Abstract

AbstractIn robotics applications, ultrasonic transducers are frequently used as rangefinders, due to their low cost and small size. The pulse compression techniques were adopted to locate multiple objects at the same time and to eliminate frequent misreadings caused by crosstalk or external ultrasound sources. However, a few problems become apparent when implementing the pulse compression techniques. First, each transducer must be equipped with a processing system for the implementation of correlation functions. This may significantly increase the complexity of the total system, cutting down one of the advantages of ultrasonic systems. Second, the majority of transducers for use in air are based on piezoelectric design, which is usually used over a narrow bandwidth. Among digital correlators, significant reductions of the processing cost can be achieved with a polarity correlator. However, this polarity correlation adds quantization noise to the signals and leads to a degradation of the output signal‐to‐noise ratio. This paper presents an analysis of the polarity correlator applied to a sonar ranging system, consisting of piezoelectric transducers and a chirp filter. A numerical evaluation of the output signal shows that the signal‐to‐noise ratio degrades only a small amount comparable with that obtained by direct digital correlators. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Electron Comm Jpn, 91(4): 20– 26, 2008; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/ecj.10077

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