Robotics Unit3 Sensors
Robotics Unit3 Sensors
Robotics Unit3 Sensors
UNIT-3
Sensors and machine vision
Dr. B. Janarthanan
Professor
Dept. of Mechanical Engineering
Mohamed Sathak A.J. College of Engineering
Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
Sensors
• Sensor is a device that acquires a physical parameter
and changes it into a signal that can be processed by
the system
• Eg., temperature, pH, velocity, rotational rate, flow
rate, pressure and many others.
• Today, most sensors do not indicate a reading on an
analog scale, but, rather, they produce a voltage or a
digital signal that is indicative of the physical variable
they measure.
• Those signals are often imported into computer
programs, stored in files, plotted on computers and
analyzed to depth.
Need of sensors
• The significance of sensor technology is
constantly growing.
• Sensors allow us to monitor our surroundings in
ways we could barely imagine a few years ago.
• New sensor applications are being identified
everyday which broadens the scope of the
technology and expands its impact on everyday
life.
Need of sensors
In Industry
• On the factory floor, networked vibration sensors
warn that a bearing is beginning to fail.
• Mechanics schedule overnight maintenance,
preventing an expensive unplanned shutdown.
• Inside a refrigerated grocery truck, temperature and
humidity sensors monitor individual containers,
reducing spoilage in fragile fish or produce.
Need of sensors
In the Environment
• Networks of wireless humidity sensors monitor fire
danger in remote forests.
• Nitrate sensors detect industrial and agricultural
runoff in rivers, streams and wells, while distributed
seismic monitors provide an early warning system for
earthquakes.
• Built-in stress sensors report on the structural
integrity of bridges, buildings and roadways, and
other man-made structures.
Need of sensors
For Safety and Security
• Fire fighters scatter wireless sensors throughout a
burning building to map hot spots and flare-ups.
Simultaneously, the sensors provide an emergency
communications network.
• Miniature chemical and biological sensors in
hospitals, post offices, and transportation centres
raise an alarm at the first sign of anthrax, smallpox or
other terror agents.
Characteristics of a sensor
1. Range: It is the minimum and maximum value of physical
variable that the sensor can sense or measure. For example,
a Resistance Temperature Detector (RTD) for the
measurement of temperature has a range of -200 to 800oC.
2. Span: It is the difference between the maximum and
minimum values of input. In above example, the span of
RTD is 800 – (-200) = 1000oC.
3. Accuracy: The error in measurement is specified in terms of
accuracy. It is defined as the difference between measured
value and true value. It is defined in terms of % of full scale
or % of reading.
Tactile Sensors: