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| United States Patent | 5602711 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5602711.html |
| Inventor(s) | Curtis; John F. (Brighton, GB);
Jayawant; Bhalchandra V. (Kingston near Lewes, GB);
Whorlow; Raymond J. (Brighton, GB) |
| Abstract | An apparatus for monitoring the inductance of a coil (L1) which is not part
of a resonant circuit including a second coil (L2) connected in series
with the first mentioned coil and a resonant circuit which is formed by
connection of a capacitor (C5) to the second coil, or optionally (C2) to a
third coil (L3) which is in a mutually inductive relationship with the
second coil so that the second and third coils act as the primary and
secondary coils of a transformer (M), a device (1) for injecting into the
circuit containing the first mentioned and second coils an a.c. signal of
substantially constant peak voltage amplitude having a frequency within
the resonance peak of the resonant circuit, and an amplitude detector (5)
for measuring the amplitude of the voltage across a component of the
resonant circuit. The apparatus may be employed as so-called integral
control in closed loop control of the suspension of an object by the first
mentioned coil. The output of the amplitude detector in such an
arrangement may be applied successively to an error detector (7) and
integrator (9). |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5602711 |
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Apparatus for monitoring inductance |
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| Publication Date |
February 11, 1997 |
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| Filing Date |
November 23, 1994 |
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| Parent Case |
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 07/986,733,
filed Dec. 8, 1992, now abandoned. |
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| Priority Data |
Jan 03, 1992[GB]9200087
Oct 20, 1992[GB]9222017 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. An apparatus for monitoring the inductance of a first coil which is not
part of a resonant circuit including:
a second coil connected in series with the first coil;
a resonant circuit which is formed by connection of a capacitor to the
second coil;
means for injecting into the circuit containing the first and second coils
an a.c. signal of substantially constant peak voltage amplitude having a
frequency within the resonance peak of the resonant circuit; and
an amplitude detector for measuring the amplitude of the voltage across a
component of the resonant circuit.
2. Apparatus as in claim 1 wherein the said second coil is itself in the
resonant circuit and the said amplitude detector is provided with
isolation from the second coil by capacitors between the said resonant
circuit and the amplitude detector.
3. Apparatus as in claim 1 and wherein the said second coil is employed
together with a third coil as a transformer, whereby in operation the a.c.
signal injected through the second coil, or primary coil of the
transformer induces a voltage alternating at the same frequency to appear
across the third coil.
4. Apparatus as in claim 1 and wherein the first coil is a control coil of
an electromagnet for the electromagnetic control of suspension of an
object, which apparatus further includes a source of electric power for
the control coil which source includes a controllable electric supply
device capable of delivering a controlled electrical supply to the control
coil, a control signal producer for producing an error control signal in
response to an incremental change in a parameter related to the position
of the object relative to electromagnet and a negative feedback control
loop for feeding said error control signal generated by the control signal
producer to the electric supply device to adjust the electrical supply to
the control coil so as to stabilize the suspension of the object relative
to the electromagnet by integral control of the position of the object,
wherein said control signal producer includes said means for monitoring
the inductance of the control coil.
5. Apparatus as in claim 4 and wherein the control coil of the
electromagnet is provided on a magnetic core.
6. Apparatus as in claim 4 and including the said object which is an object
of a type known to be influenced by a magnetic field generated by a
current-carrying coil, and is selected from a magnetic material, a
permanent magnet, an electromagnet and a current-carrying conductor.
7. Apparatus as in claim 4 and wherein the electric supply device comprises
a controlled power amplifier circuit connected to a fixed voltage source,
thereby delivering a controlled direct current to the control coil.
8. Apparatus as in claim 4 and wherein the first coil is contained in a
circuit having a Class D operational configuration, the circuit comprising
two drive transistors between which the first and second coils are
connected, the circuit also comprising an impedance in series with a
further coil, said impedance and said further coil being connected between
said transistors in parallel with the first and second coils, said further
coil connected in a further resonant circuit whose resonance peak in
operation includes said frequency of the a.c. signal injected by the
injection means and means for measuring the voltage across a component of
the further resonant circuit.
