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Technology of Laser Sensors for Distance Measurement

Laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors me­asu­re po­si­ti­ons and dis­tan­ces con­tact­lessly with laser light. They are pre­ci­se and can be used over long dis­tan­ces, as well as in close range. These sen­sors are ideal for pre­ci­se po­si­ti­on and dis­tan­ce me­asu­re­ment or for de­tec­ting ob­jects re­gard­less of color and sur­fa­ce.

How Do Laser Dis­tan­ce Sen­sors Work?

Laser sen­sors are pho­to­elect­ro­nic sen­sors and, thanks to their con­tact­less me­asu­ring prin­cip­le and high ac­cu­racy, are well-​suited to ob­ject de­tec­ti­on, path, po­si­ti­on and dis­tan­ce me­asu­re­ment. wenglor laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors work ac­cor­ding to the tran­sit time me­asu­re­ment prin­cip­le and use laser tri­an­gu­la­ti­on. In both pro­ce­du­res, dis­tan­ces are me­asu­red with laser light and out­put as a dis­tan­ce value.


          

When to Use a Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Sen­sor and When to Use a Tran­sit Time Sen­sor

Triangulation principle display

Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Sen­sors for Short Dis­tan­ces

Pre­ci­se de­ter­mi­na­ti­on of dis­tan­ces in the close range up to 1 m
De­tec­ti­on of very small ob­jects or dif­fe­ren­ces in dis­tan­ce
Li­ne­arity de­vi­ati­on < 1 mm
Very fast me­asu­re­ments 
Me­asu­re­ment on dif­fe­rent sha­pes and sur­fa­ces
High pre­ci­si­on down to the mic­ron range

Triangulation principle display

Tran­sit Time Sen­sors for Long Dis­tan­ces

De­ter­mi­na­ti­on of long dis­tan­ces up to 100 m with ref­lec­tors
Working range up to 10 m on ob­jects
Li­ne­arity de­vi­ati­on > 10 mm
Re­sis­tant to in­ter­fe­ring inf­lu­en­ces
Very high am­bi­ent light re­sis­tan­ce
Rep­ro­du­cib­le me­asu­re­ment over long dis­tan­ces

Pos­sib­le Uses of Laser Sen­sors for Dis­tan­ce Me­asu­re­ment

Pre­sen­ce check

Presence check icon

Thick­ness me­asu­re­ment

Thickness measurement icon

Di­ame­ter cont­rol

Diameter control icon

Edge co­un­ting

Edge counting icon

Po­si­ti­oning

Positioning icon

Robot po­si­ti­oning

Robot positioning icon

Stac­king he­ight mo­ni­to­ring

Stacking height monitoring icon

Parts me­asu­re­ment

Parts measurement icon

Dif­fe­ren­ti­al Me­asu­re­ment

Cont­rast Re­cog­ni­ti­on

Mo­ni­to­ring of Two-​Layer Ma­te­ri­als

Sec­tors and In­dust­ri­es which Use Laser Dis­tan­ce Sen­sors

Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Sen­sors

Tran­sit Time Sen­sors

In lo­gis­tics cen­ters, shutt­le sys­tems must auto­ma­ti­cally de­li­ver goods from the warehouse to pro­duc­ti­on. Time of flight laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors with wintec in­teg­ra­ted on the front de­tect in ad­van­ce end po­si­ti­ons or forward-​moving shutt­les in the field of vi­si­on up to ten me­ters ahead so that shutt­les can slow down or stop.

The Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Prin­cip­le

The tri­an­gu­la­ti­on prin­cip­le is a ge­omet­ric me­asu­re­ment met­hod that uses the tri­an­gu­lar re­la­ti­ons­hip. In this met­hod, a light point is pro­jec­ted onto the ob­ject to be me­asu­red. The ob­ject ref­lects the light and hits a light-​sensitive CMOS re­ce­iving ele­ment in the sen­sor at a cer­ta­in angle. The po­si­ti­on of the light spot on the CMOS line chan­ges de­pen­ding on the dis­tan­ce of the ob­ject. In this way, the dis­tan­ce to the ob­ject to be me­asu­red can be pre­ci­sely de­ter­mi­ned even at small dis­tan­ces. 

This tech­no­logy enab­les dis­tan­ce sen­sors to de­tect very small de­ta­ils. The tri­an­gu­la­ti­on prin­cip­le is used by the dis­tan­ce sen­sors CP, OCP, YP, P3 se­ri­es and PNBC

Do Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Sen­sors Have a Blind Spot?

