Abstract

The reliability of microvibration measurements is important in some applications, such as infrastructure health monitoring. Thus, it is necessary to develop a vibration standard based on ISO16063-11 for microvibrations. In this study, the low-frequency standard vibration calibration system in the National Metrology Institute of Japan was upgraded to be compatible with small input vibrations down to an amplitude of 10−3 m s−2. A low-noise reference vibration measurement system and a precise signal processing method were integrated to reduce the background noise contribution, which is a dominant uncertainty source in the field of microvibration calibration. The developed system could calibrate the sensitivity of a low-noise accelerometer down to 10−3 m s−2, between 0.1 Hz and 100 Hz. This paper reports the calibration demonstration using a servo accelerometer and the evaluated uncertainty budget. The estimated calibration uncertainty was 0.1% for a normal calibration process with an excitation of 10 m s−2, and it was 2.1% for a microvibration calibration process with an excitation of 10−3 m s−2.

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