9. Apparatus as in claim 8 and including means for dividing a signal
representing the amplitude of the voltage across a component of the first
mentioned resonant circuit by a signal representing the amplitude of the
voltage across a component of the said further resonant circuit.
10. Apparatus as in claim 9 and wherein the means for dividing comprises a
multiplier to which the signal is applied as a first input and whose
output is connected to form a first input to an operational amplifier the
signal being applied in operation as the other input to the operational
amplifier, the output of the operational amplifier also being applied to
form the other input to the multiplier.
11. Apparatus as in claim 9 and wherein the signal representing the voltage
across a component of the first mentioned resonant circuit is applied to a
first amplitude detector and the signal representing the voltage across a
component of the further resonant circuit is applied to a second amplitude
detector and wherein the result of the division of the signal by the
signal is compared in an error detector with a reference signal comprising
a desired mean level, and the error signal comprising variations between
the measured division of by and the desired mean level is integrated in an
integrator and thereafter employed as a control signal in a closed
negative feedback loop connected to said controllable electric supply
device to adjust the electrical supply to the control coil to maintain the
inductance at a desired mean level.
12. Apparatus as in claim 8 and wherein the said transistors are connected
between terminals having a positive and a negative potential by rectifying
diodes.
13. Apparatus as in claim 8 wherein said further coil comprises a primary
coil of a transformer, said transformer including a secondary coil, said
secondary coil connected in parallel with a capacitor to form said further
resonant circuit.
14. Apparatus as in claim 4 and wherein the amplitude of the alternating
voltage detected by the said amplitude detector is compared in an error
detector with a reference signal comprising a desired mean level, and the
error signal comprising variations between the measured amplitude and the
desired mean level is integrated in an integrator and thereafter employed
as a control signal in a closed negative feedback loop connected to said
controllable electric supply device to adjust the electrical supply to the
control coil to maintain the inductance at a desired mean level.
15. Apparatus as in claim 4 and wherein the said control signal producer
and feedback loop are applied in conjunction with one or more other
feedback loops to provide other forms of control, in addition to integral
control of position, related to the suspension of the object by the coil.
16. Apparatus as in claim 14 and comprising two electromagnet control coils
each having a feedback loop controlling the position of the object, the
control signal producer for producing an error control signal for each
loop comprising a single circuit common to the feedback loops associated
with both coils, the control signal producer having an output which is
applied as a negative signal to the electric supply device of one control
coil and as a positive signal to the electric supply device of the other
control coil and vice versa as appropriate.
17. Apparatus as in claim 16 and wherein the output from the common circuit
for each feedback loop is applied in conjunction with the error control
signal from the control signal producer dedicated to the control coil with
which it is associated.
18. Apparatus as in claim 4 and wherein the first coil is contained in a
circuit having a Class D operational configuration, the circuit comprising
two drive transistors between which the first and second coils are
connected, said first and second coils having a first impedance, the
circuit also comprising a further second impedance in series with a
further coil, said second impedance and said further coil connected
between said transistors in parallel with the first and second coils, on
additional impedance in a mutually inductive relationship with said second
coil and comprising a further resonant circuit whose resonance peak in
operation includes said frequency of the a.c. signal injected by the
injection means and means for measuring the voltage across a component of
the further resonant circuit.
19. Apparatus as in claim 1 and wherein in operation the said injected a.c.
signal is applied as an input to the circuit of a controllable electric
supply device and thereby superimposed upon a nominally d.c. output of
that device supplied to the first coil, said resonant frequency being in
the range 15 to 25 kHz.
20. An apparatus for monitoring the inductance of a first coil which is not
part of a resonant circuit including:
a second coil connected in series with the first coil;
a resonant circuit which is formed by connection of a capacitor to a third
coil which is in a mutually inductive relationship with the second coil so
that the second and third coils act as the primary and secondary coils of
a transformer;
means for injecting into the circuit containing the first and second coils
an a.c. signal of substantially constant peak voltage amplitude having a
frequency within the resonance peak of the resonant circuit; and
an amplitude detector for measuring the amplitude of the voltage across a
component of the resonant circuit. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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RELATED APPLICATIONS
An Application of even date by Raymond John Whorlow assigned to the present
Assignee claiming priority from UK Patent Application Nos 9200087.6 and
9219959.5.
