SSZTBB7 May   2016 LDC0851

 

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    2.     LDC0851 Differential Inductive Switching Theory
    3.     Application Examples
    4.     Prototyping Tools and Resources
    5.     Additional Resources

Luke LaPointe

Switching and latching applications that involve detecting the presence of a moving object can be complicated to design and plagued by reliability problems. Examples include implementing tamper detection for opening and closing doors, or measuring the rotational speed of a gear regularly exposed to dust or oil that could block the sensor and cause failures.

Additional challenges exist depending on the specific technology used for the switching application, including:

  • An inaccurate switching threshold due to the requirement of an additional component such as a magnet or magnetized material, which is often not very accurate due to variations between parts and often requires calibration in production.
  • Temperature variation and component aging, which affects the accuracy and repeatability of the switching threshold.

The introduction of TI’s LDC0851 differential inductive switch enables a new approach that offers a temperature-stable switching threshold accurate to 1% of the coil diameter, eliminating the need for production calibration.

LDC0851 Differential Inductive Switching Theory

The LDC0851, as shown in Figure 1, uses inductive sensing to perform a simple inductance comparison between two matched printed circuit board (PCB) coils. The output switches high or low depending on which coil has less inductance.

GUID-79B07AD5-E8F2-40D8-ABEF-3984D0374B74-low.jpg Figure 1 LDC0851 Differential Inductive Switch Functional Diagram

Application Examples

This new approach to switching applications offers benefits for two main categories of applications:

  • Proximity-detection applications that need a contactless and repeatable switching threshold, such as simple buttons, door open/close detection mechanisms and industrial proximity switches. Figure 2 shows a proximity-detection application in which an LDC0851 senses the position of a snap-dome button without electrical contact. Figure 3 shows that the adjustable threshold allows for easy prototyping and fine-tuning the response to detect the button response.
GUID-1662A793-D070-4BCA-A352-25829B81C224-low.jpg Figure 2 Proximity Detection for an Example Button Application
GUID-C858B9F6-799B-4E0B-A251-B5DD21976E94-low.jpg Figure 3 Adjustable Threshold to Fine Tune Button Response
GUID-04A24350-579E-4576-9D41-780EAEDC1440-low.jpg Figure 4 LDC0851-Based Encoder-knob Reference Design

Prototyping Tools and Resources

A simple coin-cell battery-powered evaluation module (EVM), shown in Figure 5, demonstrates close-range proximity sensing as well as simple on/off metal-button detection. This EVM includes a perforation that enables you to replace the default sensor with a custom sensor.

GUID-A749FF78-664A-4243-A1C2-86D3C8801BDD-low.jpg

If you’re interested in learning more about the new inductive switch, the WEBENCH® coil design tool can help simplify the design of stacked coils for the LDC0851. In the next post, we will go through a design example and show you how to use the new tool.

Additional Resources