Description
UNITARY TRANSDUCER CONTROL SYSTEM
TECHNICAL FIELD AND DEFINITIONS
The present invention relates in general to a method and apparatus for controlling the motion or vibration of mechanical systems. More specifically, the invention describes a method for employing a single transducer for both the detection of motion and/or vibration and the application of motive force for the purpose of influencing and controlling the motion and/or vibration.
Definition of Terms and Discussion of Suitable Transducers for use in the Invention:
The terms "subject" and "subject mass" shall refer to the thing being controlled. As used herein these terms include but are not limited to a elastic mechanical system capable of one or more modes of vibration. The term "control system" shall refer to the entire means coupled to the subject and employed to influence the state of the subject according to a reference or guiding signal or signals.
The term "controller" shall refer to the circuit means connected to the transducer. The controller comprises the sensing circuitry, the signal processing circuitry and the actuating circuitry that exists for the purpose of causing the subject to behave in accordance with a reference input.
The term "reference" shall refer to information about the desired state of the subject that may be provided to the control system. The control system's goal is to make the state of the subject conform to the reference. The reference information may be time domain data, frequency domain data, wavelet data, or any form appropriate to the particular calculations and algorithms of the control system. All control systems have a reference input, though in some cases this input may be implicit rather than explicit. For example, an input of zero may exist implicitly in a system designed only to dampen vibration.
The term "correction signal" shall refer to the output of the processor in the control system. It is the signal that the controller calculates must be applied to the transducer actuating time-channel in order to compel the subject's state to conform to the reference. In standard control system terminology, the term "error signal" roughly corresponds to the present term "correction signal". In one embodiment of the invention described herein, there is an error signal that is distinct from the correction signal. The term "transducer" shall refer to the physical means through which the control system interacts with the subject. A "sensing transducer" inputs information about the subject to the control system. A "forcing transducer", also known herein as an "actuator", outputs a force under direction of the control system to effect changes in the state of the subject. A transducer may be capable of functioning as only a sensor, or as only a source of force, or as both. A transducer employed in the control system of this invention serves both functions, i.e., sensing and actuating. The term "damping" shall refer to active damping as against passive damping. Passive damping is an example of a shorted generator and as such the power of the applied damping cannot be more than that available from the subject mass itself. In contrast to this, one of the present invention's capabilities is active damping, defined herein as the removal of energy from a vibrating mechanical system by the deliberate application of amplified force in opposition to the vibration.
Transducers capable of reciprocal, complimentary sensing and forcing functions and thus suitable for use with the present invention include but are not limited to the following:
Electromagnetic transducers that generate a signal in response to a changing magnetic field and emit magnetic force as a result of an applied current; and
Piezoelectric transducers that generate a voltage signal in response to a change in mechanical stress and change shape or exert a force in response to an applied voltage.
One contrasting example of a transducer that is not suitable for use with the invention is of the photo- modulation type. In this transducer, the motion of the subject modulates the transmission of light to a photo receptor, yielding a signal representative of that motion. This transducer is capable of sensing but not of actuating. BACKGROUND ART AND OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
Time-Channel Isolation Between Sensor and Actuator: One goal of the invention is to solve the problem of unwanted coupling between sensor and actuator. For example, a prior art musical string sustaining system displayed in U.S. Patent No. 5,523,526 ("Λ526 patent"), presents a variety of techniques for overcoming the problem of unwanted coupling between actuators and sensors in a control system, but none is as simple or as successful in practice as the present invention. In a control system, loop gain is often limited primarily by the degree of the direct response of the sensor to the actuator. Known techniques to reduce this include shielding between sensor and actuator and subtraction of unwanted coupling. The goal of all such techniques is that the sensor should sense the state of the subject but not of the actuator. In the present invention, isolation is accomplished by time-separation. Sensing is performed at a time after the application of force has been stopped, when field effects that create unwanted coupling have subsided.
Thus the sensor reads the new state of the subject resulting from the previous application of force, but the sensor does not respond to the actuating force itself.
The present invention provides any arbitrary degree of time-channel isolation. As it is possible to wait almost forever between forcing and sensing events, the isolation can be almost infinite. In practice, there is a trade-off between isolation and sampling frequency. The parameters of this compromise are dependent upon the particular transducer technology and material composition. Combinations of technologies and materials that support an extraordinary degree of isolation at relatively high sampling rates do exist; an electromagnetic transducer employing magnetic materials having low losses at high frequencies is but one example.
