Automotivesensors Review Ieeesensors2008 PDF
Automotivesensors Review Ieeesensors2008 PDF
TABLE I
AUTOMOTIVE SENSOR MARKET GROWTHNORTH AMERICA [3]
Estimate
Predicted
Global automotive sensor market volumes are approximately three
times larger than the values for the North American market given
here.
Normalized to 2002, when the average sensor cost was U.S. $6.30.
I. INTRODUCTION
Manuscript received April 19, 2008; revised July 08, 2008; accepted July 31,
2008. Current version published October 31, 2008. The associate editor coordinating the review of this paper and approving it for publication was Dr. John
Vig.
The author is retired from TRW Automotive, Washington, MI 48094 USA
(e-mail: [email protected]).
Color versions of one or more of the figures in this paper are available online
at http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/JSEN.2008.2006452
exclude were based on the judgment of the author and the availability of information.1
II. BACKGROUND
There are three areas of automotive systems application
for sensors, namely: powertrain, chassis, and body. Automotive control functions and associated systems for the three
areas of application were previously shown in Figs. 24 and
Tables IIIV in [1]. Several new applications are reviewed in
this paper.
Estimates for the automotive sensor market in 2007 and a
forecast for 2013 were derived from data in [3] and are given
in Table I. Current luxury cars have over 100 sensors per vehicle, significantly more than the average number of 40 given in
Table I. This table illustrates the dramatic growth in demand for
automotive sensors.
1Excluded automotive sensors include the following.
-Brake pedal position/force sensor (force detected via a fluid pressure sensor).
-Passive tire pressure sensor (no battery required) using hoop antennas to
couple RF power into pressure sensors embedded in the sidewalls of rotating
tires.
-Fiber-optic engine in-cylinder pressure sensor based on light reflection off a
diaphragm.
-Side door-mounted pressure sensor (which provides wide-area side-impact
crash sensing).
-Multiple degree-of-freedom inertial-sensor modules for chassis monitoring
that include x-y acceleration plus -angular rate sensing elements.
-Fuel level detection using: (a) Hall effect sensors to measure float-arm angular position or (b) transit times of ultrasonic pulses reflected off the fuel-air
surface interface.
-Vehicle heading detection using magnetometer (compass) direction sensors.
-Window anti-pinch/auto-reverse sensingobstacles are detected by:
(a) pressure-sensitive conductive window-seal strips, or (b) electric motor load
monitoring using Hall effect sensors in the motors.
Since these sensors do not currently enjoy widespread production, and are
based on generally straightforward operating principles, they were excluded.
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B. Speed/Timing Sensors
Speed/timing sensors are used to measure engine crankshaft/camshaft speeds and angles for control of spark timing
and fuel injection timing. The sensors are also used for control
of transmission input and output shaft speeds for electronically
controlled gear shifting. In addition, high-resolution crankshaft
speed sensors detect engine misfire, as evidenced by cylinder
misfire-induced modulations of crankshaft speed. Another
major application is wheel speed measurement of each vehicle
wheel to provide inputs to antilock brake, traction control, and
vehicle stability systems.
There have been many improvements to speed/timing sensors, beginning with the addition of the aforementioned smart
sensor features. A good example of a sensor with integrated
smart sensor electronics is a giant magnetoresistive (GMR)
speed/timing sensor described in [4]. This sensor, including
device.
electronics, is packaged as a
Advances in the areas of packaging and processing have contributed to the development of greater accuracy, lower cost, and
improved robustness. Further discussion of packaging and processing is beyond the scope of this paper.
Variable reluctance, Hall-effect, anisotropic magneto-resistive (AMR) and GMR types of speed/timing sensors were reviewed in [1]. New applications of speed/timing sensors include
the following.
1) Crankshaft Reverse-Rotation Detection: During repeated
restarting of an engine in a mild hybrid electric vehicle, idle-stop
engine control systems must continue to comply with emissions
requirements. Excessive exhaust emissions occur as a result of
time lags between the point when the engine throttle is first
opened compared with the time when the engine electronic control unit (ECU) is able to determine the true crank angle and
apply spark. Time lags are the result of crankshaft reverse rotations which frequently occur when an engine is shut off at the
beginning of the stopping event. Speed/timing sensors with dual
inline detector elements provide the required direction information. The phase angle of the sensor output signal, derived from
the difference of voltage waveforms between the two detector
elements, determines the direction of crankshaft rotation [5].
