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In this article we describe an Internet-of-Things sensing device with a wireless interface which is powered by the oftenoverlooked harvesting method of the Wiegand effect. The sensor can determine position, temperature or other resistively measurable quantities and can transmit the data via an ultra-low power ultra-wideband (UWB) data transmitter. With this approach we can energy-self-sufficiently acquire, process, and wirelessly transmit data in a pulsed operation. A proof-of-concept system was built up to prove the feasibility of the approach. The energy consumption of the system is analyzed and traced back in detail to the individual components, compared to the generated energy and processed to identify further optimization options. Based on the proof-of-concept, an application demonstrator was developed. Finally, we point out possible use cases.
With the growing interest in small distributed sensors for the “Internet of Things”, more attention is being paid to energy harvesting techologies. Reducing or eliminating the need for external power sources or batteries make devices more self-sufficient, more reliable, and reduces maintenance requirements. The Wiegand effect is a proven technology for harvesting small amounts of electrical power from mechanical motion.
Rugged terrain robot designs are important for field robotics missions. A number of commercial platforms are available, however, at an impressive price. In this paper, we describe the hardware and software component of a low-cost wheeled rugged-terrain robot. The robot is based on an electric children quad bike and is modified to be driven by wire. In terms of climbing properties, operation time and payload it can compete with some of the commercially available platforms, but at a far lower price.
The increasing complexity of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) presents a challenging task to validate safe and reliable performance of these systems under varied conditions. The test and validation of ADAS/AD with real test drives, although important, involves huge costs and time. Simulation tools provide an alternative with the added advantage of reproducibility but often use ideal sensors, which do not reflect real sensor output accurately. This paper presents a new validation methodology using fault injection, as recommended by the ISO 26262 standard, to test software and system robustness. In our work, we investigated and developed a tool capable of inserting faults at different software and system levels to verify its robustness. The scope of this paper is to cover the fault injection test for the Visteon’s DriveCore™ system, a centralized domain controller for Autonomous driving which is sensor agnostic and SoC agnostic. With this new approach, the validation of safety monitoring functionality and its behavior can be tested using real-world data instead of synthetic data from simulation tools resulting in having better confidence in system performance before proceeding with in-vehicle testing.
This paper covers the use of the magnetic Wiegand effect to design an innovative incremental encoder. First, a theoretical design is given, followed by an estimation of the achievable accuracy and an optimization in open-loop operation.
Finally, a successful experimental verification is presented. For this purpose, a permanent magnet synchronous machine is controlled in a field-oriented manner, using the angle information of the prototype.
This paper introduces an inexpensive Wiegand-sensor-based rotary encoder that avoids rotating magnets and is suitable for electrical-drive applications. So far, Wiegand-sensor-based encoders usually include a magnetic pole wheel with rotating permanent magnets. These encoders combine the disadvantages of an increased magnet demand and a limited maximal speed due to the centripetal force acting on the rotating magnets. The proposed approach reduces the total demand of permanent magnets drastically. Moreover, the rotating part is manufacturable from a single piece of steel, which makes it very robust and cheap. This work presents the theoretical operating principle of the proposed approach and validates its benefits on a hardware prototype. The presented proof-of-concept prototype achieves a mechanical resolution of 4.5 ° by using only 4 permanent magnets, 2Wiegand sensors and a rotating steel gear wheel with 20 teeth.
Im Projekt wurden mit Hilfe zeitaufgeloester optischer Messtechniken Relaxations-Dynamiken von optisch angeregten Ladungstraegern und Hochfrequenzeigenschaften von Hochtemperatursupraleitern untersucht. Oberhalb der Sprungtemperatur wurden die Elektron-Phonon-Kopplungskonstanten fuer YBCO und BSCCO bestimmt. Dabei wurde erstmalig ein direkter Zusammenhang zwischen der Sprungtemperatur und der Kopplungstaerke gefunden. Der Kopplungsmechanismus enthaelt sowohl phononische als auch elektronische (spindynamische) Anteile. Unterhalb von T_c wird die Dynamik durch Aufbrechen und Rekombination von Cooper-Paaren bestimmt. Bei den Arbeiten zu den kohaerenten Phononen wurde ein Modell entwickelt, das das 'Anwerfen' der Phononen und das Amplitudenverhalten unterhalb der Sprungtemperatur erklaert. Als begleitende Untersuchungen wurden breitbandige Hochfrequenz-Messungen vorgenommen. Die Methode erlaubt die Untersuchung von Ladungstraegerdichten und von Streumechanismen. Erstmalig wurde in verspannten YBCO-Duennfilmen eine starke temperaturabhaengige Resonanz-Absorption beobachtet, die als Josephson-Plasmaresonanz an intrinsischen Kontakten identifiziert werden konnte. Die Nutzbarkeit dieser Kontakte fuer Bauelemente wurde durch einen Mikrowellendetektor demonstriert. Durch den Nachweis von emittierter gepulster Strahlung aus einer stromdurchflossenen supraleitenden Bruecke nach optischer Anregung wurde erstmals die Einsatzmoeglichkeit von HTSL fuer schnelle optische Schalter demonstriert. Es wurde gezeigt, dass die Schaltgeschwindigkeit eine direkte Folge der Ladungstraegerdynamik ist.
Communication via serial bus systems, like CAN, plays an important role for all kinds of embedded electronic and mechatronic systems. To cope up with the requirements for functional safety of safety-critical applications, there is a need to enhance the safety features of the communication systems. One measure to achieve a more robust communication is to add redundant data transmission path to the applications. In general, the communication of real-time embedded systems like automotive applications is tethered, and the redundant data transmission lines are also tethered, increasing the size of the wiring harness and the weight of the system. A radio link is preferred as a redundant transmission line as it uses a complementary transmission medium compared to the wired solution and in addition reduces wiring harness size and weight. Standard wireless links like Wi-Fi or Bluetooth cannot meet the requirements for real-time capability with regard to bus communication. Using the new dual-mode radio enables a redundant transmission line meeting all requirements with regard to real-time capability, robustness and transparency for the data bus. In addition, it provides a complementary transmission medium with regard to commonly used tethered links. A CAN bus system is used to demonstrate the redundant data transfer via tethered and wireless CAN.