TRANSDUCERS



In general terms, the transduction process involves the transformation of oneform of energy into another form. This process consists of sensing withspecificity the input energy from the measurand by means of a “sensing element” and then transforming it into another form by a “transductionelement.”

The sensor-transduction element combination shown in Fig. 5.1 will henceforth be referred to as the “transducer.” Measurand relates to the quantity, property, or state that the transducer seeks to translate into an electrical output.

As an example, consider a “walkie-talkie” intercom set where the loudspeaker also functions as a microphone. At the input end, the loudspeaker functions as an acousto electric transducer and at the output end as an electro acoustic transducer. Moreover, in the reverse direction, the functions of the loudspeakers are interchanged, and for this reason we say that the loud-speaker is a bidirectional transducer and the transduction process is reversible.

Another example of reversible transduction is seen in piezoelectric materials; when an electric voltage is applied to the faces of a piezoelectric substrate, it produces a change in its physical dimensions; and conversely, when the material is physically deformed, an electric charge is generated on these faces.

In this transducer, the sensing and transduction functions cannot be separated as easily, and it represents a good example of a practical transducer used in the field of nondestructive testing (NDT) of materials and in medical ultrasound imaging of body tissues and organs. This is a bidirectional transducer, but most practical transducers are not bidirectional.

Transducers may be classified as self-generating or externally powered.

Fig 5.1. Sensor-Transduction Element Combination
 

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