Title: Quartz Crystal Technology
1Quartz Crystal Technology
- Introduction
- Design of Quartz Resonant Sensors
- Design of Pressure Transducers
- Transducer Characteristics Performance
- Applications
Home Page
2Introduction
- The widespread use of digital computers and
digital control systems have generated a need for
high accuracy, inherently digital sensors. - This presentation will discuss the design,
construction, performance, and applications of
resonant quartz crystal pressure transducers.
Home Page
3Background
- Paroscientific is the leader in the field of
precision pressure measurement. The company was
founded in 1972 by Jerome M. Paros after a decade
of research on digital force sensors. Application
of this technology to the pressure
instrumentation field resulted in transducers of
the highest quality and superior performance.
Precision comparable to the best primary
standards is achieved through the use of a
special quartz crystal resonator whose frequency
of oscillation varies with pressure induced
stress. A quartz crystal temperature signal is
provided to thermally compensate the calculated
pressure and achieve high accuracy over a wide
range of temperatures.
Home Page
4Material Properties and Characteristics of
Quartz Sensors
- Piezoelectric pressure-charge generation
- Anisotropic direction-dependent
- Elastic Modulus
- Piezoelectric Constants
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Optical Index of Refraction
- Velocity of Propagation
- Hardness
- Solubility etch rate
- Thermal and Electrical conductivity
Home Page
5Advantages of Quartz Resonant Sensors
- High Resolution More precise measurements can
be made in the time domain than the analog
domain. - Excellent Accuracy The quartz crystal sensors
have superior elastic properties resulting in
excellent repeatability and low hysteresis. - Long Term Stability Quartz crystals are very
stable and are commonly used as frequency
standards in counter-timers, clocks , and
communication systems. - Low Power Consumption
- Low Temperature Sensitivity
- Low Susceptibility to Interference
- Easy to Transmit Over Long Distances
- Easy to Interface With Counter-Timers, Telemetry,
and Digital Computer Systems
Home Page
6Design of Quartz Resonant Sensors
- Single Beam Force Sensors
- Double-Ended Tuning Fork Force Sensors
- Torsional Temperature Sensors
Home Page
7Single Beam Force Sensor Drawing
Single Beam Force Sensor
Isolator Spring
Input Force
Flexure Relief
Mounting Surface
Isolator Mass
Vibrating Beam (Electrodes on Both Sides)
The beam is driven piezoelectrically at its
resonant frequency. Isolator masses and springs
act as a low-pass mechanical filter to minimize
energy losses to the mounting pads resulting in
high Q oscillations.
Home Page
8Single Beam Force Sensor Photo
Loads applied to the mounting pads change the
resonant frequency of the beam. The change in
frequency is a measure of the applied loads.
Home Page
9Double-Ended Tuning Fork Force Sensors Drawing
Double-Ended Tuning Fork Force Sensors
Surface Electrodes
Applied Load
Electrical Exitation Pads
Mounting Pad
Dual Tine Resonators
Applied Load
Two tines vibrate in opposition to minimize
energy losses
Home Page
10Double-Ended Tuning Fork Force Sensors Photo
Produced on quartz wafers by photolithographic
and chemical milling techniques similar to
fabrication of watch crystals
Home Page
11Output Period vs. Force
Resonant Period (microseconds)
28
26
24
22
0
Full Scale Compression
Full Scale Tension
10 Change in Period with Full Scale Load
Home Page
12Torsional Resonator Temperature Sensor
Electrical Exitation Pads
Dual Torsionally Oscilating Tines
Mounting Pad
Quartz resonator used for digital temperature
compensation
Nominal Period of Oscillation5.8 microseconds
Nominal Temperature Sensitivity45 ppm/0C
Home Page
13Wafer of Temperature Sensors
The change in resonant period output is a measure
of temperature used for thermal compensation of
the pressure crystal output.
