By Robert Repas
The plethora of shrinking devices spurred by
new technologies need a special type of miniature
electric motor that fits their small size. Instead of
the typical magnet and coil construction, these motors
use piezoceramic compounds that pull or push armatures
into position using direct physical contact.
Leading the charge in these miniature motors
is PiezoMotor, a Swedish company allied with
the Faulhaber Group in Germany and MicroMo
Electronics in the U.S.
Two maxims about today’s technology are that it does more in
a smaller package. Unfortunately, some things don’t scale well. For example,
the power of a standard electric motor with magnets and coils drops off
noticeably as it becomes smaller.
How it works
Piezomotors move due to piezoelectricity, a property of certain materials
to generate an electric charge when placed under compression or tension
loads. Jacques and Pierre Curie discovered that by compressing a crystalline
material, such as Rochelle salt, they could create electricity. Of greater interest
for motor applications is that the opposite is also true an electric field
placed over a piezocrystal changes the shape of the crystal. This ability to
change shape is the basis for piezomotor technology.
Of course, Rochelle salt is no longer used. Instead, material scientists have
The motor shaft moves only nanometers for each
step, but the motion can repeat thousands of times/
second. At that rate, the armature can actually move
at linear speeds up to 100 mm/sec. Different models
include designs for vacuum and nonmagnetic applications.
Various sizes can handle pulling forces from one
to several hundred Newtons. Moreover, the simple design
supports mass production while still maintaining a
high degree of precision.
Piezomotors are viable alternatives to standard dc
motors, and in some cases may work better. Motion
control in piezomotors can reach nanometer precision,
a far greater resolution than available with dc motors.
Dc motors become more expensive as they get smaller
while piezomotors remain low cost in their size range.
The direct linear drive offered by piezomotors removes
the need for linear conversion of a dc motor’s rotary
motion.
Though traditional miniature electric motors do a
good job, there’s a limit to their practical precision, linear
motion, and size reduction. Piezoelectric motors
can shrink many designs now using conventional small electric motors. They can also be more precise, easier
to control and adjust, lighter, and more reliable. For example,
the Piezo Wave motor was originally developed
for mobile phones. It’s now integrated into many applications
including other handheld devices, medical technology
equipment, electromechanical door locks, advanced
toys, and cameras.
Of course the Piezo Wave’s small size is its obvious
advantage. But the motor’s other qualities of robustness,
motion dynamics, cost, power efficiency, and weight,
makes it a contender for use in many products.
To help designers work with piezomotors, companies
like MicroMo have demo kits available that contain the
five elements of any piezomotor design: the piezomotor,
a power supply, control electronics, a position sensor,
and a demonstration mechanical interface. It’s astonishing
what a small cube of ceramic material not much bigger
than an ant can do.