Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Journals

Article Types

Countries / Regions

Search Results (88)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = frequency-domain angle measurement

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
19 pages, 12757 KB  
Article
Simulation-to-Real Trip-Fall Detection with Continuous-Wave Doppler Radar via Physics-Informed Kinematic Modeling and Domain Randomization
by Kosuke Okusa
Sensors 2026, 26(10), 3211; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26103211 - 19 May 2026
Viewed by 519
Abstract
Falls among older adults are a major public health concern, yet collecting large-scale real fall data for radar-based detection is ethically and practically difficult. This study presents a controlled simulation-to-real feasibility study for trip-fall detection using continuous-wave (CW) Doppler radar. The method couples [...] Read more.
Falls among older adults are a major public health concern, yet collecting large-scale real fall data for radar-based detection is ethically and practically difficult. This study presents a controlled simulation-to-real feasibility study for trip-fall detection using continuous-wave (CW) Doppler radar. The method couples a physics-informed kinematic trip-fall model with a CW radar observation model to synthesize I/Q signals and Doppler spectrograms, while domain randomization varies body size, fall direction, initial velocity, sensor placement, aspect angle, amplitude, and noise. Synthetic walking and respiration data were also generated for controlled three-class classification among trip fall, walking, and seated quiet breathing. In Experiment I, the simulated spectrograms reproduced the dominant time–frequency characteristics of measured enacted trip-fall signals acquired with a 24 GHz CW radar; quantitative similarity analysis yielded a mean SSIM of 0.782 and a Doppler-ridge MAE of 24.6 Hz across five fall directions. In Experiment II, a ResNet-18 classifier trained only on simulated spectrograms achieved a macro-F1 score of 0.912 [95% CI: 0.883–0.936] on measured data from ten participants, three start locations, and eight directions. Under the present controlled evaluation, this exceeded the available real-data-trained baseline of 0.748 [95% CI: 0.691–0.805] (paired subject-level permutation test, p=0.006). These findings suggest that physics-informed simulation with domain randomization can reduce dependence on real trip-fall samples under limited-data conditions. The results do not establish robustness to other fall morphologies, fall-like activities of daily living, different environments, different radar devices, or embedded deployment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Sensing)
Show Figures

Figure 1

19 pages, 6276 KB  
Article
Misalignment Decoupling and Tilt-to-Length Suppression in a Micro-Actuated Beam Steering Mechanism via Nonlinear Cyclic Modulation
by Yang Li, Changkang Fu, Hongming Zhang, Hongyang Guo, Zhiqiang Zhao, Mengyang Zhao, Ruihong Gao, Qiang Wang, Chen Wang, Caiwen Ma, Dong He and Yongmei Huang
Micromachines 2026, 17(5), 587; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17050587 - 10 May 2026
Viewed by 304
Abstract
Tilt-to-length (TTL) coupling is a critical noise source in high-precision interferometric measurements, particularly in systems involving angular actuation and beam steering. This paper proposes a nonlinear cyclic modulation method to identify lateral misalignment and suppress the associated TTL coupling. By applying controlled sinusoidal [...] Read more.
Tilt-to-length (TTL) coupling is a critical noise source in high-precision interferometric measurements, particularly in systems involving angular actuation and beam steering. This paper proposes a nonlinear cyclic modulation method to identify lateral misalignment and suppress the associated TTL coupling. By applying controlled sinusoidal angular excitation and evaluating the complex modulus ratio between the optical path difference (OPD) and the beam angle at the modulation frequency, the TTL noise induced by the point-ahead angle mechanism (PAAM) is separated and quantified in the frequency domain. Experimental results demonstrate that lateral offset correction reduces TTL noise by 94%, corresponding to a suppression factor of 15.5 and enabling pointing control better than 21 µm/rad. Meanwhile, the parasitic displacement noise of the PAAM is reduced from 10 pm/Hz1/2 to below 4 pm/Hz1/2. These results validate the effectiveness of the proposed modulation-based identification framework and demonstrate its applicability to precision interferometric systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section A1: Optical MEMS and Photonic Microsystems)
Show Figures

Figure 1

24 pages, 25000 KB  
Article
A Real-Time SDR-Based Vehicular Scatterometer with Multi-Subband Coherent Synthesis
by Shijie Yang, Wei Guo, Caiyun Wang, Peng Liu, Te Wang, Zhenzhen Liang, Qing Xing, Xingming Zheng and Bingze Li
Sensors 2026, 26(9), 2891; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26092891 - 5 May 2026
Viewed by 1091
Abstract
Ground-based scatterometers are widely used for quantitative microwave backscattering measurements in soil moisture retrieval, vegetation monitoring, and satellite scatterometer validation. However, low-cost software-defined radio (SDR) transceivers provide limited instantaneous bandwidth, making it difficult to transmit and process signals with bandwidths on the order [...] Read more.
Ground-based scatterometers are widely used for quantitative microwave backscattering measurements in soil moisture retrieval, vegetation monitoring, and satellite scatterometer validation. However, low-cost software-defined radio (SDR) transceivers provide limited instantaneous bandwidth, making it difficult to transmit and process signals with bandwidths on the order of hundreds of MHz for fine range resolution, especially for systems requiring real-time onboard processing. To address this problem, this paper presents a vehicular, fully polarimetric, SDR-based scatterometer that achieves an equivalent wideband response by sequentially transmitting adjacent narrow subbands and coherently synthesizing them onboard. To enable real-time operation on a resource-limited field-programmable gate array/system-on-chip (FPGA/SoC) platform, we adopt a frequency-domain synthesis-pulse-compression pipeline that avoids interpolation and eliminates repeated matched filtering across subbands. A slot-based online phase calibration is performed within the settling window after each fast lock to estimate and compensate random local oscillator (LO) phase offsets, preserving coherent stitching. In addition, pulse repetition within each subband and coherent accumulation are integrated to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) under real-time throughput constraints. A Zynq-based implementation demonstrates deterministic onboard range-profile output, with a minimum processing latency of about 1.57 ms per frame. Loopback and outdoor experiments validate the equivalent 200 MHz bandwidth (five 40 MHz subbands), achieving approximately 0.75 m resolution and yielding sidelobe metrics consistent with the designed windowing, including a peak sidelobe ratio (PSLR) of −27.43 dB and an integrated sidelobe ratio (ISLR) of −12.38 dB. Field scans over farmland further show consistent σ0 trends across incidence angle and azimuth, indicating reliable onboard quantitative backscattering measurement. These results demonstrate that the proposed method provides a feasible solution for deterministic real-time equivalent wideband scatterometry on a low-cost SDR platform. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Remote Sensors)
Show Figures

Figure 1

26 pages, 8980 KB  
Article
Experimental Study on the Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Swept-Blade Wind Turbine Under Turbulent Inflow Conditions
by Junwei Yang, Chenglong Sha, Xiangjun Wang and Hua Yang
Biomimetics 2026, 11(5), 293; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics11050293 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 972
Abstract
Avian wings enable autonomous control over flight trajectory and speed, and their swept-wing geometry inspires the application of sweep modifications to horizontal-axis wind turbine blades, an approach that is critical for improving aerodynamic performance. Hence, wind tunnel experiments were performed to evaluate the [...] Read more.
Avian wings enable autonomous control over flight trajectory and speed, and their swept-wing geometry inspires the application of sweep modifications to horizontal-axis wind turbine blades, an approach that is critical for improving aerodynamic performance. Hence, wind tunnel experiments were performed to evaluate the output power and wake features of a baseline straight-bladed and a swept-blade wind turbine. The experimental results demonstrate that inflow turbulence intensity (T.I.) affects the peak power coefficient of the swept-bladed turbine, with power coefficient gains being more significant when the tip speed ratio is greater than 3.0 and under yawed conditions. At a yaw angle of 20°, when the T.I. is 0.5%, 10.5%, and 19.0%, respectively, the corresponding increased values are 13.17%, 3.44%, and 4.68%. Cross-stream velocity in the near-wake region of the swept-bladed turbine is markedly higher than that for the baseline condition. The averaged T.I. in the wake velocity region of the swept-blade conditions is greater than that of the baseline condition at most measurement positions. Moreover, power spectral density (PSD) magnitudes behind the blade tip for the swept-blade configuration are higher than those of the baseline, particularly in the medium- and high-frequency domains. This work clarifies the aerodynamic characteristics of swept-blade wind turbines to varying levels of turbulent inflow. Full article
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