Home Page
14Quartz Crystal Resonator Pressure Transducers
Internal Vacuum
Balance Weight
Balance Weight
Bourdon Tube
Quartz Crystal Resonator Force Sensor
Case
Quartz Crystal Resonator Force Sensor
Quartz Resonator Temperature Sensor
Quartz Resonator Temperature Sensor
Pressure Input
Bellows
Input Pressure
Pressures applied to the bellows or Bourdon tube
load the Quartz Force Sensors to change the
resonant frequencies. Quartz Temperature Sensors
provide thermal compensation.
Home Page
15Digiquartz Barometer
Balance weights provide acceleration
compensation. The mechanism is hermetically
sealed and evacuated. The internal vacuum
maximizes the crystal Q and serves as the
reference in absolute pressure sensors.
Home Page
16Period Measurement Resolution and Sampling
(fc)
tSensor Output Period 1/Resonant
Frequency NNumber of Periods Transducer period
output, t, gates a high frequency clock, fc, for
N periods and the clock pulses are counted.
Home Page
17Continued
Sampling Time Nt Period Resolution /- 1
Count/(Total Counts)/- 1 / (Nt)(fc)
/- 1 / (Sampling Time)
(fc) Force Resolution /- 10 / (Nt)(fc) (Only
10 of the counts are related to
Force) Example If clock 20 MHz and sampling
time1 second
then the Force Resolution5x10-7 Full Scale
Home Page
18Linearization and Temperature Compensation
Force C1- t 02/ t 2 1-D(1- t 02/ t 2) t
Force Resonator Period Output CScale Factor in
Desired Engineering Units DLinearization
Coefficient t 0Period Output at No Load
(Force0) U(Temperature Sensor
Period)-(Temperature Period at zero 0C) t 0 t 1
t 2U t 3U2 t 4U3 t 5U4 CC1C2UC3U2 DD1D2U T
emperature Y1UY2U2Y3U3 (0C)
Home Page
19Intelligent Instrumentation
Pressure Signal
Temperature Signal
RS-232 or RS-485 Out
RS-232 or RS-485 In
Home Page
20Transducer Characteristics and Performance
- Resolution
- Static Error Band
- Non-repeatability
- Hysteresis
- Conformance
- Environmental Errors
- Temperature
- Acceleration
- Long Term Stability
Home Page
21Noise Versus Record Length
Parts per billion in seconds Parts per million
for years
Home Page
22Tsunami Detection (Earthquake Generated Tidal
Waves)
Sensitivity of 1 mm of Water at Depths of 6000
meters
Home Page
Paroscientific, Inc.
Paroscientific, Inc.
Digiquartz
Digiquartz
Pressure Instrumentation
Pressure Instrumentation
23High Resolution Measurements of Dead Weight
Tester Piston Taper
Measuring piston wear to less than a nanometer
Home Page
24Pressure Hysteresis Measurements on Twenty-Three
Paroscientific Barometers
Number of Units
0
-10
-5
5
10
Pressure Hysteresis in Microbars
Mean Hysteresis -1.3 Microbars
Home Page
25Static Error Band(Non-Repeatability, Hysteresis,
Non-Conformance)
Home Page
26Total Error Band (Over Temperature at Various
Pressures)
Home Page
27Long Term Stability
Median Drift Rate -0.007 hPa
(-0.0002 inHg) per year
Home Page
28Paroscientific, Inc. Overview
- Paroscientific manufactures and sells a complete
line of high precision pressure instrumentation.
Resolution of better than 0.0001 and typical
accuracy of 0.01 are achieved even under
difficult environmental conditions. Other
desirable characteristics include high
reliability, low power consumption, and excellent
long-term stability. Over 30 full scale pressure
ranges are available - from a fraction of an
atmosphere to thousands of atmospheres (3 psid to
40,000 psia). Absolute, gauge, and differential
transducers have been packaged in a variety of
configurations including intelligent
transmitters, depth sensors, portable standards,
water level systems and meteorological
measurement systems. Intelligent electronics have
two-way digital interfaces that allow the user to
adjust sample rates, resolution, engineering
units, and other operational parameters.
Digiquartz products are successfully used in
such diverse fields as hydrology, aerospace,
meteorology, oceanography, process control,
energy exploration, and laboratory
instrumentation.
Home Page
29Digiquartz Application Areas
Home Page