2) Vibration Interference Suppression: During restarting of
an idle-stop engine in a mild hybrid electric vehicle, a false engine speed signal can be generated. Vibrations in the enginestopping event can create periodic variations in the air gap of the
speed/timing sensor between the sensor and the tone wheel. This
creates changes in magnetic field such that the sensor may inadvertently generate an output signal based on vibration, not on rotation of the tone wheel. Because vibrations produce changes in
the magnetic field, the automatic gain adjustment in the sensors
signal processor may generate excessively large gain. In this
case, the voltage-crossing thresholds become too high, and the
sensors timing signal will be in error. A logic determining circuit in a sensors signal processor detects the onset of inappropriately high levels of sensor signal gain, and it then sends a
correction signal which reinitializes the voltage-crossing thresholds back to their correct levels [6].
3) Wheel Speed Sensor New Features: Vehicle wheel speed
sensors have added four important new features.
1902
Fig. 1. Inductively coupled sensor used to measure throttle plate position [11].
1903
Low cost due to printed circuit board construction and nonresonant circuit operation.
Facilitates relaxed assembly alignment tolerances.
Design flexibility allows the sensor to be made into either
angular or linear position-sensing configurations.
2) Integrated Magnetic Concentrator (IMC) Rotary Position
Hall-Effect Sensor: This sensor measures angular position
using a single bar magnet attached to the rotating part (throttle
plate, accelerator pedal, or chassis-height link bar) whose angle
is to be determined. As seen in Fig. 2(a), the sensor is mounted
on a fixed surface underneath a magnet attached to a rotating
part. The sensor consists of the following components.
a) High-permeability IMC ferromagnetic layer: As illustrated in Fig. 2(b), an IMC layer (which is disk shaped) alters
the direction of, otherwise, the parallel-directed magnetic field
(
includes
and
components). The IMC changes
the -field directions to perpendicular-directed field
directions. The
-field directions are altered as a result of a
boundary condition; namely, at the transition interface between
low-permeability air and the high-permeability IMC layer, the
into the IMC. Bemagnetic field enters perpendicularly as
cause Hall-effect sensors respond to both the magnitude and direction of field, the use of an IMC layer to redirect the magnetic
-directions largely eliminates direcfield into perpendicular
tion variability. This allows Hall-effect sensing elements in the
silicon substrate below the IMC layer to respond solely to mag-field components [13], [14].
nitudes of the
b) Hall-effect sensing elements: Hall-effect sensing elements are mounted in the silicon substrate, in four quadrant positions, below the IMC layer. Hall sensing elements detect magmagnet field.
nitudes of the - and -components of the
As the part (whose angle is to be measured) rotates with its bar
magnet, pairs of Hall-effect sensing elements detect and genand
signal voltage waveforms
erate quadrature
[14].
c) Redundant, dual, embedded digital signal processors
and
signals are in phase quadrature
(DSPs): The
as
and are processed to determine a resolved angle
follows:
(1)
Fig. 3. Basic configuration of the dual-magnet sensor used to measure steeringwheel angle [4].
DSPs are embedded in the silicon substrate along with the Halleffect sensing elements. Dual-DSP isolated dies are used for
redundancy to insure reliability [15].
The IMC rotary position sensor provides the following
features:
Noncontact, easy-to-install, end-of-shaft mounting.
(ex Compact size, small outline package,
cluding the magnet).
Insensitivity to variations of magnetic field strength, temperature, and air gap.
Absolute 360 angular position measurement.
bit (1024 step), and angular reso Angular accuracy
bit (4096 step).
lution
3) Dual-Magnet Steering-Wheel Angle Sensor: A combined
optical/potentiometric type of steering-wheel angle sensor was
described in [1]. A new dual-magnet type of steering-wheel
angle sensor has been developed for automotive applications
[4]. Automotive applications for the steering-wheel angle
sensor include: vehicle electronic stability control, steerable
headlights, parking assist, and road navigation. The basic
configuration of the sensor is shown in Fig. 3.
