Active isolation systems attempt to cancel out vibration by vibrating a platform 180 degrees out of phase with a measured vibration stimulus. A typical system has three main parts; a passive base, a measurement unit, and 6 axis voice coils/ rotational motors. The passive base attempts to limit the transmission of higher frequency vibration (>200 Hz) through passive means such as air bladders, springs or viscoelastic material. The “active” components are usually only active below 200 Hz. The measurement unit accurately, and hopefully quickly measures the actual vibration of the platform on which a component rests. The measuring unit sends this information to the 6 axis voice coils / motors. The voice coils then vibrate 180 degrees out of phase with the measured vibration. That is, if the platform is moving one direction, they move the opposite way to cancel out the motion. The measuring unit continuously senses the motion of the platform and thus forms a feedback loop with the voice coils / rotational motors. Generally, active isolation systems do a good job at isolating a component from vibrations in the structure it is sitting on. They are used extensively in the electron microscope industry and work particularly well with relatively large amplitude vibration sources such as footfall. They have two significant drawbacks however. First, they do less well at dealing with airborne vibration (such as loudspeaker output) and machine generated vibration (such as motors/transport mechanisms. The reason is the sensor that detects the vibration is in the platform, not in the component. Typically the amplitude of the vibration in a component case is reduced by the time it reaches a sensor leading to erroneous inputs (or no input) to the motors. Second, latency causes unwanted voice coil / rotational motor movement. The system feedback is deigned to operate quickly, but by definition, the system can’t respond instantaneously. Thus the voice coils will still be moving even after the original vibration has stopped. This ring-down effect slows down the settling time of the system.
Pros:
Cons:
-
High cost, large size, extreme complexity (pneumatics, etc).
-
Measurements take place in the platform – not the component, therefore ineffective at attenuating vibration that does not reach the sensor.
-
Latency and use of servos is source of noise and ring down effect. Voice coils still moving after vibration has stopped.