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