US3114848A - High efficiency sonic generator - Google Patents

High efficiency sonic generator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3114848A
US3114848A US13923A US1392360A US3114848A US 3114848 A US3114848 A US 3114848A US 13923 A US13923 A US 13923A US 1392360 A US1392360 A US 1392360A US 3114848 A US3114848 A US 3114848A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
plate
transducer
thickness
nodal circle
sonic
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US13923A
Inventor
Kritz Jack
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Ambac International Corp
Original Assignee
American Bosch Arma Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US791481A external-priority patent/US3085167A/en
Application filed by American Bosch Arma Corp filed Critical American Bosch Arma Corp
Priority to US13923A priority Critical patent/US3114848A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3114848A publication Critical patent/US3114848A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B06GENERATING OR TRANSMITTING MECHANICAL VIBRATIONS IN GENERAL
    • B06BMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR GENERATING OR TRANSMITTING MECHANICAL VIBRATIONS OF INFRASONIC, SONIC, OR ULTRASONIC FREQUENCY, e.g. FOR PERFORMING MECHANICAL WORK IN GENERAL
    • B06B1/00Methods or apparatus for generating mechanical vibrations of infrasonic, sonic, or ultrasonic frequency
    • B06B1/02Methods or apparatus for generating mechanical vibrations of infrasonic, sonic, or ultrasonic frequency making use of electrical energy
    • B06B1/06Methods or apparatus for generating mechanical vibrations of infrasonic, sonic, or ultrasonic frequency making use of electrical energy operating with piezoelectric effect or with electrostriction
    • B06B1/0603Methods or apparatus for generating mechanical vibrations of infrasonic, sonic, or ultrasonic frequency making use of electrical energy operating with piezoelectric effect or with electrostriction using a piezoelectric bender, e.g. bimorph
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10KSOUND-PRODUCING DEVICES; METHODS OR DEVICES FOR PROTECTING AGAINST, OR FOR DAMPING, NOISE OR OTHER ACOUSTIC WAVES IN GENERAL; ACOUSTICS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G10K11/00Methods or devices for transmitting, conducting or directing sound in general; Methods or devices for protecting against, or for damping, noise or other acoustic waves in general
    • G10K11/18Methods or devices for transmitting, conducting or directing sound
    • G10K11/26Sound-focusing or directing, e.g. scanning
    • G10K11/28Sound-focusing or directing, e.g. scanning using reflection, e.g. parabolic reflectors