RIGHTS ARISING FROM FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH
Nil.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to apparatus for monitoring the inductance of
a coil.
The present invention may be employed in apparatus for the electromagnetic
control of the suspension of an object.
Electromagnetic control of the position of an object by suspension or
levitation has been employed in a number of commercial applications in the
field of industrial engineering. Such applications have included
passenger-carrying vehicles, conveyor systems, flow meters, frictionless
bearings, tool spindles, centrifuges, alternators, pumps, compressors and
balances. One aspect of the present invention is concerned with systems
for the electromagnetic control of the suspension of an object which are
suitable for use in such applications and which systems are of the kind
including an electromagnet comprising an inductive control coil, a source
of electric power for the electromagnet which source includes a
controllable electric supply device capable of delivering a controlled
electric supply to the electromagnet, a control signal producer for
generating an error control signal in response to an incremental change in
a parameter related to the position of the object relative to the
electromagnet and a negative feedback control loop for feeding an error
control signal generated by the control signal producer to the electric
supply device to adjust the electrical supply to the coil so as to
stabilise the suspension of the object relative to the electromagnet.
The relative position of the object, ie the separation or gap between the
electromagnet and the object being controlled, is monitored in the prior
art by a transducer forming part of the control signal generator for the
feedback loop. Such transducers have included devices which are photocells
(detecting the interruption of a light beam by movement of the object);
magnetic (comprising a gap flux density measurement device, eg Hall
plate); inductive (employing two coils in a Maxwell bridge which is in
balance when the inductance of the coils is equal); I/B detectors (in
which the ratio of the electromagnet coil current and magnetic flux
produced is determined to provide a measure of the gap between
electromagnet and object; for small disturbances the division may be
replaced by a subtraction); and capacitive (employing an oscillator
circuit whose output frequency varies with suspension gap).
The use of the air gap or separation measurement transducers in prior
systems has not been entirely satisfactory. Usually, the transducer has an
upper temperature limit of operation. The transducers have a discrete
physical size and the space occupied by the transducer reduces the space
available for the electromagnet and therefore the force which can be
exerted on the object.
This problem is significant where the object is a shaft which is able to
bend, eg at a resonant rotation frequency in its so-called "free-free"
mode, confining the positions in which the transducer may be located.
DISCUSSION OF THE RELATED ART
There are a number of published patent specifications in the prior art
which describe the measurement of a reactance due to an inductance
involving the use of a resonant circuit. Examples are GB 0875869, GB
0844360, GB 0654394, GB 0581246 and US 3970925. In all cases, however, the
approach is to measure the reactance within a resonant circuit in which
the applied frequency is variable whilst the circuit is in use so that the
unknown reactance can detected by applying different frequencies to the
resonant circuit.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention an apparatus for monitoring the
inductance of a first coil which is not part of a resonant circuit
includes a second coil connected in series with the first coil, and a
resonant circuit which is formed by connection of a capacitor to the
second coil, or to a third coil which is in a mutually inductive
relationship with the second coil so that the second and third coils act
as the primary and secondary coils of a transformer, means for injecting
into the circuit containing the first and second coils an a.c. signal of
substantially constant peak voltage amplitude having a frequency within
the resonance peak of the resonant circuit, and an amplitude detector for
measuring the amplitude of the voltage across a component of the resonant
circuit.
In the present invention the coil whose inductance is being monitored is
not part of a resonant circuit and the frequency is not variable whilst
the coil is in use. In general, the frequency of the applied a.c. waveform
will be substantially fixed. Furthermore, the present invention
advantageously permits the signal representing the measurement of
inductance to be employed in the control of the position of a suspended
object. This application is not envisaged in the prior art references.