11 pages, 817 KB  
Article
Retrieval of Sunrise C-Region Electron Density Using Mid-Range VLF Amplitude and FDTD-Based Optimization
by Taira Shirasaki, Yuki Itabashi and Yoshiaki Ando
Atmosphere 2026, 17(4), 350; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos17040350 - 31 Mar 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 461
Abstract
This study presents a method to retrieve the electron density structure of the transient C-region using very-low-frequency (VLF) Earth–ionosphere waveguide propagation. Here, we demonstrate the identification of the C-region from amplitude variations of a mid-range VLF propagation path that is nearly perpendicular to [...] Read more.
This study presents a method to retrieve the electron density structure of the transient C-region using very-low-frequency (VLF) Earth–ionosphere waveguide propagation. Here, we demonstrate the identification of the C-region from amplitude variations of a mid-range VLF propagation path that is nearly perpendicular to the solar terminator. Previous investigations have primarily relied on phase measurements along long-distance paths with small terminator angles, whereas the present approach utilizes amplitude information under conditions where modal interference is significant. The Faraday International Reference Ionosphere (FIRI-2018) provides an effective semi-empirical model of the lower-ionospheric electron density; however, discrepancies between simulations and observations are often observed at sunrise. To resolve this issue, we introduce Gaussian perturbations to the electron density profile output by FIRI-2018 and optimize their parameters so that finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations reproduce the observed VLF amplitude. The analysis is performed for the 22.2 kHz JJI transmitter signal received in Chofu, Japan over a mid-range propagation path, ∼900 km. The optimized electron density profile successfully reproduces the characteristic features of the C-region, including a temporary enhancement near 65 km altitude during sunrise. These results demonstrate that mid-range VLF amplitude analysis provides a quantitative tool for identifying transient lower- ionospheric structures. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

12 pages, 1958 KB  
Article
Temporal Wettability Dynamics in Sustainable Olive Pomace Biochar Composites: A Signal-Driven and Bat Algorithm Framework
by Mehmet Ali Biberci
Processes 2026, 14(6), 999; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14060999 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 384
Abstract
Olive pomace biochar, obtained through the pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass, has emerged as a sustainable and multifunctional additive for polymer composites. Its physicochemical properties, including porosity, surface area, and electrical conductivity, can be tailored by controlling feedstock type and pyrolysis conditions. Although mechanical [...] Read more.
Olive pomace biochar, obtained through the pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass, has emerged as a sustainable and multifunctional additive for polymer composites. Its physicochemical properties, including porosity, surface area, and electrical conductivity, can be tailored by controlling feedstock type and pyrolysis conditions. Although mechanical reinforcement and thermal stability improvements are well documented, the influence of biochar on surface-related properties such as wettability and contact angle remains insufficiently explored for environmentally relevant composite systems. In this study, epoxy-based composites containing biochar synthesized at 750 °C were evaluated in terms of their water interaction behavior by monitoring the evaporation dynamics of ultra-pure water droplets (10 μL, 0.055 mS/cm conductivity) at eight time intervals between 20 and 580 s using high-resolution digital microscopy. Image enhancement and segmentation were performed prior to Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) analysis to describe droplet geometry in the frequency domain. Time-dependent variations in the standard deviations of DCT coefficients were optimized using the Bat Algorithm, resulting in mathematical models capable of accurately representing droplet evolution and surface–fluid interactions. The primary novelty of this study lies in the development of a hybrid experimental–computational framework that integrates droplet-based wettability measurements with signal-domain analysis and metaheuristic optimization. Unlike conventional studies focusing solely on material characterization, this approach establishes quantitative relationships between surface behavior and numerical descriptors derived from DCT and the Bat Algorithm. The proposed methodology provides a data-driven tool for predicting wettability trends in biochar-reinforced composites and supports the development of moisture-resistant materials for coatings, packaging, and thermal insulation applications within the context of sustainable composite design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Materials Processes)
Show Figures

