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| United States Patent | 4395908 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4395908.html |
| Inventor(s) | Shopland; Robert C. (Houston, TX) |
| Abstract | A twin-transducer seismic detector includes a hollow housing closed at each
end by a diaphragm-type transducer. A deformable retaining member is
pressed against the perimeter of each transducer. An adjustable force is
applied to at least one of the deformable members to cause the member to
flatten against the transducer. As the deformable member becomes
flattened, it reduces the effective area of the transducer and hence
alters its compliance and sensitivity. The applied force is adjusted so as
to match the sensitivity of one transducer to that of the other
transducer. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4395908 |
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Means for adjusting the sensitivity of a crystal detector |
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| Publication Date |
August 2, 1983 |
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| Filing Date |
August 27, 1981 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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I claim as my invention:
1. In a detector of the type including a housing having an internal chamber
that is closed at each end by a diaphragm-type transducer, means for
matching the sensitivity of said transducers, comprising:
a shoulder at each of said housing for receiving each said transducer;
resilient deformable members contacting said transducers externally of said
chamber;
means for urging said resilient deformable members against said
transducers; and
means for applying an adjustable deforming force to at least one of said
deformable members through said urging means to alter the compliance of
the corresponding transducer until its sensitivity matches the sensitivity
of the other transducer.
2. The transducer sensitivity-matching means as defined by claim 1,
comprising:
threaded, rotatable end caps, mating with corresponding threads in the ends
of said housing for applying said deforming force to said urging means and
thence to said deformable members.
3. The transducer sensitivity-matching means as defined in claim 1 wherein
said deformable members flatten against said transducers and spread under
the pressure of a deforming force thereby altering the compliance of said
transducers.
4. The transducer sensitivity-matching means as defined in claim 1 wherein
increased deforming forces flatten and spread said deformable members
against said transducers to reduce the area of said transducers thereby to
reduce the sensitivity thereof.
5. In an accelerometer of the type including a housing closed at each end
by a diaphragm-type transducer to form a chamber for containing a volume
of a liquid inertia mass internally of said housing between said
transducers, the improvement comprising:
resilient deformable ring members contacting said transducers around the
perimeters thereof, externally of said chamber;
bezel rings for urging said deformable ring members against said
transducers;
threaded, rotatable end caps for pressing said bezel rings against said
deformable ring members to apply an adjustable deforming force to said
ring members so that they spread out to alter the compliance of said
transducers.
6. The improved accelerometer as defined in claim 5, comprising:
micrometric indications on at least one of said end caps to provide means
for quantitative measure of said tensioning force. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention is concerned with a means for adjusting the sensitivity of a
ceramic-crystal seismic detector.
2. Discussion of the Prior Art
This invention represents an improvement in the method of manufacture and
tuning of twin-crystal seismic detectors such as hydrophones or
accelerometers for example.
In its simplest form, a detector consists of a hollow housing, usually
cylindrical, of suitable material. The top and bottom of the housing are
closed by thin metal diaphragms, each supporting a disc-shaped
piezo-electric ceramic crystal element cemented to one side thereof.
Suitable conductors, electrically connected to the crystal elements,
provide means for transmitting the signals from the crystal to the outside
world.
In the manufacture of the detector, it is customary to secure the metal
diaphragms in place by simply crimping the ends of the housing over the
diaphragms. Alternatively the diaphragms were cemented in place or
ultrasonically welded.
It is important that the sensitivities of the two crystal elements be
matched, preferably within one percent or less. For that reason, it was
necessary to hand-pick each pair of crystal elements before assembling the
detector. Hand selection necessarily increased production costs.
An additional problem arose in that, once the crystal elements were
permanently fixed in place during assembly, a cracked crystal could not
later be replaced. The detector was therefore discarded.
In another application, using single-element detectors, a related problem
arises when a plurality of such detetors are electrically coupled together
as units of an array. In such an array, it is preferable that all of the
units have matched sensitivities. Here again, it was necessary to
hand-pick the detectors destined to form the units of a proposed array.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of this invention to provide a means for matching the
sensitivity of a pair of piezo-electric elements of a seismic detector
after the detector has been assembled. Another object of this invention is
to provide a detector having at least one replaceable crystal element.
In a preferred embodiment of this invention, I provide a housing for
receiving at each end a piezo electric crystal element mounted on a
supporting diaphragm. A resilient deformable member contacts the diaphragm
to support the diaphragms in the housing. A sensitivity adjusting means
applies a variable force to the deformable member.
In accordance with an aspect of this invention the deformable member
changes the effective radius of the diaphragms in proportion to the
applied force, thereby to change the compliance of the diaphragm.
In accordance with another aspect of this invention, the deformable member
is pressed against the perimeter of the diaphragm by a threaded end cap
having micrometer-type indices to quantitatively determine the amount of
applied pressure.
In accordance with yet another aspect of this invention, the deformable
member is positioned between a bezel ring and the crystal-supporting
diaphragm to alter the radius of the diaphragm when said member is
deformed by pressure applied against said bezel ring.