Sen­sors that ope­ra­te ac­cor­ding to the tri­an­gu­la­ti­on prin­cip­le have a so-​called blind spot. This is de­pen­dent on the dis­tan­ce from which the ref­lec­ted light meets the re­ce­iving ele­ment (CMOS line). If the ref­lec­ted light does not hit the CMOS line, no me­asu­re­ment can be taken. The blind spot is below the working range and means that ob­jects lo­ca­ted in this area are not de­tec­ted and no me­asu­red va­lu­es are out­put

Example CP24MHT80 laser dis­tan­ce sen­sor tri­an­gu­la­ti­on: 
Working range: 40…160 mm
Blind apot: 0…40 mm

The CMOS Re­ce­iving Line

The CMOS line is a light-​sensitive re­ce­iving ele­ment with a large num­ber of pixels. It is used to eva­lu­ate the po­si­ti­on at which the laser light hits the line. The elect­ri­cal char­ge in the pixels of the CMOS sen­sors (Comp­le­men­tary Metal-​Oxide Se­mi­con­duc­tor) is con­ver­ted into a vol­ta­ge. The po­si­ti­on of the ob­ject can be de­ter­mi­ned based on the light dist­ri­bu­ti­on on the CMOS line. 

The CMOS line enab­les highly ac­cu­ra­te dis­tan­ce me­asu­re­ment and is ty­pi­cally used in laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors based on the tri­an­gu­la­ti­on prin­cip­le.

How to Ins­tall Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Sen­sors Pro­perly

To ac­hi­eve the most stab­le ob­ject de­tec­ti­on and me­asu­re­ment pos­sib­le, the following inst­ruc­ti­ons must be ob­ser­ved when ad­jus­ting the sen­sor.

Round, Glossy, Ref­lec­ti­ve Ob­jects

When me­asu­ring shiny or round sur­fa­ces, it sho­uld be en­su­red du­ring sen­sor ins­tal­la­ti­on that no di­rect ref­lec­ti­ons fall on the re­ce­iving ele­ment.

Tip: Align the sen­sor so that it is po­si­ti­oned in an axis with the round ob­ject. 

Steps, Edges, Re­ces­ses

For all dis­tan­ce sen­sors, it sho­uld be en­su­red that the re­ce­iving beam has a di­rect line of sight and is not co­ve­red by an obs­tac­le such as an edge, step, hole or gap.

Tip: Align the sen­sor ort­ho­go­nally to the gap co­ur­se!

Mo­ving Ob­jects

One example of mo­ving ob­jects to be me­asu­red is con­ve­yor belts. It is im­por­tant that the ob­ject moves ort­ho­go­nally to the sen­sor. This pre­vents di­rect ref­lec­ti­ons to the re­ce­iver.

Tip: Ins­tall the sen­sor ort­ho­go­nally!

Color Edges

When me­asu­ring ob­jects with color tran­si­ti­ons, so-​called color edges, it is im­por­tant that the color edge runs ort­ho­go­nally to the sen­sor. This pre­vents color er­rors.

Tip: Ins­tall the sen­sor ort­ho­go­nally!

Dif­fe­ren­ces Between Sp­he­ri­cal and Asp­he­ri­cal Len­ses

Sp­he­ri­cal Lens

  • The lens has a sp­he­ri­cal sur­fa­ce

  • In­co­ming light on the edge area is more st­rongly ref­rac­ted than in the cent­ral area

  • Bund­ling of the light beams leads to a loss of pre­ci­si­on 

Asp­he­ric Lens

  • The lens has an une­ven cur­va­tu­re

  • The light beam is evenly bro­ken over the en­ti­re sur­fa­ce

  • Lens shape re­du­ces ima­ging er­rors

  • Focus point is map­ped pre­ci­sely on the line

  • Very high me­asu­ring ac­cu­racy

Time of Flight Prin­cip­le (ToF)

The ToF (Time-​of-Flight) laser sen­sors for dis­tan­ce me­asu­re­ment com­bi­ne rep­ro­du­cib­le me­asu­re­ment re­sults, re­li­abi­lity and a large me­asu­ring range. This makes them su­itab­le for a va­ri­ety of app­li­ca­ti­ons at dis­tan­ces of up to one hund­red me­ters with ref­lec­tors or ten me­ters to ob­jects. 