The first coil may be an electromagnet coil in an apparatus for the
electromagnetic control of the suspension of an object which apparatus
includes, in addition to the electromagnet coil a source of electric power
for the electromagnet coil which source includes a controllable electric
supply device capable of delivering a controlled electric supply to the
electromagnet coil, a control signal producer for producing an error
control signal in response to an incremental change in a parameter related
to the position of the object relative to the electromagnet and a negative
feedback control loop for feeding an error control signal generated by the
control signal producer to the electric supply device to adjust the
electrical supply to the electromagnet coil so as to stabilise the
suspension of the object relative to the electromagnet, wherein the
control signal producer includes the means for monitoring the inductance
of the coil.
The electromagnet coil, herein called the "control coil", may be provided
on a magnetic core.
The object may be any of the objects of types known to be influenced by the
magnetic field generated by a current-carrying coil, eg a magnetic
material, a permanent magnet, an electromagnet or a current-carrying
conductor.
The electric supply device may comprise a controlled power amplifier
circuit connected to a fixed voltage source, thereby delivering a
controlled direct current level to the control coil.
The amplifier of the amplifier circuit is preferably a high gain amplifier
and may be an amplifier of any one of classes A, B, C, D and E.
preferably, the gain of the amplifier is greater than 200, desirably
greater than 500.
Where the second coil is itself in the resonant circuit the amplitude
detector requires isolation from the d.c. components in the second coil
and this may be provided by connecting the respective leads to the said
amplitude detector through capacitors.
Where the second coil is employed together with a third coil as a
transformer the a.c. signal injected through the second coil (or primary
coil of the transformer) induces a voltage alternating at the same
frequency to appear across the third coil (or secondary coil of the
transformer). The induced voltage is a measure of the varying a.c.
component of the current flowing through the control coil at the applied
frequency.
The amplitude of the alternating voltage detected by the amplitude detector
may be compared in an error detector with a reference signal comprising a
desired mean level, and the error signal comprising variations between the
measured amplitude and the desired mean level may be integrated by an
integrator and thereafter employed as a control signal in a closed
negative feedback loop (which may be in parallel with one or more other
loops) connected to the aforementioned controllable electric supply
device, eg power amplifier circuit, to adjust the electrical supply to the
control coil to maintain the inductance (and impedance) of the control
coil at a desired mean level.
The injected a.c. signal may be applied as an input to the circuit of the
controllable electric supply device and thereby superimposed upon the
nominally d.c. output of that device supplied to the control coil.
Desirably, although not essentially, the resonant frequency is greater
than the normal audio range and is preferably in the range 15 to 25 kHz,
eg 20 kHz.
In any application where changes in the resistance of circuit resistors in
apparatus embodying the invention may be caused by changes in temperature
of the operating environment such resistors may be variable resistors each
controlled to have a fixed resistance value over a range of operating
temperatures.
It can be shown that the control of position of the object by measurement
of the inductance of the control coil in the manner described provides
so-called integral control of the suspension of the object which is a
known desirable kind of control in which the relationship between the
total force acting upon the object and the time integral of the
incremental distance moved by the object is a relationship of positive
slope.
The control signal producer and feedback loops may be used in conjunction
with one or more arrangements comprising feedback loops to provide other
forms of control of the suspension of the object by the control coil. For
example, so-called proportional and/or derivative control of the
suspension of the object may also be provided in the manner described in
co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/986,735 filed Dec. 8, 1992
by the present Assignees (the contents of which are incorporated herein by
reference), wherein signals representative of the voltage component due to
pure inductance across the coil and the current flowing through the coil
are obtained and one is differentiated or integrated as appropriate and
balanced against the other to derive an error control signal for use in
the feedback loop. Such a method of control can provide independent
proportional and derivative control of the object suspension in addition
to the integral control which may be obtained by use of the present
invention.
The present invention allows the problems associated with separate
transducers as described hereinbefore to be avoided. Electromagnetic
control of the suspension of an object may be achieved at higher
temperatures which could otherwise harm the separate transducers as used
in the prior art and greater electromagnetic control force per unit area
may be obtained by use of the present invention. As the measurement system
can be formed by using less discrete parts, suspension control may be
achieved more cheaply and more reliably than with prior art systems.