Figure 1

19 pages, 4270 KB  
Article
Adaptive Optimization of Non-Uniform Phased Array Speakers Using Particle Swarm Optimization for Enhanced Directivity Control
by Shangming Mei, Yihua Hu and Mohammad Nasr Esfahani
Modelling 2026, 7(1), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/modelling7010020 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 628
Abstract
Phased array speakers are often designed with uniform element spacing, which limits beam steering capability and sidelobe control under practical aperture and hardware constraints. This study presents an optimization-driven modelling framework for parametric array loudspeakers (PALs) that systematically links array layout synthesis with [...] Read more.
Phased array speakers are often designed with uniform element spacing, which limits beam steering capability and sidelobe control under practical aperture and hardware constraints. This study presents an optimization-driven modelling framework for parametric array loudspeakers (PALs) that systematically links array layout synthesis with high-fidelity directivity prediction, by combining a frequency-domain convolution model with a finite element method (FEM) pipeline. We formulate array layout synthesis as a constrained optimization problem and employ particle swarm optimization (PSO) to determine non-uniform element positions that suppress sidelobes while preserving mainlobe integrity across steering angles. By integrating linear acoustic field simulation with far-field directivity prediction, the framework serves as a computationally efficient surrogate model suitable for iterative design under non-ideal spacing conditions. Simulation results and laboratory measurements demonstrate that the optimized non-uniform arrays achieve consistently lower sidelobe levels and more concentrated mainlobes than conventional uniform configurations. These results validate the proposed framework as a practical and reproducible solution for steering-capable PAL design when the conventional λ/2 spacing constraint cannot be satisfied and establish a foundation for subsequent robustness and sensitivity analyses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue AI-Driven and Data-Driven Modelling in Acoustics and Vibration)
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

12 pages, 1720 KB  
Article
Field- and Angle-Dependent AC Susceptibility in Multigrain La0.66Sr0.34MnO3 Thin Films on YSZ(001) Substrates
by Gražina Grigaliūnaitė-Vonsevičienė and Artūras Jukna
Materials 2026, 19(2), 331; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19020331 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 497
Abstract
Experimental and numerical investigations of the alternating current (AC) susceptibility, χH ~ dM/dH, examined multigrain La0.66Sr0.34MnO3 (LSMO) thin films (thickness d = 250 nm) grown by radio-frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering [...] Read more.
Experimental and numerical investigations of the alternating current (AC) susceptibility, χH ~ dM/dH, examined multigrain La0.66Sr0.34MnO3 (LSMO) thin films (thickness d = 250 nm) grown by radio-frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering on lattice-mismatched yttria-stabilized zirconia YSZ(001) substrates. The films exhibit a columnar structure comprising two types of grains, with (001)- and (011)-oriented planes of a pseudocubic lattice aligned parallel to the film surface. Field- and angle-dependent AC susceptibility measurements at 78 K reveal characteristic peak- and tip-like anomalies, attributed to contributions from grains with three distinct directions of easy magnetization axes within the film plane. Numerical modeling based on the transverse susceptibility theory for single-domain ferromagnetic grains, incorporating first- and second-order anisotropy constants, corroborates the experimental findings and elucidates the role of different grain types in magnetization switching and AC susceptibility response. This study provides a quantitative determination of the three in-plane easy magnetization axes in LSMO/YSZ(001) films and clarifies their influence on the magnetization dynamics of multigrain thin films. The demonstrated control over multigrain LSMO/YSZ(001) thin films with distinct in-plane easy magnetization axes and well-characterized AC susceptibility suggests potential applications in magnetic memory, spintronic devices, and precision magnetic sensing. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