Control of Multiple Subjects in Parallel:
It is a further goal of the invention that a plurality of subjects and associated control systems may operate in close proximity to each other without significant compromise. Each subject, individually associated with one instance of the control system, may be controlled by a unique control loop function or by the same control loop function without cross interference between the control systems. This is facilitated by the definite and discrete timing structure of the invention. As a result, a plurality of parallel control systems may be synchronized in time. All sensing events and actuating event time channels may be coincident. Within such an array of control systems, any one control system's sensing function may be as isolated in time from an adjacent control system's actuating event as it is from its own actuating event .
Scaling of Mass and Frequency:
A further goal of the invention is that it should be applicable to subjects having small mass as well as those having large mass. The invention exhibits a natural complimentary scaling of mass and frequency: A decrease in transducer and subject geometry favors an increase in operating frequency and vice versa. Everything may be scaled together in a complimentary fashion, permitting a wide latitude of application.
Compact Design:
Another goal of the invention is that the transducer means be of compact design. The single transducer of the invention provides an advantage in this respect over prior, dual transducer systems.
Sensing of Velocity and of Position:
A further object of the invention is to enable the sensing of both velocity and position of the subject mass. In cases where an electromagnetic transducer is employed it is possible to exploit the settling behavior of the actuation transient to detect the proximity of the subject mass. This facilitates control of both position and motion. A detailed explanation of this follows further below.
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incrementally according to the phase of vibration, but the position changes very little if at all. The criterion is of course perfectly met in the case where the invention is employed to dampen all motion of the subject. The significance of this can be appreciated by considering the conventional case of spatially separated actuator and sensor control systems. If the subject is a complex mechanical system, the transfer characteristic through it involves time delay and phase shift that may vary as a complex function of frequency. This transfer characteristic appears in the overall control loop function and must be compensated if stable and accurate control is to be achieved. A significant body of prior art is devoted to solving exactly this problem. U.S. Patent Nos. 5,652,799 and 5,409,078 are two examples of many patents disclosing control systems using multiple sensors and actuators and necessitating various computationally expensive adaptive filters and algorithms to solve different manifestations of the same basic problem. The present invention eliminates this problem and can greatly simplify many existing control systems. Precise and stable control of the subject at the position where the transducer couples to the subject is achieved without computationally expensive compensation filters. Control of Subjects Having Changing Mechanical Characteristics :
Subjects that exhibit resonances that change in frequency rapidly and unpredictably over time pose a very difficult control system problem. Fixed compensation schemes are ruled out as a control solution since such a system is constantly and unpredictably changing. Adaptive algorithms are computationally expensive and may require too much time to converge to keep up with the changing subject. Such subjects are difficult, expensive and/or impossible to control using known control means employing separate sensing and actuating transducers.
A corollary benefit of the single transducer concept of this invention is that its simple delay-term control loop transfer characteristic is independent of the transfer characteristics of the subject being controlled. Thus the
present invention is capable of controlling subjects having physical dynamics that change quickly over time.
One interesting example of such a "variable" subject is the mechanical system consisting of a vibrating musical instrument string upon which a musician is playing. In the act of fretting and plucking the string, the musician frequently and abruptly changes the length and therefore the natural vibrating frequencies of the string. A control system coupled to the string for the purpose of controlling the vibration of the string would be subject to the difficulties described above. However, the present invention is able to control a vibrating string, as is discussed in detail further below.
Complete Harmonic Control: It is an objective of the invention to provide a means of precise and discriminatory control of each and all important modes of vibration of a subject mass. Using the invention, the most basic and opposite forms of vibration control, the promotion of vibration and the dampening of vibration, are simple to achieve and do not require any filters in the control loop. Between these extremes are found many interesting and useful functions made possible by the invention's capability of promoting and sustaining some modes of vibration while inhibiting and dampening others. To accomplish this, the force exerted by the transducer upon the subject must be precisely controlled with respect to frequency, amplitude, phase, polarity, and must be a suitable function of the past motion of the subject. In this context, promotion of all vibration and damping of all vibration are seen as special cases of the more general case of complete harmonic control.
Patents such as the λ526 patent discloses an imprecise means of achieving some control of which harmonics are promoted in a string vibration sustaining system, but there does not seem to be any prior art that discloses means of systematically, reliably and completely achieving this objective. As will be explained in detail below, the present invention makes possible the practical realization of complete harmonic control.