Measurement of steering-wheel angle is difficult because
over the four or more turns of the steering wheel, i.e., over
1440 or more of rotation, the angle of rotation must be determined within 1 accuracy. The sensor in Fig. 3 uses two
bar magnets, each attached to a free-running pinion gear.
The pinion gears engage the large drive gear attached to the
steering-wheel column. Adjacent to each pinion gear/rotating
magnet, is a GMR magnetic field sensing element, mounted in
a stationary sensor housing [16], [17].
The drive gear in Fig. 3 has 42 teeth, whereas one pinion gear
has 14 teeth and the other pinion gear has 15 teeth. Thus, for
each turn of the drive gear, the pinion gears and their embedded
magnets will each turn about three times. Because of the difference in the number of pinion teeth, the two pinion gears rotate
through 15 turns before their magnets realign. Therefore, as the
steering wheel turns through five revolutions, one of the pinion
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gears goes through 15 turns, and the two pinions realign with
each other one time.
The two GMR sensing elements detect the angles of the
pinion gears/magnets. The angles of each pinion gear exhibit
a unique relationship to the large-gear steering-wheel angle.
Steering-wheel angle is computed from the angular relationships between the pinion gear angles with respect to the large
gear angle [16].
Signal processing methods used to enhance the accuracy of
the steering-wheel angle measurement include [4]:
Sigma-delta A/D converters.
Digital filtering.
Coordinate rotation digital computing (CORDIC) angle
conversions.
Data flow partitioning.
D. Pressure Sensors
Automotive applications of pressure sensors include:
Engine manifold absolute pressure.
Ambient barometric pressure.
Evaporative fuel system leak pressure.
Brake fluid pressure.
Chassis adaptive suspension hydraulic pressure.
Air conditioner compressor pressure.
Common-rail fuel injection pressure.
Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) piezoresistor, capacitive module, polysilicon-on-steel, and fiber-optic sensors
types of pressure sensors were reviewed in [1]. New types of
pressure sensors are as follows.
1) MEMS Surface Mount Package Sensor: This sensor
has integrated electronics and its sensing diaphragm is bulk
micromachined in silicon, with an exposed area of about 1
1 mm. Four piezoresistive sensing elements are diffused
into the diaphragm to detect stresses created by applied pressure. The sensor is designed for the measurement of ambient
barometric pressure for engine control. The pressure sensor is
one of the first to be offered in a standardized small-footprint
surface-mount device package. This reduces the amount of
circuit-board area taken up by the sensor and it also makes the
sensor more compatible with standard electronics assembly
methods.
Key performance features of the sensor include [18]:
Operating range: 60 to 120 kPa.
Accuracy, 1%.
Operating temperature, 40 C to 130 C.
, surface mount package.
Small size,
2) Integrated Multiparameter Tire Pressure Sensor: The
United States government issued a safety standard requiring
tire pressure monitoring system (TPMS) sensors on each wheel
of each new car as of September 1, 2007 [19]. The standard
was enacted by an Act of the U.S. Congress in reaction to sport
utility vehicle (SUV) rollover-crash fatalities, and an associated
tire recall. The standard is unique to the U.S. and has not been
adopted by other countries. The standard requires that TPMS
sensors, within 20 min, detect a 25% pressure-deflation in any
or all vehicle tires. This includes the situation where all four
tires deflate uniformly due to seasonal falling temperatures.
The most common type of TPMS system is the direct valvemounted battery-powered type, seen in Fig. 4. The TPMS sensor
1905
Fig. 5. Piezoelectric pressure sensor integrated into a diesel engine glow plug.
(a) Essential elements of sensor [27]. (b) Physical appearance of sensor [28].
1906
Fig. 7. Engine true mass air flow sensor. (a) Measuring principle [34]. (b) Physical appearance of sensor (cover removed) [35].
upstream and downstream thermal detection elementsall fabricated on a micromachined low-thermal-mass diaphragm. The
amount that the downstream sensing element is hotter or colder
than the upstream sensing element indicates both the direction
of airflow and its mass flow rate [34]. A true mass flow sensor
and its operating principle are seen in Fig. 7.