Definitions

  • the conventional thickness mode vibration e.g.: x cut quartz plate
  • x cut quartz plate is a poor choice for this criteria.
  • the crystal In order to produce moderate displacement of air, the crystal must expand and contract working against its modulus of elasticity, thus producing large values of stored energy for small displacements of air.
  • a mode of vibration of a flat plate which is far more favorable is a flexure mode.
  • a flexure mode in causing a plate or a strip of material to flex or bend, large displacements can be obtained for smaller values of internal stored energy.
  • the difliculty here is that for given dimensions the resonant frequency is lower, and in an attempt to raise the frequency to the desired region, thick sections or small sizes must apparently be used.
  • the flexibility advantage is lost, and in the second case the transducer tends to become too small to preserve plane wave propagation and the air loading is again reduced.
  • an optimum configuration does exist where highly efficient transducers may be devised according to the present invention, as will be described.
  • a thin disk is caused Max. energy stored per cycle Energy dissipated per cycle Patented Dec. 17, 1963 to flex about a nodal circle at which it is supported, while the dimensions of the thickness and diameter, or radius, are chosen by determining the thickness to diameter ratio which gives optimum etficiency. This ratio is then used to determine the actual dimensions which produce the desired vibration frequency of the disk.
  • the optimum ratio of thickness to diameter is determined, according to this invention, at the point where the operation of the disk changes from non-plane wave radiation to plane-wave radiation as the thickness to diameter ratio is increased. For quartz the optimum ratio has been found to be 1 It is an object of this invention to produce a sonic transducer employing a disk forced into flexure about a nodal circle.
  • FIG. 1 is a plan view of the mounted transducer
  • FIG. 2 is a sectional View through line 2-2 of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a modification of FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 4 shows a particularly desirable piezoelectric construction.
  • k is a constant
  • Z is the acoustic impedance of the transducer material
  • Z is the acoustic impedance of air It is the thickness of the disk a is the radius of the disk I is a factor governing the extent of plane-wave loading dependent on diameter to wavelength ratio.
  • the transduction is in the plane wave l e ioll a1 id, if
  • Equation 4 substitute the following values and solve for a;
  • the free circular disk vibrating in the first symmetrical mode has a nodal circle which for quartz has a radius equal to 68.2% of the disk radius, and for other ma terials is not significantly different therefrom.
  • the existence of the nodal circle provides a circular locus on the active transducer on which fastening devices may be attached to support the disk.
  • a disk 10 is supported by three supporting members 11, 12, 13 which extend between a frame 14 and the disk 10.
  • the supports 11, 12, 13 are equidistantly spaced on the surface of the disk 10 and are attached to the nodal circle 15 of the disk 10, i.e. at points 68.2% from the center to the edge.
  • the supporting members 11, 12, 13 are equidistantly spaced on the surface of the disk 10 and are attached to the nodal circle 15 of the disk 10, i.e. at points 68.2% from the center to the edge.
  • the supporting members 11, 12, 13 are equidistantly spaced on the surface of the disk 10 and are attached to the nodal circle 15 of the disk 10, i.e. at points 68.2% from the center to the edge.
  • FIG. 3 shows a reflector 18 behind the disk, but is otherwise similar to FIG. 2.
  • the disk 10 is preferably a piezoelectric transducer prepared by bonding a pair of circular x-cut crystalline quartz plates 10a, 10b with like polarity faces in contact as the junction plane 10c.
  • the bonding may be by soldering, plastic resins, or other suitable media.
  • the axes of the quartz plates 10a, 10b are preferably arranged as shown in FIG. 4 with the X axes of each plate directed in opposite directions, the Y axis of one plate a located adjacent the Z axis of the other plate 10b, and the Z axis of the first plate 10a located adjacent the Y axis of the second plate 10b. This arrangement will provide the forces necessary to produce flexural vibration of the disk upon application of an electrical field between the faces of the disk. Although other axial arrangements will work, the arrangement described has been found to give the best results.
  • the desired mode of flexure vibration is the first symmetrical mode which, for the disk 10, is that mode in which only one nodal circle is found on disk 10. This symmetrical mode is obtained by forcing the disk into vibration at the proper frequency as, for example, by designing the oscillator 16 to include the disk 10 as the frequency-controlling element.
  • the supports 11, 12, 13 being on the nodal circles, assist in insuring that the desired mode of vibration is obtained.
  • the calculation of the transducer dimensions proceeds as outlined earlier.
  • the actual frequency of the device designed according to this process may depart somewhat from that to be designed, due to the frequency shift caused by the air loading. However, this effect is quite small and can be neglected in most cases.
  • the thickness and radius of the disk can be trimmed as desired.
  • the invention is not limited to the use of piezoelectric drives for the sonic transducer disks, although it appears to be most convenient at this time. It is contemplated that future developments might make other types of drives such, for example, as electromagnetic or electrostatic means, more attractive.
  • the invention herein broadly is the use of a circular vibrating free edge disk supported at its nodal circle, having a thickness to radius ratio substantially equal to b 5.4/fi( or approximations thereof.
  • a free-edge flexure mode thin circular plate, means for driving said plate in vibration in the first symmetrical mode, and means for supporting said plate at its nodal circle.
  • a free-edge flexure mode thin circular plate including a sandwich made of two plates of quartz having the X axis in the thickness direction, with the Y axis of one plate aligned with the Z axis of the other plate bonded together, and means for supporting said plate at its nodal circle.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle, said supporting members consisting of low loss wires.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and said members having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate.
  • h is the thickness of said plate
  • a is the radius of said plate
  • B is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1
  • C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate
  • C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately.
  • h is the thickness of said plate
  • a is the radius of said plate
  • ,8 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1
  • C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate
  • C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medi- 7.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate not deviating by more than twenty-five percent from wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, ,8 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular crystalline quartz plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the diameter of the plate being approximately onesixteenth.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular crystalline quartz plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the diameter of the plate being approximately within the range of one-tenth to one-twentieth.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle, said supporting members consisting of low loss wires.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and said members having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, ,8 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
  • a free-edge fiexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately L 4 a g) fi 0 wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, 5 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
  • a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle.
  • a free-edge fiexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate not deviatmg by more than twenty-five percent from wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, 6 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.

Description

SEARC WWW Jun-mm;
Dec. 17, 1963 J. KRITZ HIGH EFFICIENCY SONIC GENERATOR Filed March 9, 1960 INVENTOR. JACK KEITZ United States Patent 3,114,848 HIGH EFFICENCY SONIC GENERATOR Jack Kritz, Westhury, N.Y., assignor to American Bosch Arma Corporation, a corporation of New York Filed Mar. 9, 1960, Sex. No. 13,923 22 Claims. (Cl. 310-91) The present invention relates to sonic vibration transducers and has particular reference to sonic radiators and receivers operating in a narrow band of frequencies. This application is a continuation-impart of US. patent application Serial No. 791,481 filed February 5, 1959.
Many devices have been developed for the conversion of electrical energy into sound vibrations. 'In every case, difiiculty is experienced in producing these sound vibrations with efficiency. Reasonable efficiencies, as high as 90%, within a narrow band can be produced with quartz resonators when working into liquid and solid media. The problem becomes more dilficult as the acoustic impedance, product of density and propagation velocity, of the medium is lowered. A severe problem arises when attempting to produ e these vibrations into air or gas. Due to the low density of the gas compared to any vibrating solid medium, large deflections must be produced in order to deliver any significant amount of energy to the medium. These large deflections are usually accompanied by large restraining forces built up in the transducing solid or its support structure. In addition, where supersonic vibrations are desired the increase in frequency further aggravates the lossiness of the transducing structure, making it extremely diificult to realize efliciencies above 5% in the frequency domain above 20,000 c.p.s. This application describes means for generating sonic vibrations with high efliciency in air, although the invention is suitable for large power, low frequency transduction into air and into other media as well.
In establishing a mode of vibration for a solid transducer, it is necessary to maximize the ratio of energy delivered to air per cycle of vibration to the energy stored per cycle of vibration. In this way, a more favorable condition will exist for any given support structure. This statement can be expressed by stating that the air loaded Q is to be minimized. Here Q is defined as in all vibrating systems by:
If the air loaded Q is made small enough, reasonably poor mounting structures can be tolerated. In addition, internal losses in the vibrating transducers can then be small compared to the energy delivered to the air.
The conventional thickness mode vibration, e.g.: x cut quartz plate, is a poor choice for this criteria. In order to produce moderate displacement of air, the crystal must expand and contract working against its modulus of elasticity, thus producing large values of stored energy for small displacements of air.
A mode of vibration of a flat plate which is far more favorable is a flexure mode. in causing a plate or a strip of material to flex or bend, large displacements can be obtained for smaller values of internal stored energy. The difliculty here, however, is that for given dimensions the resonant frequency is lower, and in an attempt to raise the frequency to the desired region, thick sections or small sizes must apparently be used. In the first case the flexibility advantage is lost, and in the second case the transducer tends to become too small to preserve plane wave propagation and the air loading is again reduced. However, an optimum configuration does exist where highly efficient transducers may be devised according to the present invention, as will be described.
In accordance with this invention, a thin disk is caused Max. energy stored per cycle Energy dissipated per cycle Patented Dec. 17, 1963 to flex about a nodal circle at which it is supported, while the dimensions of the thickness and diameter, or radius, are chosen by determining the thickness to diameter ratio which gives optimum etficiency. This ratio is then used to determine the actual dimensions which produce the desired vibration frequency of the disk. The optimum ratio of thickness to diameter is determined, according to this invention, at the point where the operation of the disk changes from non-plane wave radiation to plane-wave radiation as the thickness to diameter ratio is increased. For quartz the optimum ratio has been found to be 1 It is an object of this invention to produce a sonic transducer employing a disk forced into flexure about a nodal circle.
It is another object of this invention to produce a sonic transducer employing a piezoelectric disk which includes a sandwich of crystalline quartz having particularly oriented axes for obtaining the flexural operation of the disk.
It is a further object of this invention to produce a high efficiency sonic transducer by selective choosing of the thickness to diameter ratio of the disk.
It is another object of this invention to produce a high efficiency piezoelectric sonic transducer using a quartz sandwich in which the thickness to diameter ratio is approximately 2/ These and other objects will be made clear by reference to the following description and accompanying diagrams in which:
FIG. 1 is a plan view of the mounted transducer;
FIG. 2 is a sectional View through line 2-2 of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a modification of FIG. 2; and
FIG. 4 shows a particularly desirable piezoelectric construction.
Before entering into a description of the figures, the concepts underlying the invention will be explained. Consider first the problems with air loading of the transducer.
Due to the very low specific acoustic impedance of the air medium, the development of significant power in this medium immediately implies a large value of generated volume velocity. The implication for the transducer then becomes large displacement and/or large area of the working surface. Unfortunately, both internal and mounting losses also rise significantly with these parameters. A convenient expression for these relationships is embodied in the dimensionless quantity Q defined earlier.
In developing a transducer configuration for high efficiency, it is therefore desirable to maximize [the Q contributed by mounting and internal losses while simultaneously minimizing the air loaded Q.
An appreciation of the problem can be obtained by the examination of a conventional thickness mode vibrator made of low loss material such as quartz. The air loaded Q for a transducer loaded on both sides is given Where the Zs are the specific acoustic Z alr impedances placement while minimizing the stored energy. For this reason the present invention utilizes a resonant flexure mode structure as the basis of the sonic air transducer.
An analysis of the behavior of a free edge disk vibrating in its first symmetrical mode, i.e., with only one nodal circle and no nodal diameters, and supported at its nodal circle is extremely complicated and will not be reproduced here. However, the results and some of the background will be helpful to a full understanding of the invention.
The air loaded Q of a flexural vibration free edge disk in general is given by the following expression:
where:
k is a constant Z is the acoustic impedance of the transducer material Z is the acoustic impedance of air It is the thickness of the disk a is the radius of the disk I is a factor governing the extent of plane-wave loading dependent on diameter to wavelength ratio.
'Examination of the expression above indicates that Q is a function of and implies that Q can be decreased to a minimum by choosing an (ll/a) ratio small enough. Unfortunately, the resonant frequency drops rapidly with increasing radius, causing the air loading factor I to significantly affect the expression above, to the extent that Q becomes dependent upon the reciprocal of There is, therefore, a particular value of h/a which results in the optimum value of Q. Extensive analysis, coupled with justifiable approximations, has led to the following expression for defining the h/ a ratio which gives a transducer having the lowest possible Q for the materials used:
where as the ratio for optimum efficiency of a quartz transducer, or a thickness to diameter ratio of one-half as much, i.e. 0.064 or approximately A Poissons ratio for most transducer materials is in the vicinity of 1/ 3, for which 3 is 2.78, and as a result the approximation h/a=1.94 c/c can be used for most materials. The more exact relationship is found by use of Equation 3 with the proper value of 3.
With respect to the optimum value of Iz/a, it has been found that departure from the optimum value by more than 25% to either side of the optimum will result in operation of the transducer in a region where the analysis leading to the Equation 3 does not hold. If
is smaller by 25%, the transduction is in the plane wave l e ioll a1 id, if
p is the circular frequency 7rf) of the transducer C is the rod propagation velocity of the transducer material where As an example, consider the calculations for a 20 kc. quartz transducer. In Equation 4 substitute the following values and solve for a;
From this it will be found that a=l.49 cm. and 11:.186 cm.
The value of the etficiency itself is not pertinent to the present invention and the equations for calculating the efiiciency are not given, in order not to mask the essentials of the invention.
The free circular disk vibrating in the first symmetrical mode has a nodal circle which for quartz has a radius equal to 68.2% of the disk radius, and for other ma terials is not significantly different therefrom. The existence of the nodal circle provides a circular locus on the active transducer on which fastening devices may be attached to support the disk.
The principles of the invention are carried out in the apparatus shown in FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 4.
Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 2, a typical embodiment of a sonic transducer using the present invention is illustrated. A disk 10 is supported by three supporting members 11, 12, 13 which extend between a frame 14 and the disk 10. The supports 11, 12, 13 are equidistantly spaced on the surface of the disk 10 and are attached to the nodal circle 15 of the disk 10, i.e. at points 68.2% from the center to the edge. The supporting members 11, 12, 13
are preferably proportioned so as to have a resonant frequency equal to that of the disk 10 whereby the effects of errors in the placement of supports on the disk 10 are minimized. One or all of the supporting members 11, 12, 13 are electrically connected to one terminal of an exciting oscillator power supply 16, which may be conveniently located in the frame 14 behind disk 10. The electrical connection may be made by means of the frame 14 to which the oscillator 16, FIG. 2, is grounded by lead 19 and to which the leads 11, 12, 13 are attached. The other terminal of oscillator 16 is connected to the disk 10 through the connector 17, which may also be mechanically resonant at the resonant frequency of the supports 11, 12, 13 and is attached to the opposite side of disk 10 on a nodal circle. FIG. 3 shows a reflector 18 behind the disk, but is otherwise similar to FIG. 2.
The disk 10 is preferably a piezoelectric transducer prepared by bonding a pair of circular x-cut crystalline quartz plates 10a, 10b with like polarity faces in contact as the junction plane 10c. The bonding may be by soldering, plastic resins, or other suitable media. The axes of the quartz plates 10a, 10b are preferably arranged as shown in FIG. 4 with the X axes of each plate directed in opposite directions, the Y axis of one plate a located adjacent the Z axis of the other plate 10b, and the Z axis of the first plate 10a located adjacent the Y axis of the second plate 10b. This arrangement will provide the forces necessary to produce flexural vibration of the disk upon application of an electrical field between the faces of the disk. Although other axial arrangements will work, the arrangement described has been found to give the best results.
Other types of flexure transducer plates may be employed if desired, as for example, Y-cut quartz plates adapted for vibration in shear. Although at this time, quartz appears to be the preferred piezoelectric transducer material, the invention is not to be limited to the use thereof but any suitable piezoelectric material can be used, if desired. The desired mode of flexure vibration is the first symmetrical mode which, for the disk 10, is that mode in which only one nodal circle is found on disk 10. This symmetrical mode is obtained by forcing the disk into vibration at the proper frequency as, for example, by designing the oscillator 16 to include the disk 10 as the frequency-controlling element. The supports 11, 12, 13 being on the nodal circles, assist in insuring that the desired mode of vibration is obtained.
Now in carrying out the invention disclosed herein, the calculation of the transducer dimensions proceeds as outlined earlier. The actual frequency of the device designed according to this process may depart somewhat from that to be designed, due to the frequency shift caused by the air loading. However, this effect is quite small and can be neglected in most cases. In order to tailor the manufactured transducer to the exact operating condition required, the thickness and radius of the disk can be trimmed as desired.
It should be pointed out that the invention is not limited to the use of piezoelectric drives for the sonic transducer disks, although it appears to be most convenient at this time. It is contemplated that future developments might make other types of drives such, for example, as electromagnetic or electrostatic means, more attractive. The invention herein broadly is the use of a circular vibrating free edge disk supported at its nodal circle, having a thickness to radius ratio substantially equal to b 5.4/fi( or approximations thereof.
I claim:
1. In a sonic transducer, a free-edge flexure mode thin circular plate, means for driving said plate in vibration in the first symmetrical mode, and means for supporting said plate at its nodal circle.
2. In a sonic transducer, a free-edge flexure mode thin circular plate including a sandwich made of two plates of quartz having the X axis in the thickness direction, with the Y axis of one plate aligned with the Z axis of the other plate bonded together, and means for supporting said plate at its nodal circle.
3. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle, said supporting members consisting of low loss wires.
4. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and said members having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate.
wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, B is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
6. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately.
h 5.4 a C wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, ,8 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medi- 7. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately h/a=l.94c/c wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, q, is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and c is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
8. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately h/a=l.94c/c wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, c is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and c is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
9. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle.
10. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate not deviating by more than twenty-five percent from h/a=1.94c/c wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, c is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and c is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
11. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular piezoelectric plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate not deviating by more than twenty-five percent from wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, ,8 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
12. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular crystalline quartz plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the diameter of the plate being approximately onesixteenth.
13. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular crystalline quartz plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the diameter of the plate being approximately within the range of one-tenth to one-twentieth.
14. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle, said supporting members consisting of low loss wires.
15. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and said members having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate.
16. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, ,8 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
17. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge fiexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately L 4 a g) fi 0 wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, 5 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
18. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately h/a=1.94c/c wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, q, is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and c is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
19. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle and having a resonant frequency substantially the same as the resonant frequency of said plate, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate being approximately h/a=1.94c/ c wherein h is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, c is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and c is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
20. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge flexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended from said support by supporting members attached to said plate at the nodal circle.
21. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge fiexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate not deviating by more than twenty-five percent from h/a=l.94c/c wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, c is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and c is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
22. In a sonic transducer for producing sonic vibrations in an adjacent medium, a free-edge fiexure mode circular plate having a nodal circle, a support for said plate, said plate being suspended at the nodal circle, the ratio of the thickness of the plate to the radius of the plate not deviatmg by more than twenty-five percent from wherein it is the thickness of said plate, a is the radius of said plate, 6 is a constant dependent on Poissons ratio and having a value between 2.4 and about 3.1, C is the bulk propagation velocity in the material of said plate, and C is the propagation velocity in said adjacent medium.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,896,513 Hougaard Feb. 7, 1933 2,004,170 Moser et al June 11, 1935 2,239,550 Cubert Apr. 22, 1941 2,242,755 Pope May 20, 1941 2,385,666 Watrobski Sept. 25, 1945 2,953,696 Ruggles Sept. 20, 1960 3,046,423 Wolfskill et al July 24, 1962 FOREIGN PATENTS 414,764 Great Britain Aug. 13, 1934 619,872 Great Britain Mar. 16, 1949

