Hall-Effect Sensors: Theory and Application
Autor Edward Ramsdenen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 mar 2006
* A comprehensive, up-to-date reference to use when crafting all kinds of designs with Hall effect sensors*Replaces other information about sensors that is too theoretical, too biased toward one particular manufacturer, or too difficult to locate*Highly respected and influential author in the burgeoning sensors community
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780750679343
ISBN-10: 0750679344
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: Approx. 100 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE
ISBN-10: 0750679344
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: Approx. 100 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: ELSEVIER SCIENCE
Public țintă
PRIMARY MARKET: Electronics design engineers, mechanical engineers, and engineering managers working in a vast array of application areas—automotive, computers, medical, embedded, military, aerospace/aviation, , construction, etc.;instrumentation engineers; test engineers
SECONDARY MARKET: electronics technicians; inhouse training departments of electronics manufacturers and other technology companies
Cuprins
1.Hall Effect Physics
The theory and math behind the Hall effect.
2.Practical Hall Effect Transducers
Key characteristics, integrated Hall transducers, transducer geometry, examples.
3.Transducer Interfacing
Modeling Hall transducers, biasing, amplifiers, temp. compensation, offset adjustment.
4.Integrated Sensors, Linear and Digital Devices
Linear sensors, switches and latches, speed sensors, application-specific devices.
5.Interfacing to Integrated Hall Sensors
Interface issues, line driver circuits, the pull-up resistor, interfacing to standard logic devices, discrete logic, driving loads, LED interface, incandescent lamps, relays, solenoids, and inductive loads, wiring reduction schemes, encoding and serialization, digital to analog encoding, voltage regulation and power management.
6.Proximity Sensing Techniques
Head-on sensing, slide-by sensing, magnet null-point sensing, float-level sensing, linear position sensing, rotary position sensing, Vane switches,
7.Current Sensing
Resistive current sensing, free-space current sensing, toroidal current sensors, digital current sensor, closed-loop current sensors.
8.Speed and Timing Sensors
Competitive technologies, magnetic targets, vane switches, geartooth sensing, single-point sensing, differential fixed threshold, differential variable-threshold, speed and direction sensing.
9.Application-Specific Hall Sensor ICs
Micro-power switches, two-wire switches, networkable sensors, power devices, smart motor control.
10.Development Tools for Hall Effect Sensors
Electronic bench equipment, magnetic instrumentation, mechanical tools, magnetic simulation software.
Appendix A. Brief Introduction to Magnetics
Appendix B. Suppliers List
Glossary
References and Bibliography
Index
The theory and math behind the Hall effect.
2.Practical Hall Effect Transducers
Key characteristics, integrated Hall transducers, transducer geometry, examples.
3.Transducer Interfacing
Modeling Hall transducers, biasing, amplifiers, temp. compensation, offset adjustment.
4.Integrated Sensors, Linear and Digital Devices
Linear sensors, switches and latches, speed sensors, application-specific devices.
5.Interfacing to Integrated Hall Sensors
Interface issues, line driver circuits, the pull-up resistor, interfacing to standard logic devices, discrete logic, driving loads, LED interface, incandescent lamps, relays, solenoids, and inductive loads, wiring reduction schemes, encoding and serialization, digital to analog encoding, voltage regulation and power management.
6.Proximity Sensing Techniques
Head-on sensing, slide-by sensing, magnet null-point sensing, float-level sensing, linear position sensing, rotary position sensing, Vane switches,
7.Current Sensing
Resistive current sensing, free-space current sensing, toroidal current sensors, digital current sensor, closed-loop current sensors.
8.Speed and Timing Sensors
Competitive technologies, magnetic targets, vane switches, geartooth sensing, single-point sensing, differential fixed threshold, differential variable-threshold, speed and direction sensing.
9.Application-Specific Hall Sensor ICs
Micro-power switches, two-wire switches, networkable sensors, power devices, smart motor control.
10.Development Tools for Hall Effect Sensors
Electronic bench equipment, magnetic instrumentation, mechanical tools, magnetic simulation software.
Appendix A. Brief Introduction to Magnetics
Appendix B. Suppliers List
Glossary
References and Bibliography
Index