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between the transducer and the subject, the physical reference frame of the transducer directly affects the subject. It appears to be taken as convention in many patents that the force transducer is assumed to be at rest with some implied absolute reference frame, but in practice it is necessary to consider the reaction of the transducer to the force it exerts against the subject mass. For example, a transducer that promotes or suppresses vibration in the subject should itself have sufficient mass so as not to vibrate in anti-phase with the subject mass. Alternately or additionally the transducer should rest upon some other thing with sufficient mass or stiffness to produce the desired effect .
Within the limits indicated, the present invention makes possible lower cost and simpler control systems for controlling subjects that previously required control systems employing computationally expensive adaptive and fixed compensation signal processing means. Furthermore, the present invention extends' closed loop control to the control of subjects that could not be effectively controlled with previous systems.
Some Shortcomings of Prior Art Utilizing Separate Sensing and Actuating Units:
Consider the simple application of dynamic damping of a fixed mechanical subject, as disclosed in U.S. Patent No.
5,321,474 (" 74 patent") that utilizes a separate actuator and sensor for the purpose of damping the vibration in an electrode wire in a xerographic apparatus. In the system disclosed in the 74 patent, damping is produced only in the specific case where each mode of vibration is exactly countered by a force in opposition to it. The overall control loop' s transfer function includes the mechanical transfer function of the wire. The output of the sensor must be processed by a loop compensation filter that adjusts the phase of the canceling signal fed to the driver to compensate for the phase shift through the wire from driver to sensor so that the force produced by the driver may properly act to inhibit vibration of the wire at the sensor. The wire's vibrations can be damped only because the characteristics of the wire as a mechanical system are mostly fixed and
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of subject 36 in accordance with reference 22. The processor 24 contains signal processing means of analog, digital, optical, or any other type for effecting any appropriate control algorithm for controlling the behavior of subject 36 in a manner according to reference signal 22 and control input 20. The processor 24 also contains conventional means (not shown) for generating timing signals for controlling system events and forming the actuating signal according to its corrected calculated correction. In summary, the controller is programmed to sample the transducer output signal during the sensing time channel of each successive time frame and for applying the actuating signal to the transducer (i.e., to the sensing/actuating circuit) during an actuating time channel of each successive time frame.
In some applications the subject will be excited by mechanical events external to the control system but in other applications it may be necessary or advantageous to provide an external signal input 21 ("excitation signal") to the transducer sensor/ actuator circuit during the actuating time channel to excite the subject or to change its position. The excitation signal may be of any suitable form including a noise signal, a fixed level or an impulse. It should be noted that the reference signal 22 need not have a finite value, but may have a non-value or zero depending upon the application. For example, a vibration damping application may not require an explicit reference (or an input signal at 21). The reference then would be implicitly zero. In contrast, a harmonic control application may require a spectral profile signal 22 as a reference and an impulse input signal 21 to initiate vibration of the subject. The reference may include additional data such as ambient temperature, time of day etc. The nature of the reference signal will depend on the application. The control system can be understood by examining Fig. 1 with respect to the timing diagram of Fig. 2. The interval from t0 to t represents one complete frame of events and it is understood that frames repeat sequentially during operation, i.e., t4 is really t0 of the next frame. Signals
26 and 28 are shown in the timing diagram of Fig. 2 and correspond to signals 26 and 28 of Fig. 1.
Initially, signal 28 is low or de-asserted and switch 34 is off. Amplifier 14 is responsive to transducer output
5 signal 12 developed by transducer 10 and informative of the state of subject 36. At time t0, signal 26 from the processor commands block 18 to sample signal 16. At time t^ signal 26 is turned off and stable sample output signal 20 is presented to processor 24. Time t0 to tτ thus constitutes the sample
10 acquisition time. Signal 20 also constitutes the sampled transducer output of the system and provides a means to monitor the motion of the subject.
Between tτ and t2 processor 24 calculates a correction signal or signals as a function of the sample input 20 and
15 reference 22. The output signal 30 from the processor represents the correction signal in the absence of input 21 and after amplification, via amplifier 32, is supplied via switch 34 to the sensor actuator circuit 11 of the transducer. The correction signal modulates the actuating
20 signal that is used to actuate the transducer and all of this occurs within the same frame time so the bandwidth-governing loop response delay time is much smaller than the time between samples. This is the minimal delay method and results in the greatest system bandwidth. An alternate
25 scheme allows more calculation time at the expense of increased loop delay. In the alternate scheme processor 24 has available the entire duration from tx to t4 of frame n to calculate a correction for the frame n+1. In this pipeline mode of operation, processor 24 would output the stored
30 result of a previous calculation while simultaneously calculating the correction signal for the next frame.
