Abstract

Ultrasonic vibration measurement and the development of ultrasonic vibration sensors have a significant impact on underwater pattern detection, providing good support for the exploitation and usage of marine resources. Advanced digital signal processing algorithms improve mechanical displacement measurements using ultrasonic speed and pm-level interferometers in real-time. In recent years, developing digital algorithms and employing low-cost software-defined radio (SDR) software applied to communication systems and other general-purpose systems with flexible solutions are essential in modern industrial applications. Specifically, the SDR can be consistent with real-time phase-change measurements of MHz-frequency interference signals for a heterodyne interferometer. This paper combines a heterodyne interferometer and a real-time SDR phase meter, demonstrating an ultrasonic vibration instrument's high-speed vibrating measurement capabilities. A double-pass interferometer is implemented to produce interference signals modulated with a sine waveform phase change associated with a tool's ultrasonic vibrating displacement, calculated by the phase meter's quadrature demodulation algorithm. The measurement results show that the system detects the sine-wave vibration trajectory generated by the vibrator at a frequency of 20 kHz and an amplitude of ~460 nm. The principle of the measurement system, instrumentations, experiments, and results are discussed in the paper.

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