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I am making a device for measurements. I would like to measure the distance within accuracy of 1 mm. Range could be 2 cm to 15 cm . I looked at Proximity Sensors but the readings displayed by these sensors are not steady.

I wish to measure the thickness of the plate (carbon steel). The two sensors will be mounted on a structure. The sensors will give me the distance of the surface from the sensor. Then I will calculate the thickness of the plate.

What are possible types of low cost sensors I can use?

Sensor Arrangement

Trevor Archibald
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JustCurious
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6 Answers6

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Answering the question:

What are possible types of low cost sensors I can use?

There are several types of sensors that can provide millimeter level accuracy. "Low cost" is a very relative term, so you'll need to do some shopping around based on your specific budget.

Optical sensors-

Included here are those of the type you listed, though it's a very cheap sensor meant more to provide a "yeah something is in front of me, about yay-far-away". There are also laser sensor systems which can provide millimeter level accuracy.

Ultrasonic Sensors-

Most ultrasonic sensors have relatively low accuracy; in the 25.4mm range. But some higher end sensors have sub-millimeter accuracy. Some are stand alone units with high accuracy.

Eddy current sensors-

These measure induced eddy currents and provide incredible accuracy.

Mechanical measurement-

It may be implied by your diagram, but it's not specified. Calipers are an obvious choice for measuring thickness. For a semi-automated approach you can also use linear displacement sensors.

Samuel
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Was looking for other distance solutions, and came across this question.

A sensor that I've found works well is the Sharp GP2Y0E02B (digital version) (newer version is the GP2Y0E03). Configuring it as an I2C sensor, using an Arduino, I've been able to get sub-millimeter resolution (0.156 mm - Range is ~630 mm, with 12 bit resolution).

Almost didn't believe it when I read the spec, so I put the sensor on a Bridgeport with a test target, and used this as 'ground truth'. Out to 50 mm on a simple test, the error was less than 0.2 mm; out at 100 mm, I got about a 0.4 mm error.

asylumax
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Various solutions are possible depending on your exact requirements.

Contacting system

This is probably the most obvious system, consisting of 1 or 2 lever arms which are deflected by the plate. By measuring the deflection the size could be determined. The main drawback of this is that it is a contacting system which may be a problem depending on your setup.

Video system

Another alternative which would be simple to implement is a video system. Mount a camera above your sample and image the plate as it passes through. By either calibrating the camera before hand or mounting a line scale beneath the plate the size can be determined. Resolution will depend on resolution of the camera and scale, although I think 1 mm shouldn't be hard to achieve. This is probably what I would do if you didn't want a contact system.

Laser rangefinder

These may be possible depending on what you consider low cost. Most systems are based on time of flight, which limits the resolution to ~1 mm. Additionally most cheap systems I have seen have a minimum range of at least 5 cm, which may be too large for you.

Interferometer

Also may be possible. However, simple fringe counting methods have difficulties when measuring steps, so will probably not be suitable for measuring a plate (unless its infinite). Frequency scanning methods are possible, but probably don't fall under low cost, measurement speed may also be an issue depending on sample length and throughput required.

nivag
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You haven't stated whether you want to get sensor readings into a computer or not. Also, it's not clear how frequent you need to do this task, and how much setup time is allowed per measurement.

If you want to do some Quality inspection (of whether the metallic plate is within tolerance bounds), you might want to consider simple or advanced image processing. for simple image processing, take a picture from front view and measure the distance between one end of the metal plate to the other end, or put a measurement paper behind the metal plate and take or observe the picture for measurement. If you have a human operator, this would probably be a simple way, just the accuracy requirement might be missed, depending on the setup of course.

Proximity sensors and other types of sensors might be effected by the movement of the metal plate, are you sure that it is not moving?

If you are sure about the alignment quality (that two surfaces are parallel), then you could push the plate to one side and use a regular micrometer or other measurement device.

Gürkan Çetin
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The RFD77402 (Qwiic) uses an infrared VCSEL (Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Laser) module to measure the amount of time it takes to bounce off a target. This allows low-cost millimeter readings up to two meters.

SparkFun offers a breakout board for like 15 USD. The sparkfun board is not available as of 2022 (or earlier)

Brian Leach
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The [MaxBotix HRLV MaxSonar-EZ][1] line (I'm looking at EZ4) claims to have a very steady analog output with 1mm accuracy, and has some supporting test documentation for their claims. About $40/sensor. I'd like the I2C version in order to eliminate analog weirdnesses in the circuitry as a factor, but so far the I2C ones only go to 1CM accuracy.