Both types of air flow sensors in Sections IV-F2 and IV-F3
include means to minimize effects of contamination. In the upstream side of the sensors air flow channel, a channel segment
is structured so that it creates air flow vortices. The vortices
act on the flowing air to separate out potentially contaminating
liquid droplets and solid particles entrained in the intake air
flow. Contaminants are deposited on the channel segment walls
before they reach the measuring element, thereby protecting the
sensing element from the effects of contamination [36].
To take advantage of the best performance features of each
method, vehicle manufacturers often combine different methods
of air flow measurement. For example, mass airflow methods
in Sections IV-F2 or IV-F3 provide more accurate steady-state
air flow measurement, and one of these methods is combined
with the engine speed-air density method in Section IV-F1,
which provides superior transient response [37]. The combined
methods, therefore, provide both steady-state accuracy and fast
transient response.
1907
Fig. 8. Magnetic encoder-ring/Hall-effect sensing-element sensor used to measure steering-wheel torque [38]. The encoder ring and the stator rings are connected
via the sleeve to opposite ends of the torsion bar, and twist with respect to each other when steering-wheel torque is applied. The twist angle of the encoder ring
with respect to the stator rings is detected and it provides the torque signal.
G. Torque Sensors
Various configurations of torsion-bar twist-angle types of
torque sensors were described in [1]. Twist angle due to the
applied torque acting on a torsion bar is detected using one
of the following approaches: a) potentiometrically (requiring
sliding contacts), or by assorted noncontact means including; b)
optics with varying apertures; c) magnetics with displaceable
air gaps; or d) electrical eddy currents with variable shaded
poles.
Additionally, magnetoelastic detection methods can be used
on solid (noncompliant) shafts. In this case, torque is measured
by noncontact means using: a) ac-excitation to detect torsional
stress-induced changes in the magnetic permeability of a shaft
surface layer or b) sensing the effects due to torque-induced
rotation of permanently magnetized domains in surface layers of
a shaft. (As the domains rotate, they self generate a torque signal
as a result of angular-dependent coupling of the magnetization
to external field detectorsno ac-excitation required).
Applications of torque sensors of automotive interest include:
Steering-wheel torque for electric power steering (EPS).
Driveshaft (transmission-out) torque.
Clutchshaft (engine-out) torque.
Because of the more rapid development of EPS systems and
the less demanding operating requirements associated with the
steering column location, steering-wheel torque sensors are further developed than driveline torque sensors. New types of EPS
torque sensors are described.
1) Magnetic Encoder-Ring/Hall-Effect Sensing Element
Steering Wheel Torque Sensor: This EPS torque sensor, illustrated in Fig. 8, consists [38], [39] of:
Two co-rotating stator rings, each with 12 intermeshed ferromagnetic teeth are both connected via a sleeve to the
input end of a torsion bar that is inline with the steeringwheel column.
A magnetically poled encoder-ring rotor has 12 alternating
northsouth poles. The encoder ring is connected to the
1908
packaging and processing that have yielded smaller, more accurate, lower cost, more robust sensors. Automotive applications
for linear acceleration sensors include:
Vehicle stability and chassis adaptive suspension systems.
Vehicle frontal, side, and rollover crash sensing.
Engine knock detection (using flat-response acceleration
sensors and bandpass frequency filtering).
Piezoresistive MEMS, capacitive MEMS, resonant-beam
MEMS and piezoelectric types of linear acceleration inertial
sensors were reviewed in [1]. New automotive applications
and features for acceleration sensors, not previously described,
include the following.
1) Chassis Acceleration: Chassis acceleration sensors today
typically offer two-axis ( - ) acceleration measurements and
.
come in surface mount packages as small as
This minimizes the amount of circuit-board area taken up by
the sensor.
One chassis acceleration sensor utilizes a seismic-mass that is
micromachined in silicon into the form of an elliptical-shaped
plate, with tether springs integral to its body [46]. The sensor
utilizes a lateral-to-substrate-displacement operating configuration. Acceleration-induced deflections of the seismic mass are
detected by changes in capacitance due to lateral displacements
between comb electrodes. Chassis acceleration sensors have the
following features:
Integrated minimal-overshoot, low-pass frequency
(fourth-order Bessel) filtering of the output signal.
Built-in self-monitoring failure detection and self-calibration.
