Sensors: Ref. Hand Book of Modern Sensors: Physics, Design and Application
Sensors: Ref. Hand Book of Modern Sensors: Physics, Design and Application
Ref.
Hand Book of Modern Sensors: Physics, Design and Application
Sensor and Actuator
Sensors Characteristics
A sensor is often defined as a device that receives and responds to a signal or
stimulus.
world is divided into natural and human-made objects.
The natural sensors like those found in living organisms, usually respond with
signals, having an electrochemical character, that is, their physical nature is
based on ion transport, like in the nerve fibers (such as an optic nerve in the
fluid tank operator).
In manmade devices, information is also transmitted and processed in electrical
form, however, through the transport of electrons. Sensors that are used in the
artificial systems must speak the same language as the devices with which they
are interfaced. This language is electrical in its nature and a man-made sensor
should be capable of responding with signals where information is carried by
displacement of electrons, rather than ions. Thus, it should be possible to
connect a sensor to an electronic system through electrical wires rather than
through an electrochemical solution.
A sensor is a device that receives a stimulus and responds with an electrical
Sensors, Transducers, Actuators
Any sensor is an energy converter. The term sensor should
be distinguished from transducers.
The transducers are converter of any one type of energy
into another. For example loudspeaker, which converts an
electrical signal into a variable magnetic field and,
subsequently, into acoustic waves. And its nowhere
related to the perception or sensing.
Transducers may be used as actuators in various systems.
In simple actuators may be defined as opposite to a
sensor, which generally converts electrical energy to non-
electrical energy.
Sensor convert any type of energy into electrical energy.
Eg. Thermo couple, photo cell, microphone etc.
Role of Transducers
Transducers may be parts of complex sensors. For example, a
chemical sensor may have a part, which converts the energy of a
chemical reaction into heat (transducer) and another part, a
thermopile, which converts heat into an electrical signal (direct
sensor). The combination of the two makes a chemical sensor, a
device which produces electrical signal in response to a chemical
reagent.
Sensors classification on the basis of complexity
There are two types of sensors; direct and complex.
A direct sensor converts a stimulus into an electrical signal or modifies an
electrical signal by using an appropriate physical effect.
A complex sensor in addition needs one or more transducers of energy
before a direct sensor can be employed to generate an electrical output.
A sensor does not function by itself; it is always a part of a larger system
that may incorporate many other detectors, signal conditioners, signal
processors, memory devices, data recorders, and actuators. The sensors
place in a device is either intrinsic or extrinsic. It may be positioned at the
input of a device to perceive the outside effects and to signal the system
about variations in the outside stimuli. Also, it may be an internal part of a
device that monitors the devices own state to cause the appropriate
performance. A sensor is always a part of some kind of a data acquisition
system. Often, such a system may be a part of a larger control system that
includes various feedback mechanisms.
Sensor Classification
Sensor material
Detection means used in sensors
Conversion phenomena
Field of applications