Claims (1)

1. IN A SONIC TRANSDUCER, A FREE-EDGE FLEXURE MODE THIN CIRCULAR PLATE, MEANS FOR DRIVING SAID PLATE IN VIBRATION IN THE FIRST SYMMETRICAL MODE, AND MEANS FOR SUPPORTING SAID PLATE AT ITS NODAL CIRCLE.
US13923A 1959-02-05 1960-03-09 High efficiency sonic generator Expired - Lifetime US3114848A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13923A US3114848A (en) 1959-02-05 1960-03-09 High efficiency sonic generator

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US791481A US3085167A (en) 1959-02-05 1959-02-05 High efficiency sonic generator
US13923A US3114848A (en) 1959-02-05 1960-03-09 High efficiency sonic generator

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3114848A true US3114848A (en) 1963-12-17

Family

ID=26685425

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13923A Expired - Lifetime US3114848A (en) 1959-02-05 1960-03-09 High efficiency sonic generator

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3114848A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3198970A (en) * 1961-06-09 1965-08-03 Bosch Arma Corp Piezoelectric vibration transducer
US3317761A (en) * 1964-05-12 1967-05-02 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Resonant and antiresonant vibratory members attached to a crystal
US3437849A (en) * 1966-11-21 1969-04-08 Motorola Inc Temperature compensation of electrical devices
US3754435A (en) * 1969-06-25 1973-08-28 Automation Ind Inc Material tester
US3970879A (en) * 1971-12-29 1976-07-20 Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd. Piezoelectric acoustic device
US4533186A (en) * 1983-02-28 1985-08-06 International Business Machines Corporation Cylindrical type squeeze bearing systems with bearing and driving elements attached in areas of maximum deflection
US4545625A (en) * 1983-02-28 1985-10-08 International Business Machines Corporation Prestressed cylindrical squeeze bearing member
US4666315A (en) * 1981-06-12 1987-05-19 International Business Machines Corporation Planar and cylindrical oscillating pneumatodynamic bearings