Accuracy, 2% of full scale (over the entire range of acceleration, temperature, and sensor-to-sensor calibration variation).
Resolution, 10-mg.
Electrically selectable acceleration detection ranges.
Wide measurement bandwidth, dc-to-400 Hz.
2) Vehicle Crash Detection: Modern vehicles generally include five acceleration crash sensors, namely: a) a right-front
and a left-front satellite crash sensor (to trigger front airbags
in offset frontal crashes); b) a right-side and a left-side satellite
crash sensor (to trigger side airbags and curtain airbags); and
c) a central safing sensor mounted in the passenger compartment (for high reliability crash detection). Furthermore, because
three-row-seat vans and SUVs have longer lateral-coverage curtain bags, these vehicles require two additional side satellite
crash sensors, mounted in their rear-quarter panels.
A typical satellite crash sensor utilizes a lateral-to-substrate
displacement configuration, is flexure-supported, and has a
rectangular-shaped seismic mass [47]. Displacement of the
seismic mass is capacitancely detected using comb electrodes.
The sensor is fabricated using the high aspect ratio deep-reactive ion etching (DRIE) process in silicon, as described on
page 1546 of [48]. Crash-detection acceleration sensors have
the following features:
Integrated minimal-overshoot, low-pass (two-pole Bessel)
frequency filtering of the output signal.
Wide measurement bandwidth, dc-to-1000 Hz (to detect
short-duration crash events).
Wide dynamic measurement range, 80 dB.
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.
Low noise operation, 1
Built-in self-monitoring failure detection and self-calibration.
I. Angular Rate (Gyro) Inertial Sensors
As in acceleration sensors, automotive angular-rate sensors
also utilize MEMS technologies. Their operation is based on
detection of the effects of Coriolis forces acting on various types
of vibrating mechanisms. Vibrating-ring, vibrating-tine (tuning
fork), and vibrating mass types of angular rate inertial sensors
were reviewed in [1] and [45]. Although the operating principles
of these sensors have remained the same, there have been several
improvements.
Prior models of vibrating-tine automotive rate sensors
required a large circuit board footprint of as much as
25 50 mm. To minimize the circuit-board area taken up by
the sensor, considerable effort has been made to reduce sensor
size. The 25 50-mm sensor today comes in a 16 19-mm
(76% area reduction) footprint package [49]. The reduced
footprint was made possible by utilizing a micromachining
(etching) process to fabricate the double-ended quartz tuning
fork, reducing its length to 10 mm.
Smaller-footprint rate sensors have been achieved using the
vibrating-ring type of sensor. Sensor footprints of 9 9 mm
have been realized. This was done by: a) replacing an electromagnetic actuation type of ring vibration with a capacitive electrostatic vibration actuation [50]; b) micromachining a 4-mm
thick, flexure-supported silicon ring; c) updiameter, 100grading from analog to digital circuitry; d) using back-to-back
stacking of electronics and sensing element dies; and e) utilizing
surface-mount packaging.
Automotive applications of angular rate sensors include the
following.
1) Vehicle Electronic Stability Control (ESC): Vehicle yaw
angle rate detection is a key component of ESC which is now required on all new passenger vehicles under a United States federal safety standard that phases in beginning with 2009 models
[51]. This federal requirement for ESC systems created a huge
demand for rate sensors. ESC systems are not mandated in other
countries, but new car assessment programs (NCAPs) such as
Euro NCAP, Japan NCAP, etc., additionally drive demand in
these countries.
2) Active Chassis Suspension: Suspension control systems
use angular-rate sensors to detect vehicle roll-rate and pitchrate.
3) Rollover-Protection Side Curtain Airbags: Vehicle rollrate sensors are a key part of a sensor suite used to trigger deployment of rollover-protection side curtain airbags.
4) Vehicle Navigation Systems: Navigation Systems use
yaw-rate sensors to detect vehicle heading (yaw angle) when
the autonomous dead reckoning mode of navigation is required. Yaw angle is determined by a mathematical integration
of the yaw angular rate signal with respect to time. (When the
systems GPS absolute position signal is unavailable, near
tall buildings or inside tunnels, the system switches to an
autonomous navigation mode of operation).