In a particular form of the present invention the coil whose inductance is
being monitored may be energised by a circuit in a Class D configuration
to minimise power consumption. This will be called a "Class D" form of the
invention. In this case the input drive signal, which may be that obtained
from a negative feedback loop for control of position of a suspended
object, is used to control the mark-space ratio of a square (or
rectangular) waveform. This causes the fundamental frequency of the
applied waveform to vary in a sinusoidal manner relative to the mark-space
ratio. In order to compensate for this variation a further coil (called a
fourth coil to distinguish from the aforementioned coils) providing a
known impedance (as a function of frequency) may be connected in parallel
with the first coil. The fourth coil is connected to a fifth coil in
series with the fourth coil, and (as for the circuit of the first coil) a
resonant circuit is formed by connection of a capacitor to the fifth coil
or to a sixth coil which is in a mutually inductive relationship with the
fifth coil so that the fifth and sixth coils act as the primary and
secondary coils of a transformer. The waveform applied to the first coil
is also applied to the fourth coil.
In the Class D form of the invention the signal S1 across the first
mentioned or "first" resonant circuit component which is a measure of the
a.c. component of the current flowing through the first coil varies with
mark-space ratio of the input waveform and also with separation x between
the electromagnet comprising the first coil and the object controlled
thereby. The signal S2 across the further or "second" resonant circuit
component which is a measure of the a.c. component of the current flowing
through the fourth coil varies only with mark-space ratio of the input
waveform. Information on the separation x may be obtained by dividing the
signal S1 by the signal S2.
This division gives:
##EQU1##
where k.sub.1 and k.sub.2 are constants and w and t represent respectively
angular frequency and time.
This can be re-written as:
##EQU2##
where k.sub.3 is a further constant.
Thus, a signal which is representative of the division of the amplitude of
S1 by the amplitude of S2 may be employed as the input of the error
detector as specified hereinbefore and the output employed for feedback
loop control of the separation x in the manner as described above. The
division may be carried out by applying the respective signals S1, S2
picked up from the first and second resonant circuits to amplitude
detectors and then feeding into an operational amplifier the output of the
amplitude detector for signal S2 together with the output of a multiplier
whose inputs are the output of the amplitude detector for signal S1 and
the output of the operational amplifier.
In the Class D form the first coil is contained in a circuit, comprising
two drive transistors between which the first and second coils are
connected, the fourth and fifth coils also being connected between the
transistors in parallel with the first and second coils. The transistors
may be connected between terminals having a positive and a negative
potential, the connections including rectifying diodes. The term
"transistors" here includes bipolar transistors of either the n-p-n or
p-n-p type, or field effect transistors, or other semiconductor devices
known to those skilled in the art to operate in a similar manner to such
transistors.
Desirably, the fourth coil does not itself form part of a tuned circuit.
Desirably, the impedance of the fourth coil is similar to that of the first
coil. A resistor or capacitor which does not form a parallel tuned circuit
may alternatively be used in place of the fourth coil or used together
with the fourth coil to provide the desired impedance.
The apparatus according to the present invention may comprise a plurality
of control means for controlling together the suspension of an object by
controlling its position in the manner described above, each such means
comprising a control coil, an electric supply device, an error control
signal producer and a feedback loop from the control signal producer to
the supply device all as described hereinbefore.
For example, two coils controlled in that way working together as a pair
are required to control the suspension of an object in one dimension. An
active electromagnetic bearing for a rotating shaft constituting the
object being suspended may comprise two pairs of electromagnet coils
controlled in the manner described the members of each pair working
together to control one dimensional suspension, the overall bearing
providing two dimensional suspension.
A complete suspension system for a shaft may comprise two or more such
active bearings acting radially upon the shaft and one active thrust
bearing acting upon an end of the shaft.
Use of apparatus according to the present invention to suspend a rotating
shaft advantageously allows the problem of the restriction on the choice
of location of separate transducers caused by bending of the shaft in its
free-free mode to be avoided.
