SLYA048B March   2020  – June 2021 FDC1004 , FDC1004-Q1 , FDC2112 , FDC2112-Q1 , FDC2114 , FDC2114-Q1 , FDC2212 , FDC2212-Q1 , FDC2214 , FDC2214-Q1 , LDC0851 , LDC1001 , LDC1041 , LDC1051 , LDC1101 , LDC1312 , LDC1312-Q1 , LDC1314 , LDC1314-Q1 , LDC1612 , LDC1612-Q1 , LDC1614 , LDC1614-Q1 , LDC2112 , LDC2114 , LDC3114 , LDC3114-Q1

 

  1.   Trademarks
  2. 1Inductive and Capacitive Theory of Operation
    1. 1.1 Inductive Sensing Theory of Operation
    2. 1.2 Capacitive Sensing Theory of Operation
  3. 2FDC: Capacitive Level Sensing
    1. 2.1 Capacitive Technology Benefits in Liquid Level Sensing
    2. 2.2 Getting Started With Capacitive Liquid Level Sensing
    3. 2.3 Device Selection
    4. 2.4 Design Challenges and Additional Collateral
  4. 3LDC: Inductive Touch Buttons
    1. 3.1 Inductive Technology Benefits in Buttons
    2. 3.2 Getting Started With Inductive Buttons
    3. 3.3 Device Selection
    4. 3.4 Design Challenges and Additional Collateral
  5. 4LDC: Incremental Encoder and Event Counting
    1. 4.1 Inductive Technology Benefits in Incremental Encoders
    2. 4.2 Getting Started With an Inductive Incremental Encoder
    3. 4.3 Device Recommendations
    4. 4.4 Design Challenges and Additional Collateral
  6. 5LDC: Metal Proximity Sensor
    1. 5.1 Inductive Technology Benefits in Metal Proximity Detection
    2. 5.2 Criteria to Consider when Choosing Inductive Sensing for Metal Proximity Applications
      1. 5.2.1 Metal Target Movement in Relation to Inductive Coil
      2. 5.2.2 Sensing Distance
      3. 5.2.3 Size and Shape of Metal Target
      4. 5.2.4 Speed (Sample Rate versus Resolution)
      5. 5.2.5 Environmental Compensation
    3. 5.3 Getting Started With Inductive Metal Proximity Sensing
    4. 5.4 Device Recommendations
    5. 5.5 Design Challenges and Additional Collateral
  7. 6Revision History

Sensing Distance

Sensing distance is directly correlated to the size of the sensor coil. As a guideline, 1um-10cm is a viable sensing range for inductive technology. For most of the LDC devices, including the LDC131x family and the LDC3114, the maximum sensing range can be considered to be 50% of the coil diameter for higher precision applications. For low precision applications, such as a mere detection of metal presence, can be possible up to 100% of the coil diameter. The LDC161x family is the highest resolution LDC device and can add additional sensing range – this device family can sense targets up to 200% of the coil diameter. For simpler LDC metal proximity applications that only require a switch output, the LDC0851 can be considered; it can detect 40% of it’s coil diameter by using the side-by-side coil approach and up to 30% when using a stacked coil approach for size-constrained applications. For more information and tradeoffs between the two different sensor approaches with the LDC0851, see the LDC0851 Stacked Coil Design Considerations.

For a rectangular or elliptical coil, consider the shortest dimension to be the critical dimension when estimating the sensing distance.

Note that the sensitivity is the highest within 20% of the total sensing distance as seen in the below figure. This is because the relative inductance shift versus distance curve is logarithmic in nature and within the 20% cutoff, shorter shifts in distance equate to a stronger shift in relative inductance, allowing for µm level movements in the z-axis.

GUID-0E7DEB37-0C77-4D21-B7FD-73EC80AE77B4-low.jpgFigure 5-4 Relative Inductance vs Distance