15 pages, 31607 KB  
Article
Photonic-Assisted Simultaneous Frequency and Angle of Arrival Measurement Based on Stimulated Brillouin Scattering
by Liangshun Zhao, Yue Zhang, Ju Chen, Fangyi Chen, Caili Gong and Yongfeng Wei
Photonics 2025, 12(12), 1215; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12121215 - 9 Dec 2025
Viewed by 719
Abstract
The multidimensional parameter measurement of microwave signals, including temporal, spatial, and frequency, is essential for electronic warfare and radar systems. In this article, we present a photonic scheme for real-time microwave frequency and angle-of-arrival (AOA) measurement based on stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS). In [...] Read more.
The multidimensional parameter measurement of microwave signals, including temporal, spatial, and frequency, is essential for electronic warfare and radar systems. In this article, we present a photonic scheme for real-time microwave frequency and angle-of-arrival (AOA) measurement based on stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS). In the proposed system, the unknown signal under test (SUT) received by adjacent antennas is injected into a dual-drive Mach–Zehnder modulator (DDMZM). Two branches of the SUT with phase difference interfere in the optical domain, converting phase difference into the power of optical sidebands. These optical sidebands are scanned by combining SBS with frequency-to-time mapping (FTTM) to achieve simultaneous measurement of the AOA and frequency. Consequently, the frequency and AOA of the SUT are mapped to the time interval and normalized amplitude of the output electrical pulses, respectively. Results show that the system can achieve the frequency measurement of multiple RF signals in the range of 5–15 GHz and AOA measurement in the range of −70° to 70°, with measurement errors of ±5 MHz and ±2°, respectively. Furthermore, the frequency measurement range can be flexibly adjusted by tuning the pump optical driving signals. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Measurement Systems, 2nd Edition)
Show Figures

Figure 1

27 pages, 62283 KB  
Article
Near-Field Target Detection with Range–Angle-Coupled Matching Based on Distributed MIMO Radar
by Quanrun Cheng, Yuhong Zhang, Cao Zeng, Zhigang Zhou, Guisheng Liao and Haihong Tao
Sensors 2025, 25(22), 7003; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25227003 - 16 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1353
Abstract
With respect to distributed MIMO radar systems, conventional far-field detection methods fail under near-field conditions due to significant wavefront curvature, which inevitably results in target energy loss and erroneous parameter estimation. To solve this problem, we propose a near-field target detection framework based [...] Read more.
With respect to distributed MIMO radar systems, conventional far-field detection methods fail under near-field conditions due to significant wavefront curvature, which inevitably results in target energy loss and erroneous parameter estimation. To solve this problem, we propose a near-field target detection framework based on range–angle-coupled matching in this study. Firstly, we design the linear frequency modulation by frequency division (FD-LFM) signal. In addition to offering favorable orthogonality and Doppler tolerance, the transmitter of distributed MIMO radar employs a wide beamwidth to mitigate the low scanning efficiency associated with beam positioning in distributed phased array (PA) radar systems. Secondly, we develop a three-dimensional grid-based echo model for near-field targets in range–azimuth–elevation domain. Specifically, we conceive a coherent pulse integration method via multi-dimensional matching, which enables precise delay alignment and echo accumulation across all transmit–receive pairs for accurate near-field target detection. Thirdly, we propose a parallelization scheme for distributed MIMO radar near-field processing. Our proposal not only compensates effectively for spherical wave propagation effects but also achieves real-time processing through GPU acceleration. Finally, our proposed method’s feasibility of high resolution and effectiveness of near-field detection have been verified by field experimental simulation and actual measurement processing results. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Communications)
Show Figures