The Time-​of-Flight me­asu­ring prin­cip­le, also known as tran­sit time me­asu­re­ment, cal­cu­la­tes the dis­tan­ce L to the ob­ject via light pul­ses. The diode in the sen­sor emits laser pul­ses that are ref­lec­ted by the ob­ject. The time in­ter­val from the emis­si­on of the light pulse to the ob­ject and back again is me­asu­red. The time T and the light speed C then pro­vi­de the cor­res­pon­ding dis­tan­ce to the ob­ject

The following phy­si­cal for­mu­la is used to de­ter­mi­ne the dis­tan­ce:
 
L = ½ × C × T 

The Time-​of-Flight me­asu­ring prin­cip­le is used by the dis­tan­ce sen­sors P1PY, P2PY, P1KY and OY

The Most Im­por­tant Facts About the Speed of Light at a Glan­ce

The speed of light is a fun­da­men­tal cons­tant of phy­sics. In va­cu­um, it is 299,792,458 m/s. Not­hing moves as fast as light.

Do ToF Sen­sors Have a Blind Spot?

ToF sen­sors have no blind spot. Ob­jects can be de­tec­ted below the set­ting range and the sen­sor switches, but can­not pro­vi­de any me­asu­re­ment re­sults.

At What Co­ve­ra­ge of the Light Spot Does the Sen­sor Switch?

The sur­fa­ce fi­nish of the ob­ject plays a de­ci­si­ve role in de­ter­mi­ning which co­ve­ra­ge of the light spot the sen­sor switches. Bright sur­fa­ces lead to switching of the ToF sen­sor even with low co­ve­ra­ge of the light spot, as the num­ber of pho­tons required for de­tec­ti­on of the light pulse is re­ac­hed fas­ter. Dark sur­fa­ces, on the other hand, require gre­ater co­ve­ra­ge to ac­hi­eve the same ef­fect.

If am­bi­ent light, such as sun­light or il­lu­mi­na­ti­on, inc­re­ases, the ob­ject ap­pe­ars to be­co­me dar­ker for the sen­sor. In such cases, a lar­ger area of the light spot must hit the ob­ject to en­su­re re­li­ab­le de­tec­ti­on.

Due to the op­tics of the sen­sor, there is also a small pro­por­ti­on of scat­te­red light that oc­curs out­si­de the ac­tu­al light spot. With highly ref­lec­ti­ve, glossy sur­fa­ces, this can lead to the ob­ject being de­tec­ted be­fo­re the light spot ac­tu­ally re­ac­hes it. It is the­re­fo­re im­por­tant to avoid dis­tur­bing, shiny st­ruc­tu­res near the light beam.

Tran­sit Time Sen­sors with Ref­lec­tor

The use of ref­lec­tors can sig­ni­fi­cantly extend the area over which the time-​of-flight sen­sors can be used. The ToF sen­sors focus exclusively on the light ref­lec­ted by the ref­lec­tor and ef­fec­ti­vely supp­ress all other sig­nals. This en­su­res that me­asu­re­ments are only taken on ref­lec­tors, while ref­lec­ti­ve ob­jects and other shiny sur­fa­ces are not de­tec­ted as ref­lec­tors and ig­no­red ac­cor­dingly.

This func­ti­onal prin­cip­le is par­ti­cu­larly ad­van­ta­ge­o­us if in­cor­rect me­asu­re­ments due to backg­ro­und ob­jects are to be avo­ided. A ty­pi­cal app­li­ca­ti­on example is the cont­rol of over­he­ad con­ve­yor sys­tems, where the dis­tan­ce to the ve­hic­le in front must always be re­li­ably re­cor­ded. Es­pe­ci­ally when cor­ne­ring, me­asu­re­ments are pre­ven­ted from being taken er­ro­ne­o­usly on ob­jects in the backg­ro­und, as these could lead to in­cor­rect cont­rol com­mands. 

This tech­no­logy is also ideal for app­li­ca­ti­ons requiring large working ran­ges.

Com­pa­ri­son of Tran­sit Time and Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on Working Ran­ges

The sen­sor at the top of the image is a tran­sit time sen­sor, while the sen­sor below ope­ra­tes ac­cor­ding to the tri­an­gu­la­ti­on prin­cip­le.

