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Hollow Shaft kits feature self-powered, multi-turn capability

Don Horne   

Products Controls ippt


POSITAL’s new multi-turn Hollow Shaft kit encoders mark a significant innovation for industrial motion control.
Until now, almost all through- or hollow-shaft encoders have been limited to a single-turn measurement range, largely because fully satisfactory multi-turn technology has been not been available. POSITAL has overcome this limitation with its new capacitive hollow shaft kit encoders. They feature an integrated rotation counter that records each revolution the instrument experiences, even if these occur when no external power is available.
Power for the counter circuitry is supplied by POSITAL’s well-proven, maintenance-free Wiegand energy harvesting system. There is no need for troublesome backup batteries or complex mechanical solutions.
The new Hollow Shaft kit encoders are especially well suited to robots and cobots. Weighing in at just 110 g, with an outer diameter of 80 mm, these devices can be integrated directly into the joints of the robot arms. Their open-centre form factor leaves room for designers to route mechanical components, cables or pneumatic/hydraulic lines through the centre of the joint.
Their slim design (only 17.8 mm deep) and large central opening (30 or 50 mm) make them ideal for many applications, including servomotors and drives. Installation and commissioning are straightforward: a few simple steps and the measuring system is ready for use, without complicated calibration procedures.
While POSITAL earlier championed the switch from optical to magnetic measurement technologies in encoders, the new Hollow Shaft series represents a deliberate break with the past. Magnetic systems typically require that key components be places on the centreline of the device, which makes it difficult to adapt to hollow shaft configurations. The capacitive measurement technique enables a ring-shaped form factor, while also offering reliability and precision (18-bit electronic resolution and an accuracy of ± 0.02 degrees) at a moderate cost.
Capacitive encoders have two key components, a rotor and a stator. These function as plates in a capacitive system. Capacitive coupling between the plates changes as the rotor turns relative to the stator, varying the modulation of electrical signals transmitted through the system.
A sophisticated signal processing system analyzes these changes in signal strength and phase angle to precisely determine the angular position of the rotor relative to the stator. This system integrates capacitive effects around the full circumference of the ring-shaped components, so that measurements are largely insensitive to dust, moisture of minor misalignments.
At the heart of the self-powered multi-turn system is POSITAL’s Wiegand energy harvesting technology. For most applications of this technology, the Wiegand wire assembly and rotating magnet that triggers energy production are both located on the device’s centre line.
However, for the new open-centre hollow shaft layout, a new set-up had to be developed.
Through experimentation and extensive magnetic field simulation, a reliable solution was developed with four diametrical-oriented magnets placed evenly around the rotor. These four magnets provide a stable magnetic field that triggers polarity reversals in the Wiegand sensor installed in the stator. With each 360-degree rotation of the rotor, the Wiegand assembly generates a current pulse that energizes the counting electronics. The multi-turn counter has a 43-bit memory for a measurement range of almost nine trillion revolutions.
“These are values ​​that put us right on trend for our target market,” says POSITAL-FRABA CEO Christian Leeser.
www.posital.com


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