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Bandwidth Enhancement Strategies for Acoustic Data Transmission by Piezoelectric Transduction

IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS

Gerbe, Romain; Ruzzene, Massimo; Sugino, Christopher; Erturk, Alper; Steinfeldt, Jeffrey A.; Oxandale, Samuel W.; Reinke, Charles M.; El-Kady, I.

Several applications, such as underwater vehicles or waste containers, require the ability to transfer data from transducers enclosed by metallic structures. In these cases, Faraday shielding makes electromagnetic transmission highly inefficient, and suggests the employment of ultrasonic transmission as a promising alternative. While ultrasonic data transmission by piezoelectric transduction provides a practical solution, the amplitude of the transmitted signal strongly depends on acoustic resonances of the transmission line, which limits the bandwidth over which signals are sent and the rate of data transmission. The objective of this work is to investigate piezoelectric acoustic transducer configurations that enable data transmission at a relatively constant amplitude over large frequency bands. This is achieved through structural modifications of the transmission line, which includes layering of the transducers, as well as the introduction of electric circuits connected to both transmitting and receiving transducers. Both strategies lead to strong enhancements in the available bandwidth and show promising directions for the design of effective acoustic transmission across metallic barriers.

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Bandwidth Enhancement Strategies for Acoustic Data Transmission by Piezoelectric Transduction

IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS

Gerbe, Romain; Ruzzene, Massimo; Sugino, Christopher; Erturk, Alper; Steinfeldt, Jeffrey A.; Oxandale, Samuel W.; Reinke, Charles M.; El-Kady, I.

Several applications, such as underwater vehicles or waste containers, require the ability to transfer data from transducers enclosed by metallic structures. In these cases, Faraday shielding makes electromagnetic transmission highly inefficient, and suggests the employment of ultrasonic transmission as a promising alternative. While ultrasonic data transmission by piezoelectric transduction provides a practical solution, the amplitude of the transmitted signal strongly depends on acoustic resonances of the transmission line, which limits the bandwidth over which signals are sent and the rate of data transmission. The objective of this work is to investigate piezoelectric acoustic transducer configurations that enable data transmission at a relatively constant amplitude over large frequency bands. This is achieved through structural modifications of the transmission line, which includes layering of the transducers, as well as the introduction of electric circuits connected to both transmitting and receiving transducers. Both strategies lead to strong enhancements in the available bandwidth and show promising directions for the design of effective acoustic transmission across metallic barriers.

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Wideband Acoustic Data Transmission Through Staircase Piezoelectric Transducers

IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium, IUS

Gerbe, Romain; Ruzzene, Massimo; Sugino, Christopher; Erturk, Alper; Steinfeldt, Jeffrey A.; Oxandale, Samuel W.; Reinke, Charles M.; El-Kady, I.

Ultrasounds have been investigated for data communication to transmit data across enclosed metallic structures affected by Faraday shielding. A typical channel consists in two piezoelectric transducers bonded across the structure, communicating through elastic mechanical waves. The rate of data communication is proportional to the transmission bandwidth, which can be widened by reducing the thickness of the transducers. However, thin transducers become brittle, difficult to bond and have a high capacitance that would draw a high electric current from function generators. This work focuses on investigating novel transducer shapes that would allow to provide a constant transmission across a large bandwidth while maintaining large-enough thickness to avoid brittleness and electrical impedance constraints. The transducers are shaped according to a staircase thickness distribution, whose geometry has been designed through an analytical model describing its electro-mechanical behavior formulated for this purpose.

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4 Results
4 Results