Key
Red area: Blind spot (ob­jects are not re­li­ably de­tec­ted)
Green area: Working range (ob­jects are re­li­ably de­tec­ted)
Yellow range: Set­ting range/me­asu­ring range (set switching po­ints/me­asu­red va­lu­es are disp­la­yed) 

Out­put of Dis­tan­ce Va­lu­es

Di­gi­tal Switching Out­put

Dis­tan­ces can be ta­ught in via di­gi­tal switching out­puts. As soon as the taught-​in dis­tan­ce is re­ac­hed, the sen­sor out­puts a switching sig­nal at the out­put. This enab­les ob­jects to be de­tec­ted and po­si­ti­ons to be de­tec­ted.

Ana­log Out­put

The dis­tan­ce value is out­put as a li­ne­arly pro­por­ti­onal cur­rent (4…20 mA) or vol­ta­ge value (0…10 V) via an ana­log out­put. The cha­rac­te­ris­tic curve can be set within the en­ti­re me­asu­ring range by te­ac­hing in. 

IO-​Link

IO-​Link tech­no­logy is used aro­und the world for stan­dar­di­zed com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on with sen­sors and ac­tu­ators. This is point-​to-point com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on.

In­dust­ri­al Et­her­net

In­dust­ri­al Et­her­net is a ge­ne­ric term for all Et­her­net stan­dards for real-​time data trans­mis­si­on between the cont­rol and sen­sor. In­dust­ri­al Et­her­net pro­to­cols inc­lu­de, for example, Et­her­CAT, Et­her­net/IP or PRO­FI­NET.
 

What Is Ac­cu­racy?

High ac­cu­racy means that the an­ti­ci­pa­ted me­asu­re­ment re­sults are ac­hi­eved. This term is only used for qualitative sta­te­ments. This means that it is not a tech­ni­cal pa­ra­me­ter. Ac­cu­racy is made up of pre­ci­si­on and cor­rect­ness. The ac­cu­racy always de­pends on the me­asu­ring prin­cip­le used.
 

 Pre­ci­si­on

Pre­ci­si­on, also known as re­pe­ti­ti­on ac­cu­racy, can be de­ter­mi­ned by suc­ces­si­ve me­asu­re­ments under con­sis­tent con­di­ti­ons. A very pre­ci­se value the­re­fo­re de­li­vers al­most cons­tant me­asu­re­ments. The pre­ci­si­on of a sen­sor is quantified by rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity.

Cor­rect­ness

Cor­rect­ness is a qualitative value. It is de­fi­ned by li­ne­arity de­vi­ati­on, tem­pe­ra­tu­re drift, switch-​on drift and switching dis­tan­ce de­vi­ati­on.

The fi­gu­re shows how cor­rect­ness, pre­ci­si­on and ac­cu­racy are re­la­ted. The red dots rep­re­sent suc­ces­si­ve me­asu­re­ments from a sen­sor, while the tar­get in­di­ca­tes the cor­rect value. If the me­asu­red va­lu­es are far apart and far away from the tar­get, this in­di­ca­tes a low pre­ci­si­on and cor­rect­ness. Ide­ally, me­asu­re­ments sho­uld be cor­rect and ac­cu­ra­te, me­aning they are close to­get­her and within the tar­get range.

Rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity and Li­ne­arity in Com­pa­ri­son: When is Which Value Used?

ab­so­lu­te me­asu­re­ment

Li­ne­arity and rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity va­lu­es are im­por­tant for ab­so­lu­te me­asu­re­ments, such as de­ter­mi­ning the ac­tu­al dis­tan­ce of an ob­ject or a di­ame­ter. A good rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity value pro­vi­des re­pe­atab­le va­lu­es. High li­ne­arity en­su­res cor­rect me­asu­red va­lu­es. Ove­rall, both li­ne­arity and rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity are im­por­tant fac­tors when it comes to ob­ta­ining cor­rect and ac­cu­ra­te me­asu­red va­lu­es in ab­so­lu­te me­asu­re­ments.

po­si­ti­oning tasks

The sen­sor de­li­vers rep­ro­du­cib­le me­asu­red va­lu­es for re­pe­ated me­asu­re­ments. It always hits the same point or po­si­ti­on, i.e. it is re­pe­atab­le. This is cru­ci­al to en­su­re ac­cu­ra­te and re­li­ab­le po­si­ti­oning of an ob­ject. The main goal is to always place the ob­ject in the same place. Re­pe­ti­ti­on ac­cu­racy is of great im­por­tan­ce, while li­ne­arity is less im­por­tant for po­si­ti­oning tasks. High pre­ci­si­on is cru­ci­al here, and the cor­rect­ness can be neg­lec­ted. 