Rollover-crash-detection rate sensors in Section IV-I3 require operating range and bandwidth several times greater
1910
Fig. 9. Essential operating components of a dual vibrating-mass angular rate sensor used in vehicle electronic stability and active suspension control systems [52].
1911
1912
Fig. 10. Flexible-fuel sensor which measures ethanol content in fuel [66].
are mounted in the front face of the HVAC control panel. They
independently measure body surface temperatures of the driver
and passenger, and allow the HVAC to individually regulate
comfort according to the body temperatures of driver and passenger [74].
Standard CMOS MEMS technologies are used to fabricate
the IR sensor. Dozens of thermocouple (thermopile) junctions
and associated n-well thermistors are formed in thin membranes
etched in bulk silicon on each sensor. Electronics is provided via
a separate integrated-circuit chip [74].
4) Rain Sensors: Rain sensors provide feedback signals
for automatic windshield wiper control. Depending on design,
IR-beam optics in the sensors either refract light away from,
or reflect more light back, when rain impinges on their optical
path at the interface between the windshield and the outside
weather. Detected changes in IR beam intensity are proportional to amount of rainfall.
A capacitive type of rain/fog sensor is also in production. The
capacitive sensor includes a flat substrate. One side of the substrate has surface electrodes that capacitively generate electric
fields that extend (fringe) through the windshield to outside air
and interact with impinging raindrops. Changes in capacitance
(dielectric constant) indicate the presence of rain. The other
side of the substrate includes electronic signal processing [75].
The capacitive sensor geometrically has three-times greater
sensing area than the IR optical sensor and consequently
detects moisture on three-times greater windshield area than
the IR optical sensor. Because the capacitive sensor detects
moisture on a greater windshield sensing area than its optical
counterpart, it better responds to difficult-to-measure fine mist
and is less affected by a dirty windshield [75].
5) Fluid Level Sensors: Thermistors are commonly used to
detect low levels in coolant, fuel, brake, and steering fluids. Differences between the self-heating temperature of the thermistor
when immersed in a fluid, and not immersed, provide an output
signal. Another commonly used approach to low fluid sensing
uses a magnet mounted in a float. The magnet-in-float travels
along a slotted keyway and rides up and down with the changes
in the fluid level. A reed switch is mounted at a fixed position.
As fluid level drops, the magnet-in-float descends, and when
the level of the fluid drops below a predetermined point, the
magnets field actuates the reed switch, therein providing a low
fluid level signal [76].
L. Occupant Safety and Security Sensors
The United States enacted a safety standard that among other
things includes operating requirements for advanced airbag systems [77]. The standard is unique to the U.S. and has not been
adopted by other countries. The standard applies to all vehicles in the United States manufactured since model year 2004.
The standard gives special attention to protection of infants in
rear-facing infant seats, unbelted small children, short-stature
adults, and elderly adultspersons who have been disproportionately susceptible to injury by early-model airbags. Occupant
safety sensors developed specifically to make airbags safer and
to comply with this standard are described below.
1) Occupant Safety Sensors: The federal standard for advanced airbags offers three compliance options. The option most
1913
commonly used by automakers utilizes occupant-sensing technologies to statically classify occupants (weight, size, position)
and when necessary to suppress airbag inflation if an at-risk occupant is detected in a seat [77].
The following sensors are used for occupant static classification purposes in advanced airbag control systems.
a) Seated weight sensors: Seated weight sensors measure
occupants seated weight to distinguish small children from
adults in the right-front passenger seat. When a lighter-weight
passenger is detected, the airbag system is adjusted to provide
a softer bag deployment, or no deployment at all if a child
or empty seat is detected. There are two main types of seated
weight sensors used in production vehicles today.
Seat cushion-embedded, fluid-filled bladder with pressure
sensor readout [78].
Strain-gage sensing elements, integrated in seat-base
corner mounts [79], as shown in Fig. 11.
b) Seatbelt tension sensors: Seatbelt tension sensors detect
the apparent added weight of a tightly belted child restraint seat.