In accordance with another aspect of this invention, the bezel ring,
deformable member and pressure cap are removable so that the crystal
element can be replaced.
In another embodiment of this invention, I contemplate providing a
twin-crystal accelerometer having a liquid mass contained between the
crystal elements, each crystal element being associated with a means for
matching the sensitivity of the crystal elements.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a skeletonized view of an exemplary twin-crystal accelerometer
having a liquid inertial mass;
FIG. 2 is a partial detail view of a deformed resilient element; and
FIG. 3 is an end view of the accelerometer.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
This invention represents an improvement in the manufacture of seismic
detectors having one or more piezo electric crystals as active elements.
The improvement resides in providing a convenient means for adjusting the
sensitivity of the active elements in those circumstances where matched
sensitivities are required of those elements. One such device might be a
twin-crystal accelerometer as shown in FIG. 1 by way of example but not by
way of limitation.
Accelerometer 10 consists of a housing 14, preferably of plastic such as
PVC having inner top and bottom shoulders 16 and 18. Transducers 20 and
22, consisting of ceramic piezo-electric crystals 24, 24' and thin
supporting diaphragms 26, 26', rest on shoulders 16 and 18. Transducers 20
and 22 are held in place by deformable members 28 and 30, bezel rings 32
and 34 for urging the deformable members 28 and 30 against said
transducers, and threaded end caps 36 and 38. A volume 12 of a heavy
liquid such as mercury nearly fills housing 14 between transducers 20 and
22. Twisted-pair conductors 40 and 42 transmit the electrical signals from
transducers 20 and 22 to the outside world through passageways 44 and 46
in end caps 36 and 38. The entire assembly may be contained within any
desired type of sealed outer housing that is well known to the art but
which is not shown to avoid unnecessary detail in the drawing.
Piezo-electric accelererometers fall into three types: Compression, shear
and bender.
In commercial seismic exploration, bender-type piezo-electric crystals are
used. A piezo-electric crystal, in the form of a thin disc, is cemented to
a thin metal diaphragm made of such material as beryllium-copper. An
accelerating force presses the diaphragm against an inertial mass, causing
the crystal element to flex. The output signal due to flexure of the
diaphragm-crystal element is proportional to said force.
In a batch of mass-produced transducers, their sensitivities may vary
several percent from an average value for the batch. Instead of
hand-selecting a pair of transducers for use in assembling a detector I
prefer to use production-run transducers and then to provide a means for
matching their sensitivities after assembly. Transducer sensitivity can be
adjusted by changing the mass loading of the crystal element or by
changing the spring constant or compliance of the supporting diaphragm. I
prefer to follow the latter course, i.e., to adjust the diaphragm
compliance.
The spring constant can be changed by altering the effective radius of the
metal diaphragm, thus varying its area and compliance. The radius is
altered, according to my invention, by applying a variable pressure
against a resilient deformable member such as an O-ring 28 that bears
against the perimeter of the diaphragm. A desired pressure is applied by
rotating a threaded end cap 36 clockwise or counter clockwise depending
upon whether the pressure is to be increased or decreased. Increased
pressure tends to flatten the O-ring, giving it an ovoid cross-section. As
the O-ring becomes more flattened, it necessarily spreads out and reduces
the effective radius of diaphragm 26 as shown in FIG. 2. The combination
of increased pressure and decreased effective radius reduces the
compliance of the diaphragm and decreases the sensitivity. It should be
observed that the resilient deformable member does not apply a compressive
force to the crystal itself, it merely alters the compliance or spring
constant of the transducer taken as a whole. It should also be observed
that length of the bottom edge 33 of bezel 32 is restricted so that O-ring
28 has room to deform under a deforming force applied thereto.
Threaded end caps 36 and 38 have sockets 50 and 52, as shown in FIG. 3, in
their external end faces to receive the prongs of a conventional spanner
for turning the end caps during tension adjustment. Alternatively a screw
driver slot could be provided. Angular calibration marks are etched on the
end faces of the threaded end caps 36 and 38 so that micrometric
reproducible tension settings may be made with respect to an index 54. The
pitch of the threads of end caps 36, 38 and at the ends of housing 14 is
not critical. Angular calibration marks spaced five degrees apart are
adequate. I have found that with a pitch of 14 threads per inch,
variations in relative sensitivity from 6 to 10% are possible by making a
rotational adjustment of an end cap of less than 45 degrees.
In operation, to match sensitivities of a pair of transducers, I
customarily position the accelerometer so that housing 14 is horizontal
and the liquid inertial mass contacts both transducers substantially
equally. The transducers are electrically coupled in opposition and driven
by an accelerating force at constant velocity, at a discrete frequency.
Optimum sensitivity match is achieved when the differential output voltage
reading on a digital voltmeter is minimized by changing compressional
forces on one or both diaphragms by rotation of the end caps. I prefer to
make sensitivity checks at several discrete acceleration-force frequencies
distributed over the spectral band of interest. The sensitivity match
would be optimized over that band.
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Description  |
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