The minimal delay method allows greater bandwidth but less time for calculation. The pipeline method provides more time for calculations at the expense of greater delay and
35 consequent lower bandwidth. Both methods can by used either singly or together. Complex control system calculations could involve several stored past values of signal 20 spanning several frames. In contrast, damping of vibration can be achieved with a processor block 24 calculation as simple as
, Q the inversion and amplification of signal 20. Such damping
can therefore be achieved with absolutely the minimum possible delay and therefore the greatest bandwidth. All such processor block 24 methods and control calculations are intended to fall within the spirit and scope of the invention.
The actuating event begins at t2 when signal 28 closes switch 34 and initiates a force that acts between the transducer and the subject. At t3, signal 28 returns to its rest state and switch 34 is opened. Note that the actuating event may proceed for some time after t3 due to energy stored in the transducer but by design the actuating event will have subsided to provide the required degree of isolation before t4. (t4 is in fact t0 of the next frame) .
There are two basic methods available for causing the transducer's actuating force to be proportional to the calculated correction output of processor 24. The first method achieves amplitude modulation of the actuator while the second method achieves pulse-width modulation of the actuator. This second method is more efficient as it allows low loss power switching techniques to be employed, though it will generate more electromagnetic interference than the first method.
In the amplitude proportional method, switch 34 connects drive amplifier 32 to the transducer at time t2. The output of amplifier 32 is an amplified signal directly proportional to output 30 of processor 24. As a consequence transducer 10 exerts a force proportional to the output of processor 24 upon subject 36 for the entire fixed interval t2-t3. This may be termed "pulse amplitude modulation" or "PAM". In a variation of PAM, during each event frame output 30 of processor 24 may consist of a smoothly shaped curve such as a cosine shaped pulse that begins and ends at zero and that is amplitude and polarity modulated according to that frame's calculated correction value. The output of amplifier 32 may be a current rather than a voltage. When such a current pulse amplitude modulation scheme is used in conjunction with an electromagnetic transducer, a subtle benefit is gained. The output impedance of the actuating circuit remains high at all times so there is no passive damping of the subject during the actuation interval.
In the time proportional method, amplifier 32 provides a fixed magnitude signal of a polarity controlled by signal 30, and the magnitude output of processor 24 is expressed as the on-time of switch 34 controlled by the pulse duration of signal 28. (Note that in this case the time proportional actuating signal is converted from the correction output of processor 24 via signal 30 and signal 28.) The transducer thus exerts an actuating force during some part of the interval t2-t3. The duration is proportional to the calculated output of processor 24. Either or both edges of signal 28 may be modulated, but all assertions of signal 28 must occur within the interval t2 - t3. This may be termed "pulse width modulation", or "PWM".
Many variations of the foregoing are possible. Both methods may be used in combination. Switch 34 may be realized implicitly as an attribute of amplifier 32 as could be the case if amplifier 32 was a bipolar current source. Switch 34 may be two switches, one connected between the transducer and a positive source and the other connected between the transducer and a negative source; signal 28 would then be steered to the appropriate switch according to the desired polarity. To achieve pulse width modulation, either or both edges of the actuating signal may be modulated by the correction signal during the interval t2 -t3. All such variations are considered to be subsumed within the invention's concept that the force applied to the subject by the transducer is proportional to the correction signal output of a control block algorithm or calculation and occurs during a prescribed portion of the frame time that does not overlap the sensing time interval.
When switch 34 is opened at t3, the actuating force begins to abate and the transducer returns to its sensing mode. The system is allowed to settle for the remaining duration of the frame time up to t4, when the next frame begins and a fresh sample of the new state of subject 36 is taken by the means previously described (t4 of one frame is coincident with t0 of the next frame) .
Subject 36 will be have been moved, accelerated, decelerated or otherwise incrementally affected by the force applied during each event frame. A succession of event frames
constitutes piece-wise control of the subject's state or behavior .
Referring now to Figs. 3-7 various transducer configuration suitable for use in the control system are illustrated. As shown in Fig. 3, it may be advantageous to use a plurality of separate windings on a single pole piece 64 of an electromagnetic transducer, for example employing one such winding for the actuating current and a second winding for the sensing function. The two windings and associated terminals 60a and 62a would collectively constitute the transducer sensor/actuator circuit. As windings 60 and 62 would be closely coupled to one another, the resulting device would retain the essential characteristics of a single winding transducer. The absence of direct electrical coupling between the actuating and the sensing circuits does not thwart the intent of the invention and indeed may be an advantage in some implementations .
Fig. 4 shows a piezoelectric transducer with electrodes 72a and terminals 70 constituting the sensor actuator circuit. Piezoelectric structure 72 may itself be the direct subject of a control system in a manner analogous to the arrangement of Fig. 8. Alternately, structure 72 may be mechanically coupled to a distinct subject mass. In either case, deforming stress of structure 72 will give rise to a field voltage that can be sensed between the electrodes at termination 70 during the sensing control interval. During the actuating interval, termination 70 can be driven with a voltage that would cause piezoceramic structure 72 to change shape and/or transmit mechanical force to a subject. A piezoelectric transducer is thus shown to be suitable for use with the invention.
Fig. 5 shows a transducer 78 similar to that of Fig. 4, but with separate electrode pairs, i.e., 78a and 78b constituting the sensor/actuator circuit, the pair 78a and termination 74 for sensing and pair 78b and termination 76 for actuating. This is the piezoelectric analog to the transducer of Fig. 3 and the same explanations apply.
As shown in Fig. 6, the unitary or single transducer arrangement of the present invention may include two separate magnetic cores 80 and 84 and windings 82 and 88 which are
connected together. The cores and associated windings are deployed in parallel with windings and magnetic poles reversed. An external interfering field would induce one signal phase on winding 82 and an opposite, canceling signal phase on counter-wound coil 88. This arrangement is the familiar "hum-bucking" pickup arrangement that rejects external impinging magnetic fields. When used with the present invention, this configuration has the added advantage of reducing electromagnetic interference, (EMI) . Fields emanating from the two cores during the actuation interval cancel in space as they propagate. Any vibrating ferrous subject within coupling proximity of the tops of magnets 80 and 84 generates an equal voltage of the same phase on both windings 82 and 84 that can be sensed and sampled by a control system. When the same paralleled windings are driven by a control system actuator current, the action of the resulting magnetic field is such that the magnetic field modulation in magnet 80 and 84 has the same phase with respect to the subject, so the arrangement can exert control forces upon the subject. It will be obvious to one skilled in the art that there are several ways to achieve the objectives of the circuit of Fig. 6. Notably, winding 88 can be wound in the same direction as winding 82 and cross-connected with winding 82 rather than directly paralleled as shown, with much the same effect. Also, one of the windings may be passive, not coupled to the subject and/or not wound upon a magnet but existing only for the purpose of canceling external fields. In summary, with respect to the subject, the whole transducer assembly acts substantially as though it was one single magnet and winding, with the exception that it rejects external interference, and all such transducer assemblies are within the scope of the invention.
Different shapes of transducers are possible. Fig. 7 for example shows a solenoid 92 in the shape of a semicircle. Either or both poles of magnet 90 could be coupled to a subject.
Under certain circumstances the subject mass of the control system may itself form part of the transducer. In the example shown as Fig. 8, a stretched steel wire 42 is the subject of a control system that acts to promote or inhibit
vibrations upon the wire. The same wire 42 serves as the conductive element of the electromagnetic transducer of the control system. The subject wire 42 is stretched between anchors 44 and 46 and its endpoints and is electrically
5 connected to controller 48 via connector wires 50 and 52
Vibrating wire 42 cuts the lines of force produced by magnet 39 and generates a voltage proportional to velocity across the wire that is sensed during the sensing interval by controller 48, a controller according to the present
10 invention. During the actuating interval, controller 48 directs an actuator current through wire 42 that is proportional to the control function' s response to the sensed subject velocity and reference information 22. This current gives rise to a magnetic field that interacts with the
15 magnetic field emanating from the magnet 40 and produces an attractive or repulsive magnetic force between the wire and the magnet. Over a series of such events, wire 42 is compelled to follow the reference. If the reference is zero, the result is the dampening of vibration. 0 In the case of Fig. 8 the subject is the conducting wire 42 of the transducer, but it may be easily seen that magnet 39 could be the subject and the winding fixed. These kinds of variations are found when the general principle is applied in the field of electric motors, for example.
_5 The transducer arrangement of Fig. 9 is an alternative to the more familiar transducer arrangement presented in Fig. 8. A very similar explanation applies. The only difference is that the stretched wire 42 is not electrically connected to controller 48. Instead, controller 48 is connected to a 0 coil of wire 41 wound around magnet 40. During the sensing interval, vibration of subject wire 42 varies the reluctance of the flux path surrounding magnet 40 and generates a voltage proportional to the velocity of wire 42. During the actuating interval, actuating current passing through coil 41 5 gives rise to a magnetic field that, according to polarity, adds to or subtracts from the static field of the magnet and therefore modulates the pull of the magnet upon wire 42. There are workshop differences between the arrangements of Fig. 8 and Fig. 9, but the principle of operation is much the 0 same. In the most general case, it does not matter that the
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amplitude of vibration is at a null. The string is plucked by the musician and a voltage wave proportional to the velocity of the string develops across transducer winding 41 of Fig. 9. This voltage wave is sampled by controller 48 during the sensor-time channel interval. During the actuating time-channel, controller 48 applies a pulse to the transducer that either lessens or increases the magnetic field pulling upon the string. Thus is described one discrete control frame. Each such frame has the effect of giving the string a little shove that is integrated by the mass of the string and contributes to a small change in its vibration. A succession of similar control frame events strongly controls the vibration of the string. The effect may be heard acoustically if the string 42 and anchors 46 and 44 are deployed upon a suitable acoustic instrument body, or the sample stream output 20 may be externally monitored by a conventional instrument amplifier.
Detailed Description of a Particular Application of the Invention Fig. 10 is a detailed circuit diagram of the control system shown in Fig. 9. Both Fig 9 and Fig. 10 are specific instances of the general scheme of Fig. 1. Within Fig. 10, outlined circuit section 180 represents a block 24 of Fig. 1, while the rest of Fig 10 represents one means of realizing the actuating and sensing time channel circuitry of Fig. 1 in a system based upon an electromagnetic transducer.
Within the controller circuitry of Fig. 10, a bank of controllable filters is included within the feedback path of the control loop. The spectral profile of the subject's actual vibration is obtained through Fourier transform of a sequence of samples derived from the transducer during sensing intervals. Said profile is compared to a spectral profile signal supplied as a reference and an error profile signal is generated. Each element within the error profile controls its corresponding filter signal from the filter bank to produce a correction signal that drives the transducer during the actuation time-channel intervals. Accordingly, frequency specific regenerative and degenerative forces are applied to the subject to minimize the error profile. The subject mass is caused to vibrate with a spectral profile
that matches the reference spectral profile to the best degree possible, considering the subject's available modes of vibration.
The following description of the circuit of Fig. 10 is best read with reference to Fig. 11 and Fig. 12. The waveforms of certain circuit nodes of Fig. 10 are shown in Figures 11 and 12 and bear the same reference numbers.
Referring to Fig. 10, a transducer 100 consists of a coil of wire 100a wound about a cylindrical permanent magnet 100b. The transducer is deployed under ferrous steel wire string 42 stretched between anchors 46 and 44. String 42 has been plucked and is therefore vibrating. During the sensing interval a voltage vl04 representative of the string's velocity is therefore generated across the sensor/actuator circuit (terminals 100c and coil 100a) of transducer 100 and is applied to buffering and scaling amplifier 124, via capacitor 102 and resistor 104. Resistors 120 and 122 determine the gain of amplifier 124. The output of amplifier 124 is applied to one terminal of electronic switch 126. Switch 126 is controlled by signal 134 that is developed by timing generator 132. Within timing generator block 132 are shown waveforms representative of the voltage signals 134 and 136. These same signals are shown relative to other signals in Figures 11 and 12. Signal 134 is the sample acquisition signal. The positive pulse of signal 134 closes switch 126 during t0 - tτ and capacitor 128 acquires a sample of the voltage output of amplifier 124. Said sample is buffered by amplifier 130 and becomes signal 160 that is available both as an output of the system and as an input to processing block 180 shown in dashed lines. Output 160 is a sampled representation of the velocity waveform of string 42. Output 160 is applied to an analog to digital converter (D/A) 157 and the digitized samples are then fed into an algorithmic process that incorporates a number of past stored samples and calculates the magnitude of harmonics in the signal by means of the well known Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) shown as block 158. Spectral Magnitude Subtractor 162 subtracts the resulting spectrum of the actual signal from a target spectrum supplied as reference 156 and generates a set of difference or error signals one of which is signal 166.
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Ω 3 (D cn Hi cn σ J β) Ω P- 3 P1 rt PJ s a Hi cn O O φ Hi rt Hi P1 o o P- Φ cn tr P- cn P- Hi
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the intent, spirit and scope of the present invention.
Systems that dampen all vibration and systems that sustain vibration are special cases of the general case presented above. If the reference 156 is zero at all frequencies, correction signal 152 of summing block 178 will deliver degenerative feedback to the string at all frequencies. If the reference is maximal at all frequencies, then signal 152 will deliver regenerative feedback at all frequencies. In these two special cases, the entire circuitry of blocksl57, 158, 162, 170, and the multipliers can be dispensed with. Output 160 could be connected directly to multiplier 172, replacing signal 168 and the reference would be applied directly as signal 166 to the same multiplier. With this simplified configuration, a reference of +1 would cause the string's vibrations to sustain while a reference of -1 would cause the string's vibrations to be dampened. A simple circuit can thus be constructed to achieve these two aims without the complexity of the digital signal processing required to achieve complete, independent control of all of the string's harmonics. Even that minimal version of the invention would achieve the aim of the electrode damping system disclosed in the aforementioned 74 patent and the basic objective of the string vibration sustaining system disclosed in the λ526 patent. Circuit area 180 of Fig. 10 has been deliberately presented with some ambiguity with respect to whether digital signal processing ("DSP") or analog signal processing circuitry is employed. As discussed above, the basic functions of sustain and damping can be realized without DSP using simple analog components. Certainly the FFT function is better realized digitally. Filter bank 170, the multipliers, the summing block and a pulse-width modulator ("PWM") to be described could be deployed using analog circuits and simple logic gates as shown in Fig. 10. However, it is expected that modern advanced realizations of the invention will implement all of the functionality of circuit area 180 most economically using A/D and D/A converters and DSP programs. Correction signal 152, shown graphically in Figures 11 and 12, is applied to a PWM circuit. Comparator 142 detects the polarity of signal 152. Absolute value calculator 150
applies the magnitude of signal 152 to one input of comparator 140. The other input of comparator 140 is supplied by signal 136, a voltage ramp that occurs identically during every time interval t2 _ t3 of every frame as shown in Fig. 11. The maximum magnitude of signal 152 is constrained by design to never exceed the most positive ramp voltage. The polarity and shape of the ramp voltage is illustrated within block 132 and in Fig. 11. The comparison of the signal magnitude against this ramp voltage produces a PWM signal that is active only during the t2. t3 frame interval. AND gates 146 and 148 and inverter 144 perform a data directing function according to the polarity-sensing output of comparator 142. The data director function directs the PWM signal to either signal line 149 or 147 but not to both, according to the polarity of signal 152. This completes the PWM function description. Any circuit or DSP program that could be functionally substituted for the PWM circuit just described would fall within the spirit and intent of the invention. Switches 108 and 110 may be bipolar, MOSFET, IGBT transistor switches or any other suitable kind. Voltage translation and buffering circuitry for driving these switches with signals 147 and 149 from the AND gates is not shown, but one skilled in the art will have no difficulty supplying such details.
Assume the particular present control frame signal processing block 180 has calculated that a positive output of some force duration is required to achieve the aims of its algorithm. Gate 146 then asserts signal 149 for the calculated time interval. This closes switch 108 and connects the transducer sensor/actuator circuit to voltage source 116. Current il04 ramps up through the transducer 100 (more specifically winding 100a) . The volt-seconds stored in the inductance of transducer 100 is proportional to the time switch 108 remains closed. Waveform il04 of Fig. 11 and Fig 12 shows current il04. Once switch 108 is opened the stored energy in the transducer inductance must discharge. The transducer inductance, in trying to maintain previous current, snaps voltage vl04 down against catch diode 114. See waveform vl04 of Fig. 11. Current then flows from