For example, a large toddler in heavy child seat, buckled-in with
high seatbelt tension, might be mistaken for a small adult female. Even though they both may have the same apparent seated
weight, the airbag cannot deploy on the child, but must deploy on the adult female. Inputs from the seatbelt tension sensor
allow belt tension to be factored out of the seated weight measurement, therein avoiding an inappropriate airbag deployment
on a child. Seatbelt tension sensors are typically mounted at the
seatbelt buckle-anchor locations. The sensors often consist of
a magnet in a spring-loaded assembly, where belt-tension-induced displacement of the magnet is sensed using a Hall-effect
sensor [80].
c) Seatbelt buckle status sensors: Seatbelt buckle status
sensors are used to detect whether or not an occupants seatbelt
is buckled. This input is, for example, used by airbag systems,
which have dual-level bag inflation rates. When an occupants
seatbelt is buckled, a less aggressive bag inflation rate is used
because the seatbelt is already restraining the occupant. Buckle
status sensors consist of a magnetic circuit internal to the buckle
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that includes a magnet, a Hall-effect sensor, and a circuit-completion buckle latch member. Full engagement of the buckles
latch into the tongues latch window completes the magnetic circuit [81].
d) Seat position sensors: Seat position sensors are used to
detect whether a drivers seat is positioned far forward which indicates that a short-stature person is driving the vehicle. When
the drivers seat is far forward, typically in 80%-to-100% of
full forward travel, this indicates that the driver is close to the
steering-wheel airbag. When a driver is seated this far forward,
and a moderate-severity crash occurs, bag deployment can be
suppressed because: i) at this close distance the steering wheel
itself is protecting the driver and ii) there is a risk that the drivers
close proximity could result in unintended injury by the deploying airbag. Seat position sensors typically consist of a magnetic circuit that includes a magnet, a Hall-effect sensor, and a
circuit-completion vane member. A ferromagnetic steel vane attached to the bottom of the drivers seat acts as the circuit-completion member. The vane completes the magnetic circuit when
the seat is positioned far forward [82].
2) Intrusion-Detection Security Sensors: Two-way remote
keyless entry (RKE) and antitheft systems both utilize sensors
to detect unauthorized intrusion into vehicles. Intrusion sensors
are mounted inside the vehicle cabin. Types of sensors most
commonly used for intrusion detection are:
Shock/vibration/motion, where low-frequency interior
vibrations, vehicle swaying, or vehicle bouncing are detected.
Glass breakage [83]. In some cases, microphones detect
the breakage and neural-network pattern recognition of the
detected acoustic energy spectrum is utilized.
Ultrasonic doppler motion detection utilizes signal processing that ignores stationary objects [84].
Passive far-IR body-heat detection [83].
M. Distance Sensors
Distance sensors monitor areas surrounding a vehicle, and are
designed to detect dangerous obstacles such as other vehicles
on paths of potential collision. Distance sensors are categorized
as: a) long range sensors which look forward at distances of
approximately 30100 m and b) short range sensors which look
in all directions around the vehicle at distances of approximately
030 m. Advances in sensor technology and new automotive
applications are presented here.
1) Long Range Distance Sensors: Adaptive cruise control
(ACC) systems require long-range distance sensors which use
either 77-GHz (a government-regulated frequency) millimeterwave radar or near-infrared laser radar. Instead of simply maintaining vehicle speed, ACC maintains distance from the car in
front. If a vehicle cuts in front, the subject vehicle automatically
slows down and maintains a safe separation distance. If a lead
vehicle speeds away, then the subject vehicle automatically resumes to its own set speed. Mutual interference among multiple
vehicle radar beams is suppressed, for example, by synchronizing the modulation of the radars transmit carrier frequency
with its receiver tuning frequency, thereby distinguishing its
own received signal from those of other radars. Pseudorandom
modulation of the carrier frequency is one method used to suppress mutual interference.
Another application for long-range distance sensors is forward collision warning. Studies have shown that, 60% of
rear-end collisions could be avoided if drivers had an extra half
second to react, and there is 90% avoidance with a full one
second reaction time [85]. ACC distance sensors provide the
necessary reaction time.
The four types of sensors, described here were selected because each one is currently used in one or more production
vehicles. Pros and cons corresponding to the various types of
long-range distance sensors are summarized as follows.
