PIEZOELECTRIC EFFECT.
The piezoelectric effect was discovered by Pierre and Jacques
Curie in 1880. It remained a mere curiosity until the 1940s. The
properties of certain crystals to exhibit electrical charges
under mechanical loading was of no practical use until very high
input impedance amplifiers enabled engineers to amplify their
signals. In the 1950's, electrometer tubes of sufficient quality
became available and the piezoelectric effect was commercialized.
The charge amplifier principle was patented by W.P. Kistler in
1950 and gained practical significance in the 1960s. The
introduction of solid state circuitry and the development of
highly insulating materials such as Teflon and Kapton greatly
improved performance and propelled the use of piezoelectric
sensors into virtually all areas of modern technology and
industry.
Piezoelectric measuring systems are active electrical systems.
That is, the crystals produce an electrical output only when they
experience a change in load. For this reason, they cannot perform
true static measurements. However, it is a misconception that
piezoelectric instruments are suitable for only dynamic
measurements. Quartz transducers, paired with adequate signal
conditioners, offer excellent quasistatic measuring capability.
There are countless examples of applications where quartz based
transducers accurately and reliably measure quasistatic phenomena
for minutes and even hours.
APPLICATIONS OF PIEZOELECTRIC INSTRUMENTATION
Piezoelectric measuring devices are widely used today in the
laboratory, on the production floor and as original equipment.
They are used in almost every conceivable application requiring
accurate measurement and recording of dynamic changes in
mechanical variable such as pressure, force and acceleration. The
list of applications continues to grow and now includes:
PIEZOELECTRIC TRANSDUCERS (Quartz
Based)
The vast majority of Kistler transducers utilize quartz as the
sensing element. As discussed in other sections of this catalog,
Kistler also manufactures transducers which utilize piezo-ceramic
elements and micromachined silicon structures. However, the
discussion in this section will be limited to quartz
applications. Quartz piezoelectric transducers consist
essentially of thin slabs or plates cut in a precise orientation
to the crystal axes depending on the application. Most Kistler
transducers incorporate a quartz element which is sensitive to
either compressive or shear loads. The shear cut is used for
patented multi-component force and acceleration measuring
transducers. Other specialized cuts include the transverse cut
for some pressure transducers and the patented polystable cut for
high temperature pressure transducers. See Figures 1 and 2 below.
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Figure 1 - Quartz Crystal Y Bar |
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Figure 2 - Piezoelectric Effect |
The precisely machined quartz elements are assembled either
singly or in stacks and usually preloaded with a spring sleeve.
The quartz package generates a charge signal (measured in
picoCoulombs) which is directly proportional to the sustained
force. Each transducer type which uses a quartz configuration
optimized and ultimately calibrated for its particular
application (force, pressure, acceleration or strain).
Quartz transducers exhibit remarkable properties which justify
their large scale use in research, development, production and
testing. They are extremely stable, rugged and compact. Of the
large number of piezoelectric materials available today, quartz
is employed preferentially in transducer designs because of the
following excellent properties:
HIGH AND LOW IMPEDANCE
Kistler supplies two types of piezoelectric transducers: high and
low impedance. High impedance units have a charge output which
requires a charge amplifier or external impedance converter for
charge-to-voltage conversion. Low impedance types use the same
piezoelectric sensing element as high impedance units and also
incorporate a miniaturized built-in charge-to-voltage converter.
Low impedance types require an external power supply coupler to
energize the electronics and decouple the subsequent DC bias
voltage from the output signal.