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English
Newnes (an imprint of Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd )
21 February 2006
Table of Contents 1. Hall Effect Physics 2. Pr actical Hall Effect Transducers 3. Transducer Interfacing4. Integrated Sensors, Linear and Digital Devices 5. Interfacing to Integrated Hall Sensors 6. Proximity S ensing Techniques 7. Current Sensing 8. Speed and Timing Sensors 9. Application-Specific Hall Sensor ICs< BR id='CRLF'>10. Development Tools for Hall Effect Sensors Appendix A. Brief Introduction to Magnetics Appendix B. Sup pliers List Glossary References and Bibliograp hy Index industrial control systems, cell phones, and many others. The importance of these sensors, however, contrasts with the limited information available. Many recent advances in miniaturization, smart sensor configurations, and networkable sensor technology have led to design changes and a need for reliable information. Most of the technical information on Hall effect sensors is supplied by sensor manufacturers and is slanted toward a particular product line. System design and control engineers need an independent, readable source of practical design information and technical details that is not product- or manufacturer-specific and that shows how Hall effect sensors work, how to interface to them, and how to apply them in a variety of uses.

By:  
Imprint:   Newnes (an imprint of Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd )
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   2nd edition
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   660g
ISBN:   9780750679343
ISBN 10:   0750679344
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. Hall Effect Physics The theory and math behind the Hall effect. 2. Practical Hall Effect Transducers Key characteristics, integrated Hall transducers, transducer geometry, examples. 3. Transducer Interfacing Modeling Hall transducers, biasing, amplifiers, temp. compensation, offset adjustment. 4. Integrated Sensors, Linear and Digital Devices Linear sensors, switches and latches, speed sensors, application-specific devices. 5. Interfacing to Integrated Hall Sensors Interface issues, line driver circuits, the pull-up resistor, interfacing to standard logic devices, discrete logic, driving loads, LED interface, incandescent lamps, relays, solenoids, and inductive loads, wiring reduction schemes, encoding and serialization, digital to analog encoding, voltage regulation and power management. 6. Proximity Sensing Techniques Head-on sensing, slide-by sensing, magnet null-point sensing, float-level sensing, linear position sensing, rotary position sensing, Vane switches, 7. Current Sensing Resistive current sensing, free-space current sensing, toroidal current sensors, digital current sensor, closed-loop current sensors. 8. Speed and Timing Sensors Competitive technologies, magnetic targets, vane switches, geartooth sensing, single-point sensing, differential fixed threshold, differential variable-threshold, speed and direction sensing. 9. Application-Specific Hall Sensor ICs Micro-power switches, two-wire switches, networkable sensors, power devices, smart motor control. 10. Development Tools for Hall Effect Sensors Electronic bench equipment, magnetic instrumentation, mechanical tools, magnetic simulation software. Appendix A. Brief Introduction to Magnetics Appendix B. Suppliers List Glossary References and Bibliography Index

Ed Ramsden is an electrical engineer who has been working with Hall effect sensors since 1988. His experience ranges from designing Hall effect integrated circuits to developing novel magnetic processing techniques. He has written over a dozen technical articles on sensor-related topics, and he holds four U.S patents in the area of magnetic sensor technology.

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