Three sensor types are millimeter-wave radarseach featuring all-electronic (no moving parts) scanning operation,
along with the ability to penetrate inclement weather. The
pulsed doppler type of radar features a GaAs Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit (MMIC) design providing very fast
radar scan update rates. The FM/CW radar claims to be the
smallest and lightest automotive radar sensor in production
today. Monopulse radar also features MMIC technology along
with complete range and azimuthal (horizontal) angle information derived from each received pulse.
Laser radar, the fourth type of long-range distance sensor,
features great accuracy and very low cost (said to be 1/3 the
cost of mm-wave radar), but laser radar cannot penetrate heavy
fog, rain, or snow.
a) Pulsed doppler radar: Pulsed doppler radar transmits pulses (bursts) of continuous-wave signals which upon
reflecting from a moving target additionally include a doppler
frequency shift as a means for discriminating moving from
fixed targets [112]. Gallium-arsenide MMIC circuits provide
fast switching of three transmit/receive beams which sequentially scan the right-side, center, and left-side azimuthal areas
of the roadway [87]. The output signal of pulsed-doppler radar
provides range, range closing rate, and azimuthal location of
targets. Target range is derived from pulse transit time, range
closing rate is derived from the doppler frequency shift in
the received pulse, and target azimuthal angle is derived from
knowledge of which one of the three beams, or combination
of beams, detected the target. Pulsed doppler radar is used in
certain luxury European and North American vehicles.
b)
FM/CW radar:
Frequency-modulated/continuous-wave radar directly measures range and closing speed.
Beat frequencies, the differences between transmit and
doppler-shifted received signal frequencies, are computed.
To extract vehicle range, sums of the beat frequencies are
formed (doppler shifts cancel out when beat frequencies are
summed). On the other hand, differences between beat frequencies indicates range-closing rate (range components cancel out
when differences are computed) [86]. In this way, both target
range and closing rate are simultaneously measured.
One configuration of this radar transmits a 10 wide flood
beam. Three 3 wide received beam directions are electronically
switched in the receive antenna, therein providing azimuthal
scanning of the roadway [85]. In another configuration of the
radar, instead of just switching receive beams, the combined
transmit-and-receive beams are simultaneously switched among
the three or four azimuthal directions [88]. This latter type of
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Fig. 13. Automotive system applications that use short-range distance sensors [92].
TABLE II
DISTANCE SENSOR AUTOMOTIVE APPLICATIONS
Sense areas and application uses are based on published literature and the judgment of the author.
Also utilizes vehicle dynamics sensor inputs (braking, deceleration, etc.)
Various types of short-range radars, sometimes together with camera vision, detect rapid closing rates of
slower-speed vehicles with respect to nearby slow or stopped vehicles or pedestrians ahead.
Various types of long-range radars detect rapid closing rates of faster-speed vehicles with respect to more
distant slow or stopped vehicles ahead.
typically operate at a frequency of 24-GHz which, compared to long-range 77-GHz frequency, allows for wider
beamwidths and broader road coverage, as required for
short-range operation.
Ultra-wideband (UWB) radars feature extremely fast measurement update rates and close-range high resolution that allows separate tracking of multiple approaching targets. Multibeam-forming radars feature near real-time broad-area coverage
of blind spots. Laser radars feature great accuracy, fast update
rates, and very low cost, but they cant penetrate heavy fog, rain,
or snow. Camera vision has good lateral object size resolution,
but its range measurement accuracy is poor, and it also does not
penetrate heavy fog, rain, or snow. Ultrasonic sensors have slow
Fig. 14. An automotive 24-GHz UWB distance sensor (exploded view). This
short-range radar sensor is currently available in the United States and Europe
and is approximately the size of a deck of playing cards [92].
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Fig. 15. Two types of automotive night vision technology are used. (a) FIR
warm body-detect camera [106]. (b) NIR illuminator and camera [100].
V. CONCLUSION
A comprehensive update and review of current-production
automotive sensor technologies is presented. New types of automotive sensors ranging from torque sensors to short-range
distance sensors are described. In addition, new features available in automotive sensors that measure acceleration and comfort/convenience are reviewed. New automotive systems applications, made possible by use of sensors that make measurements ranging from angular rate to occupant safety, are also
summarized.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Use of TRW Automotive Inc. resources and facilities in the
Systems Technology Department of Occupant Safety Systems,
Washington, MI, were essential in preparing this review paper
and are gratefully appreciated.
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