Figure 1

16 pages, 2469 KB  
Article
Wide-Band Characteristic Analysis and Compensation Research of Electromagnetic Current Transformer
by Xingyan Wu, Zhenhua Li, Zhenxing Li, Lei Zhang and Chenyi Yang
Energies 2025, 18(21), 5862; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18215862 - 6 Nov 2025
Viewed by 769
Abstract
In order to realize the wide frequency applicability of the electromagnetic current transformer in a ‘double high’ power system, the equivalent circuit model of the electromagnetic current transformer under wide frequency is established. The complex permeability method is used to obtain the excitation [...] Read more.
In order to realize the wide frequency applicability of the electromagnetic current transformer in a ‘double high’ power system, the equivalent circuit model of the electromagnetic current transformer under wide frequency is established. The complex permeability method is used to obtain the excitation impedance value on the basis of the existing core parameters. Secondly, according to the equivalent circuit of the current transformer in the broadband domain, the error transfer function of the electromagnetic current transformer is derived. Through simulation calculation, the ratio difference and angle difference in the electromagnetic current transformer at 50 Hz–3000 Hz are obtained. The correctness of the theoretical analysis and simulation model is verified by comparing it with the existing model and measurement. The simulation and test results show that the electromagnetic current transformer has good linearity when the frequency is in the frequency range of 50 to 650 Hz. When the frequency exceeds this frequency, the ratio difference and angle difference in the current transformer will not reach the accuracy standard, which indicates that it is difficult to accurately measure the high frequency current. Aiming at the correlation of frequency characteristics, this paper proposes a method of optimizing parameters, which provides a certain reference for the error compensation and structural design of electromagnetic current transformers. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

18 pages, 1995 KB  
Article
Research on Roll Attitude Estimation Algorithm for Precision Firefighting Extinguishing Projectiles Based on Single MEMS Gyroscope
by Jinsong Zeng, Zeyuan Liu and Chengyang Liu
Sensors 2025, 25(21), 6721; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25216721 - 3 Nov 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2693
Abstract
The accurate acquisition and real-time calculation of the attitude angle of precision firefighting extinguishing projectiles are essential for ensuring stable flight and precise extinguishing agent release. However, measuring the roll attitude angle in such projectiles is challenging due to their highly dynamic nature [...] Read more.
The accurate acquisition and real-time calculation of the attitude angle of precision firefighting extinguishing projectiles are essential for ensuring stable flight and precise extinguishing agent release. However, measuring the roll attitude angle in such projectiles is challenging due to their highly dynamic nature and environmental disturbances such as fire smoke, high temperature, and electromagnetic interference. Traditional methods for measuring attitude angles rely on multi-sensor fusion schemes, which suffer from complex structure and high cost. This paper proposes a single-gyro attitude calculation method based on micro-electromechanical inertial measurement units (MIMUs). This method integrates Fourier transform time-frequency analysis with a second-order Infinite Impulse Response (IIR) bandpass filtering algorithm optimized by dynamic coefficients. Unlike conventional fixed-coefficient filters, the proposed algorithm adaptively updates filter parameters according to instantaneous roll angular velocity, thereby maintaining tracking capability under time-varying conditions. This theoretical contribution provides a general framework for adaptive frequency-tracking filtering, beyond the specific engineering case of firefighting projectiles. Through joint time-frequency domain processing, it achieves high-precision dynamic decoupling of the roll angle, eliminating the dependency on external sensors (e.g., radar/GPS) inherent in conventional systems. This approach drastically reduces system complexity and provides key technical support for low-cost and high-reliability firefighting projectile attitude control. The research contributes to enhancing the effectiveness of urban firefighting, forest fire suppression, and public safety emergency response. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Innovation, Communication and Engineering)
Show Figures

Figure 1

15 pages, 4563 KB  
Article
Detection and Evaluation of Shield Damage Defects in Power Cables Using an Improved Dual-Frequency Time–Frequency Domain Reflectometry
by Kun Zhao, Stefano Grivet-Talocia, Paolo Manfredi, Yuan Yan and Hongjie Li
Energies 2025, 18(19), 5214; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18195214 - 30 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1002
Abstract
Cable shields may develop holes when the sheath is damaged. Time–frequency domain reflectometry (TFDR) is an effective method for detecting cable defects, but it cannot directly evaluate hole sizes. To address this issue, we analyze the impact of shield hole sizes on TFDR [...] Read more.
Cable shields may develop holes when the sheath is damaged. Time–frequency domain reflectometry (TFDR) is an effective method for detecting cable defects, but it cannot directly evaluate hole sizes. To address this issue, we analyze the impact of shield hole sizes on TFDR signals. Building on this analysis, we propose an improved dual-frequency TFDR method to measure shield holes and evaluate their sizes. This method directly measures the characteristic impedances and damage ratios using dual-frequency TFDR, followed by a two-step evaluation process to determine the hole center angles and lengths based on these measurements. Simulations and experiments validate the proposed method. In laboratory-scale experiments using a scaled cable model, and considering measurement noise, the maximum relative errors for shield hole length and center angle are 11% and 5%, respectively. Full article
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

