4.6 Article

Sensor Fusion for Improved Control of Piezoelectric Tube Scanners

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CONTROL SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 1265-1276

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCST.2008.921798

Keywords

Displacement estimation; Kalman filter; nanopositioner; piezoelectric strain sensor; piezoelectric tube scanner; receding horizon control; sensor fusion

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP0666620]
  2. University of Newcastle
  3. ARC Center for Complex Dynamic Systems and Control
  4. Australian Research Council [DP0666620] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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In nanopositioning applications, capacitive or inductive sensors are used to measure displacement and provide feedback to eliminate actuator nonlinearity, dynamics, cross-coupling between axes, and thermal drift. Due to their noise density, typically 20 pm/root Hz for 100-mu m range transducers, feedback loops are restricted to a few tens of Hertz if nanometer precision is required. In this study, a capacitive displacement sensor is used with a piezoelectric strain voltage measurement to reduce sensor noise at frequencies above 1 Hz. The piezoelectric strain voltage is derived from an open-circuit electrode on a four-quadrant piezoelectric tube actuator and requires no additional hardware. The noise density of the piezoelectric strain voltage is measured to be three orders of magnitude lower than the capacitive sensor. This allows a large increase in closed-loop bandwidth with no penalty on sensor-induced noise. The advantageous properties of the capacitive sensor and piezoelectric strain voltage are discussed and utilized to design a Kalman filter that combines the two signals in a statistically optimal way. A receding horizon control strategy is then introduced as a technique for controlling the tube scanner. A wide-bandwidth controller is implemented that provides reference tracking and damping of the actuator resonance, with root-mean-square displacement noise below 0.4 nm.

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