| The steady state solution for the accelerometer
is found to be,
where the amplitude H, the phase f, the damping ratio z,
and the natural frequency wn are given by,
Most accelerometers are constructed with a small mass and a short
stiff spring, such that the natural frequency wn is much higher than the
working frequency w. As a result, the
denominator of the amplitude H is approximately 1,
This is important because the accelerometer can now track the
acceleration of the target object directly, without the need for any
amplitude corrections. To see this, compare the simplified
displacement of the accelerometer with the acceleration amplitude of
the target object, AObject,
Observe that the target object's acceleration amplitude is
contained within the accelerometer's displacement directly,
For z = 0.707, the effective frequency
range can be up to 0.4 wn
with less than 1% error. In fact, the results are often acceptable
up to 0.6 wn without
adjustment.
For modern piezoelectric accelerometers, the damping ratio is
close to zero. In addition, their mass is very small (approx. 10
grams; less than 1 oz) and they have a very high stiffness,
resulting in natural frequencies of 30 kHz or more. Hence their
working range can extend up to 5 kHz or higher.
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