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1896513A (en) * 1930-10-08 1933-02-07 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Piezo-electric crystal
GB414764A (en) * 1933-02-13 1934-08-13 Marcel Charles Tournier Improvements in mechanical frequency standards such as piezoelectric crystals
US2004170A (en) * 1933-02-06 1935-06-11 Telefunken Gmbh Crystal holder
US2239550A (en) * 1939-11-20 1941-04-22 Aurex Corp Bone conduction hearing device
US2242755A (en) * 1939-02-11 1941-05-20 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Acoustic device
US2385666A (en) * 1943-01-30 1945-09-25 Gen Electric Crystal mounting
GB619872A (en) * 1942-11-10 1949-03-16 Charles Louis Florisson Supersonic apparatus utilising piezo-electric vibrators
US2953696A (en) * 1957-04-29 1960-09-20 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Piezoelectric crystal unit
US3046423A (en) * 1958-10-09 1962-07-24 Bliley Electric Company High shock and vibration resistant piezoelectric crystal units

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1896513A (en) * 1930-10-08 1933-02-07 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Piezo-electric crystal
US2004170A (en) * 1933-02-06 1935-06-11 Telefunken Gmbh Crystal holder
GB414764A (en) * 1933-02-13 1934-08-13 Marcel Charles Tournier Improvements in mechanical frequency standards such as piezoelectric crystals
US2242755A (en) * 1939-02-11 1941-05-20 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Acoustic device
US2239550A (en) * 1939-11-20 1941-04-22 Aurex Corp Bone conduction hearing device
GB619872A (en) * 1942-11-10 1949-03-16 Charles Louis Florisson Supersonic apparatus utilising piezo-electric vibrators
US2385666A (en) * 1943-01-30 1945-09-25 Gen Electric Crystal mounting
US2953696A (en) * 1957-04-29 1960-09-20 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Piezoelectric crystal unit
US3046423A (en) * 1958-10-09 1962-07-24 Bliley Electric Company High shock and vibration resistant piezoelectric crystal units

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3198970A (en) * 1961-06-09 1965-08-03 Bosch Arma Corp Piezoelectric vibration transducer
US3317761A (en) * 1964-05-12 1967-05-02 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Resonant and antiresonant vibratory members attached to a crystal
US3437849A (en) * 1966-11-21 1969-04-08 Motorola Inc Temperature compensation of electrical devices
US3754435A (en) * 1969-06-25 1973-08-28 Automation Ind Inc Material tester
US3970879A (en) * 1971-12-29 1976-07-20 Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd. Piezoelectric acoustic device
US4666315A (en) * 1981-06-12 1987-05-19 International Business Machines Corporation Planar and cylindrical oscillating pneumatodynamic bearings
US4533186A (en) * 1983-02-28 1985-08-06 International Business Machines Corporation Cylindrical type squeeze bearing systems with bearing and driving elements attached in areas of maximum deflection
US4545625A (en) * 1983-02-28 1985-10-08 International Business Machines Corporation Prestressed cylindrical squeeze bearing member

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3804329A (en) Ultrasonic generator and atomizer apparatus and method
US4706230A (en) Underwater low-frequency ultrasonic wave transmitter
US3400892A (en) Resonant vibratory apparatus
US3833825A (en) Wide-band electroacoustic transducer
JP3852949B2 (en) Ultrasonic transducer
US20010033124A1 (en) Horn array emitter
US2787777A (en) Ceramic transducer having stacked elements
US4757227A (en) Transducer for producing sound of very high intensity
US3054084A (en) Balanced flexural electroacoustic transducer
JPS5959000A (en) Recessed type ultrasonic wave probe and its manufacture
US3114848A (en) High efficiency sonic generator
US2406767A (en) Directive transceiver for sound
JP3502161B2 (en) Vibration system for electrophotographic equipment
US2741754A (en) Disk transducer
US2497680A (en) Piezoelectric crystal unit
US4413331A (en) Broad beam transducer
JPS62125798A (en) Ultrasonic testing head
JP3416648B2 (en) Acoustic transducer
US2406792A (en) Piezoelectric oscillator
US2844809A (en) Compressional wave transducers
US3085167A (en) High efficiency sonic generator
US3421137A (en) Echo repeater and/or target simulator
US2170318A (en) Piezoelectric crystal device
US4972389A (en) Electroacoustic transducer
US5386168A (en) Polarization-sensitive shear wave transducer