Where a plurality of coils are employed each to provide electromagnets
these may be wound on different portions of a common core in a known
manner. The core may be shaped and laminated in known manner. For example,
it may be a solid ring shape with the object at the axis of the ring. The
ring shape may have projections facing toward the axis some or all of the
projections carrying the control coils. The core may be one of the other
shapes well known in this field.
In apparatus according to the present invention comprising two
electromagnetic control coils each having a feedback loop controlling a
parameter relating to the position of the object, the control signal
producer for producing an error control signal for each loop may comprise
a single circuit common to the feedback loops associated with both coils.
The control signal producer may have an output which is applied as a
negative signal to the electric supply device of one control coil and as a
positive signal to the electric supply device of the other control coil
and vice versa (as appropriate). The output from the common circuit for
each feedback loop may be applied in conjunction with an error control
signal from a control signal producer dedicated to the control coil with
which it is associated.
Active bearings embodying the present invention may be employed in any
applications requiring contactless, maintenance-free, non-lubricated
bearings. Such applications include bearings for moving parts in machines
handling dangerous materials, eg radioactive, toxic or biologically active
materials, high speed bearings for vacuum pumps, food processing (where
lubrications would cause contamination), bearings for high temperature
environments and bearings for low temperature environments (where oil and
other lubricants would freeze).
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of
example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a circuit diagram of a feedback loop circuit embodying the
present invention.
FIGS. 2 and 3 are circuit diagrams of alternative arrangements for the
circuit shown in FIG. 1 ;
FIG. 4 is a block circuit diagram of apparatus embodying the present
invention including two active electromagnet coils for controlling the
suspension of an object.
FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram of an alternative form of circuit embodying the
present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In FIG. 1 an electromagnet comprising a control coil represented by its
inductance L1 and its resistance R1 is supplied at one of its terminals X1
with a nominally fixed level nominally d.c. supply by a high gain
amplifier A1 driving through a resistor R15 a Darlington pair of
transistors T1 and T2 connected to a supply voltage +V.sub.R.
Superimposed upon the nominally d.c. output of the amplifier A1 is a 20 kHz
a.c. signal provided by an oscillator 1 connected to the base of the
transistor T1 through a capacitor C3. The output of the oscillator 1 and
capacitor C3 could alternatively be applied as an input to the amplifier
A1. The voltage applied to the control coil comprising L1 and R1 contains
therefore a 20 kHz component of constant voltage amplitude. The impedance
of the control coil varies with the air gap or separation between the
electromagnet comprising the control coil and object being controlled O,
and incremental changes in the air gap or separation caused by incremental
changes in the total force upon the suspended object result in a varying
20 kHz current component passing through the control coil. An air core
transformer M comprises a further or primary coil having an inductance L2
(and an internal resistance not shown) in series with the inductance L1
and resistance R1 and connected to ground through resistor R2, and a
secondary coil having an inductance L3 connected in an output circuit to a
capacitor C2. The components of the output circuit are chosen so that the
circuit is resonant at the frequency of the oscillator 1. The resonant
output circuit picks up by mutual induction in the secondary coil of
inductance L3 a voltage related only to the 20 kHz component of current
flowing through the control and primary coils of inductance L1 and L2.
Because the amplitude of the applied alternating voltage component is
constant, the induced voltage represents a measurement at the applied
frequency of the impedance of the control coil and hence any change in the
measured induced voltage can be detected to provide control of the gap
between the electromagnet comprising the control coil and controlled
object.
The amplitude of the 20 kHz component of voltage across the capacitor C2 is
detected as follows. The voltage is applied via a resistor R20 providing a
high input impedance to one input terminal of an amplifier A5 whose other
terminal is connected via an isolating capacitor C4 through a resistor R22
to earth. A resistor R21 is also connected between the output of the
amplifier A5 and the input to the amplifier A5 connected to the capacitor
C4. The circuit comprising the amplifier A5 acts as a buffer to isolate
its output from its input. The peak amplitude at the output of the
amplifier A5 is detected by a peak level detector 5 and the detected peak
level is compared with a reference voltage V.sub.REF in an error detector
or difference amplifier 7, the difference being provided as an output. The
output signal from the error detector 7 comprising an error signal is
integrated by an integrator 9 whose output ramps until the error signal is
zero, and the output of the integrator 9 is applied via a potentiometer P6
and a resistor R23 to the amplifier A1 at an input terminal X3 thereof
thereby completing a feedback loop the amplifier A1. The other input
terminal of the amplifier A1 is connected to earth through a resistor R13.
The input terminal X3 to the amplifier A1 is also connected through a
resistor R121 to the variable contact of a potentiometer P4, the positive
end of which is at a positive potential +V and the negative end of which
is at a negative potential -V. A resistor R14 is connected between the
input to the amplifier A1 from the resistor R13 and the output of the
amplifier A1.
When the control coil experiences an incremental increase in impedance
indicating an incremental decrease in the gap from the electromagnet
comprising the control coil to the suspended object the control signal
applied from the integrator 9 at the terminal X3 is negative so as to
increase the gap to its desired mean level to maintain the stable position
of the object. Likewise, when the impedance falls a positive control
signal is applied at the terminal X3 causing the gap to be reduced. The
level of the reference voltage V.sub.REF is selected so as to define the
required mean stable gap between the electromagnet and controlled object.
The feedback loop from the transformer M to the input terminal X3 will
hereinafter be referred to as "Circuit Q2". Control of the suspension of
the object by the arrangement comprising the Circuit Q2, as noted above,
can be shown to be so-called integral control. So-called proportional
and/or derivative control of the suspension of the object may also be
achieved, eg by an arrangement as described in the aforementioned
copending United States applications and the feedback loop employed in
such an arrangement will herein be referred to as "Circuit Q1". The
Circuits Q1 and Q2 may therefore be in parallel, each generating an error
control signal. The error control signals generated by the Circuits Q1 and
Q2 may be applied together at the terminal X3 as common inputs to the
amplifier A1.
FIGS. 2 and 3 show alternative ways of deriving the input voltage to the
amplifier A5 via resistor R20 in FIG. 1.
In FIG. 2 the second coil represented by L2 (connected in series with L1)
is not part of a transformer but is itself connected to a capacitor C5
selected to give a resonant circuit with the coil L2. The voltage across
the terminals of coil L2 is isolated via isolating capacitors C6, C7 and
forms the input to Circuit Q2 via resistor R20 and amplifier A5 in the
manner shown in FIG. 1.
In FIG. 2 and also in FIGS. 3 and 4 which are referred to as follows the
internal resistance of the coils is not shown.
In FIG. 3 the second coil represented by L2 (connected in series with L1)
is again the primary coil of a transformer M together with a secondary
coil represented by L3 but in this case the capacitor, here C8, required
for the resonant circuit is connected across the primary coil L2. The
voltage across the terminals of coil L3 forms the input to Circuit Q2 via
resistor R20 and amplifier A5 in the manner shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 shows an example of how Circuits Q1 and Q2 may be combined and
employed to influence two control coils A, B. The control coils may be
incorporated in electromagnets which together form a pair, for example
mutually controlling in an active bearing the position in one dimension of
the axis of a rotating steel shaft (not shown). In practice there would be
a known geometrical arrangement of the coils and the object being
controlled to optimise this form of operation. In FIG. 4, the amplifier A1
(and its associated input resistances and reference voltage), the
transistors T1 and T2, the capacitor C3 and the connections from the first
control coil, in this case coil A, to the Circuits Q1 and Q2 are all
embodied within an amplifier circuit QA providing input current to the
coil A. Likewise, a similar arrangement of components is embodied within
an amplifier circuit QB providing input current to the second control
coil, in this case coil B. Variations in the voltage across each coil A,
B, indicated in FIG. 4 as V and, variations in the current through each
coil A, B, indicated as I, are detected respectively by the Circuit Q1
operating jointly upon the two pairs of inputs. Variations in the
impedance of each coil A, B indicated in FIG. 4 as x (because impedance is
measured to control the gap x from the electromagnet to the controlled
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