14 pages, 2495 KB  
Article
Research on a Feedthrough Suppression Scheme for MEMS Gyroscopes Based on Mixed-Frequency Excitation Signals
by Xuhui Chen, Zhenzhen Pei, Chenchao Zhu, Jiaye Hu, Hongjie Lei, Yidian Wang and Hongsheng Li
Micromachines 2025, 16(10), 1120; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16101120 - 30 Sep 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3486
Abstract
Feedthrough interference is inevitably introduced in MEMS gyroscopes due to non-ideal factors such as circuit layout design and fabrication processes, exerting non-negligible impacts on gyroscope performance. This study proposes a feedthrough suppression scheme for MEMS gyroscopes based on mixed-frequency excitation signals. Leveraging the [...] Read more.
Feedthrough interference is inevitably introduced in MEMS gyroscopes due to non-ideal factors such as circuit layout design and fabrication processes, exerting non-negligible impacts on gyroscope performance. This study proposes a feedthrough suppression scheme for MEMS gyroscopes based on mixed-frequency excitation signals. Leveraging the quadratic relationship between excitation voltage and electrostatic force in capacitive resonators, the resonator is excited with a modulated signal at a non-resonant frequency while sensing vibration signals at the resonant frequency. This approach achieves linear excitation without requiring backend demodulation circuits, effectively separating desired signals from feedthrough interference in the frequency domain. A mixed-frequency excitation-based measurement and control system for MEMS gyroscopes is constructed. The influence of mismatch phenomena under non-ideal conditions on the control system is analyzed with corresponding solutions provided. Simulations and experiments validate the scheme’s effectiveness, demonstrating feedthrough suppression through both amplitude-frequency characteristics and scale factor perspectives. Test results confirm the scheme eliminates the zero introduced by feedthrough interference in the gyroscope’s amplitude-frequency response curve and reduces force-to-rebalanced detection scale factor fluctuations caused by frequency split variations by a factor of 21. Under this scheme, the gyroscope achieves zero-bias stability of 0.3118 °/h and angle random walk of 0.2443 °/h/√Hz. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

18 pages, 1860 KB  
Article
Acoustic Scattering Characteristics of Micropterus salmoides Using a Combined Kirchhoff Ray-Mode Model and In Situ Measurements
by Wenzhuo Wang, Meiping Sheng, Zhiwei Guo and Minqing Wang
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(10), 1856; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13101856 - 25 Sep 2025
Viewed by 688
Abstract
Effective management of Micropterus salmoides resources requires accurate assessment of their abundance and distribution. Fisheries acoustics is a key method for such evaluations, yet its application is limited by insufficient target strength (TS) data. This study combines the Sobel edge detection [...] Read more.
Effective management of Micropterus salmoides resources requires accurate assessment of their abundance and distribution. Fisheries acoustics is a key method for such evaluations, yet its application is limited by insufficient target strength (TS) data. This study combines the Sobel edge detection technique with the Kirchhoff ray-mode model to estimate the TS of Micropterus salmoides cultured in Guangdong, China, and validates the results through in situ measurements. The relationships between TS and fish body length were established at 38 kHz, 70 kHz, 120 kHz, and 200 kHz. At 200 kHz, the average in situ TS was –42.41 dB, with a fitted formula of TS = 32.00 lgL − 88.24. Further validation was performed using time- and frequency-domain analyses of echo signals. The results show that TS increases with swim bladder volume, indicating its dominant influence. The relationship between TS and frequency is nonlinear and affected by the swim bladder angle, swimming posture, and behavioral patterns. This study also improves the computational efficiency of the Kirchhoff ray-mode model. Overall, it provides essential parameters for acoustic stock assessment of Micropterus salmoides, providing a scientific basis for their sustainable management and conservation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Marine Aquaculture)
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop