddiqui ◽  
Jessica Fink ◽  
Emilio Wagner

Background Medial column internal rotation in hallux valgus (HV) can be measured using weight-bearing computed tomography (WBCT). Anteroposterior weight-bearing foot radiographs’ (WBXR) ability to estimate medial column internal rotation in HV was evaluated comparing these measurements with those obtained from WBCT. Methods Three observers evaluated WBCT and WBXR of 33 HV feet twice. Medial column internal rotation was measured with WBCT and classified into 3 levels according to WBXR findings. Intra- and interobserver reliability were obtained for WBXR and WBCT, in addition to WBXR-WBCT correlation. Results WBXR and WBCT intraobserver agreement was substantial and near perfect, respectively (κ 0.79 and 0.84). Their interobserver agreement was excellent (intraclass correlation 0.85 and 0.9, respectively). The WBXR-WBCT correlation was substantial (κ 0.68). WBXR diagnostic accuracy to predict the WBCT results was 85%. Conclusions The proposed method for medial column internal rotation measurement using WBXR is reliable and has a substantial agreement with WBCT measurements. Levels of Evidence Level III


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document