^ LO LO N3 - ' - ' Lπ
O Lπ o Lπ o Lπ o
J LO Co O Lπ O O
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PJ Ω Ω rt rt cn rt rt P- d d P P- m d O tr βJ P- P rt P1 * 0 rt P- in rt d rt O rt rt P
P O 0 d tr Φ < 03 Ω Ω cn O tr Ω 3 P- P O Ω • 3 Φ Ω P P- rt P- J P- 03
Ω P- P PJ φ a β P» • φ Φ cn P PJ Φ PJ P1 P • P T a P- 03 P rt rt tr 0 3 φ ιj P
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P φ tr φ φ J Hi O d Ω P- O 0 • φ Ω cn PJ Ω cn rt rt d tr PJ Φ d Tl P- Ω P P- 0 0 u O CΛ O rt P P P-- J Hi rt βj P- P a P- d ts d Φ P- P P Pi rt P- < d en p3 3 PJ
P- Ω rt O P Φ Hi CΛ IJ P- cn P- a rt rt rt rt T 03 Φ P1 a n φ rt TJ Ω rt P- rt J O P- P- z 3 Tl rt d 03 IJ d rt Ω rt a rt d O cn < d CΛ d • PJ d 1 O " tr P β)
P1 P- P rt P P- P- tr P . tr rt O P- O d PJ d P- rt CΛ rt rt rt 0 P- rt CΛ cn Φ Hi 03
P1 P1 TJ O rt P rt 03 φ P- tr 3 rt P- σ Ω O P Φ rt rt {-• Φ rt P> O P- P O Φ P- 0 O Φ
"< CΛ d O a tr d Hi PJ βJ PJ rt φ Hi cn tr O 0 tr O 0 P P a Ω rt Hi rt IJ rt O P- φ IJ TJ P- 0 rt PJ tr TJ Φ Pi rt Φ Ω rt Hi rt 03 . P- rt O P- ιj 3 < rt βj P rt P IJ Φ tr P TJ Φ Tl tr rt J P- tr J ιj Ω tr P O rt βJ PJ P" tr ιj O Φ Z 03 P- cn φ a < d Φ X rt P- ιj tr a rt σ PJ Φ βJ rt βJ a P tr P rt 0 φ Hi O P < P- CΛ φ • TJ rt 03 d PJ a ^ O 3 A P tr t-3 rt CΛ p- cn P- 4
Ω rt C P- rt 0 Φ P" rt P1 τ tr • Hi Φ J P- Ω T) TJ d CO P- tr P- < O cn a O cn Ω CΛ O a IJ φ 0 IJ d CΛ Φ H rt PJ IJ 3 P tr PJ P- a cn < 0 a Hi d P PJ to
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P- IJ en 03 tr Pi Φ P- rl P- P • O P J P P- O P CΛ 3 3 cn Φ CΛ P P- rt a 0 • a rt \ a Ω PJ O P- TJ Φ rt rt 0 O 03 P- CΛ T d 03 rt 0 tr P1 d P ιj PJ P s P P p- 3 O ιj O P N 0 Ω rt 3 rt P- rt Φ TJ rt P- IJ J M Ω LO a βj βJ Ω P- O cn 0 03 φ TJ O O tr Hi φ d O rt tr PJ •< P H Ω 0 tr O βJ O 4-. φ "" 0 TJ P rt P IJ a a O N PJ Hi Hi Pi rt 3 tr φ ^ 03 PJ P- P P P1
TJ d IJ Ω 3 TJ cn d d P- Hi rt O O P p. rt Φ O TJ T P- O P Hi βj P1
TJ 03 rt ^ O P β a PJ rt O Ω Hi O Φ PJ φ rt tr Φ d PJ cn TJ P- Hi Hi en P- rt P O 00 φ tr O P 0 P- P- d rt tr rt P- rt PJ a N Φ a Ω rt IJ 0 P O a Ω tr a Hi β PJ P a P Ω O tr IJ O tr tr Φ J tr IJ β Hi cn Ω rt d PJ cn
IJ rt P φ • a IJ CJ β Ω tr p O O rt φ P- tr 0 rt rt
PJ a Ω IJ PJ •J rt IJ rt 3 > Ω CΛ Hi O PJ rt d O P1 CΛ r O o Φ rt P1 IJ P- 3 ι O ? CΛ IJ rt P- a z IJ ^ p- φ TJ
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both circuits.
The simple transducer 100 of Fig. 10 may be advantageously replaced by a "humbucking" transducer of the type shown in Fig. 6. This connection, known for several decades and in the public domain, tends to cancel external interference during the sensing interval. When used with the present invention the humbucking connection tends to reduce the electric field emitted by the transducer during the actuating interval. This later advantage is important in helping devices built from the invention to pass emission limits set by the FCC and other regulatory bodies.
For simplicity, the circuit of Fig. 10 used to actuate the transducer is shown as a half-bridge with switches 108 and 110. A full bridge consisting of four switches may be employed to drive the transducer with twice the voltage with the same power supplies used for the half-bridge. The relative merits and implementations of full-bridges and half bridges as drivers for transducer loads are well known in the art of switching amplifiers and linear amplifiers and all such circuits that are suitable fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
The specific examples presented herein are intended to clarify the invention but not to limit its scope. Many different embodiments of the present invention are possible and will prove applicable to motion and vibration control problems in many fields. All fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.