“Surface Acoustic Wave based ID-Tags Wireless Sensors”
Speaker: Prof. Leonhard Michael Reindl,
Institute of Microsystems Technology (IMTEK), University of Freiburg, Germany
when: Wednesday, January 26 at 4:00PM,
where: UCF, Harris Corp. Engineering Center, HCEC 101
ABSTRACT:
In the recent years unwired SAW sensors and identification tags have come under notice with a growing number of publications and applications. In this presentation the operating principles of wireless passive, mostly SAW based identification marks and sensors are shown.
The whole radio based sensor system consists of a read-out unit, comparable to an RADAR device, and a passive transponder, consisting of a surface acoustic wave (SAW) device wired to an antenna. The surface acoustic wave stores the read-out signal for a predefined period of time to suppress all environmental echo interferences. Physical or chemical effects may influence the propagation characteristics of the surface acoustic wave. Two fundamental devices allow storing and modulating of surface acoustic waves: the resonator, and the uniform or chirped delay line.
In this presentation, the transponder setup using a reflective delay line, resonator, or impedance sensor is discussed in detail, as well as the setup of the read out unit using a pulse or FMCW radar. Special emphasis is set on the achievable accuracy and on the sensitivity range. Several applications of such sensor systems and their state-of-the-art performance is presented by way of examples which include identification marks and wireless measurements of temperature, pressure, torque, acceleration, tire-road friction, magnetic field, and water content of soil. A discussion of other resonant structures which also could be used in a passive transponder system will close the presentation.
BIOGRAPHY:
Leonhard Reindl received his Diploma in Physics from Technical University of Munich, Germany, in 1985 and his Dr. sc. techn. from University of Technology Vienna, Austria, in 1997. In April 1985 Dr. Reindl joined the surface acoustic wave group of the Siemens Corporate Technology Division, Munich, Germany. At Siemens Dr. Reindl contributed to the development of SAW convolvers, dispersive, tapped, and reflective delay lines. His primary interest was in the development and application of SAW ID-tag and wireless passive SAW sensor systems. In April 1999 Dr. Reindl joined the Institute of Electrical Information Technology, Clausthal University of Technology, where he became professor of communications and microwave techniques. In May 2003 he accepted a full professor position as the chair for Electrical Instrumentation at the Institute for Microsystems Technology (IMTEK) at the University of Freiburg, Germany. Dr. Reindl is member of the IEEE, of the TPC of the IEEE Frequency Control Symposium, the Ultrasonics Symposium, the Eurosensors, and of the German biannual Symposium Sensoren und Messsysteme. He has been elected member of the AdCom of the IEEE UFFC society in 2005 to 2007 and from 2009 to 2011. He served also for the European ESRIF committee. He holds more than 30 patents on SAW devices and wireless passive sensors and has authored or co-authored more than 150 papers in this field.