 

Star­ting point
A dis­tan­ce me­asu­re­ment is car­ri­ed out and the maximum pos­sib­le de­vi­ati­on is de­ter­mi­ned. It is always me­asu­red on the same ob­ject to rule out color er­rors. The am­bi­ent tem­pe­ra­tu­re may vary by 10 °C.

Va­lu­es from the data sheet: 

  • Rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity: 3 mm
  • Li­ne­arity de­vi­ati­on: 10 mm
  • Tem­pe­ra­tu­re drift:  0.4 mm/K

Cal­cu­la­ti­on
Pre­ci­si­on (rep­ro­du­ci­bi­lity) + cor­rect­ness (li­ne­arity de­vi­ati­on, tem­pe­ra­tu­re drift) = ac­cu­racy 
mm + 10 mm + (0.4 mm * 10 °C) = 17 mm

What De­ter­mi­nes the Ac­cu­racy of the Me­asu­re­ment Re­sults?

Time-​of-flight laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors ac­hi­eve high me­asu­ring ran­ges of up to 10 m on ob­jects and 100 m on ref­lec­tors. Tri­an­gu­la­ti­on laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors, on the other hand, is very ac­cu­ra­te. However, the me­asu­ring range is rest­ric­ted to max. 1,000 mm. Va­ri­o­us set­tings can be made to op­ti­mi­ze the ac­cu­racy of the sen­sors for dis­tan­ce me­asu­re­ment de­pen­ding on the app­li­ca­ti­on. This means that the ac­cu­racy can be furt­her inc­re­ased by fil­ter func­ti­ons.

Laser Clas­ses and Their Modes of Ac­ti­on

Use of Red and Blue La­sers

wenglor’s laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors work with red or blue laser light. Whether red or blue light is used de­pends on the app­li­ca­ti­on. Red laser light has a wavelength of 650 nm. Blue la­sers work with a wavelength of 405 nm and the­re­fo­re have a shor­ter wavelength. This means that the blue laser beam pe­net­ra­tes less de­eply into the ob­ject to be me­asu­red and de­li­vers pre­ci­se and stab­le re­sults. Glowing sur­fa­ces in par­ti­cu­lar are not af­fec­ted by the blue laser. Laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors with blue diode are very well su­ited for or­ga­nic sur­fa­ces, po­lis­hed me­tals, shiny plas­tic sur­fa­ces or dark pa­ints.

What Is the Dif­fe­ren­ce Between Nor­mal Light and Laser Light?

Nor­mal Light

Dis­per­si­on di­rec­ti­onLight waves are dis­per­sed in all di­rec­ti­ons
WavelengthsCon­sist of many dif­fe­rent wavelengths
Phase equivalenceWaves os­cil­la­te out of phase
Di­ver­gent light beam with large spot di­ame­ter

Laser Light

Light waves are st­rongly di­rec­ted
Con­sists of one wavelength (mo­noch­ro­ma­ti­city)
Waves os­cil­la­te synch­ro­no­usly
-> St­rong bund­ling enab­les small light spot di­ame­ters at great dis­tan­ces.

Why Is There Red and Blue Laser Light?

The light spect­rum con­sists of dif­fe­rent wavelengths. Each has a dif­fe­rent color. A color can be as­sig­ned to each wave in the color spect­rum. Red light dif­fers from blue light in its wavelength and energy den­sity.
 
Wavelength blue: 380 – 500 nm
Wavelength red: 640 – 675 nm

What Is Light?

Light is the part of elect­ro­mag­ne­tic ra­di­ati­on vi­sib­le to the human eye. The ra­di­ati­on pro­pa­ga­tes in dif­fe­rent wavelength ran­ges when emit­ted by a light so­ur­ce, for example a light bulb. The wavelength range lies between UV ra­di­ati­on (shor­ter wavelengths) and inf­ra­red ra­di­ati­on (lon­ger wavelengths).

What Is Color?

The color of ob­jects is a sub­jec­ti­ve imp­res­si­on cre­ated by ob­jects ab­sor­bing dif­fe­rent wavelengths and ref­lec­ting ot­hers. These wavelengths rep­re­sent dif­fe­rent co­lors. The color ref­lec­ted by the ob­ject can be per­ce­ived by the human eye. 

What Is a Laser?

The term laser stands for Light Amp­li­fi­ca­ti­on by Sti­mu­la­ted Emis­si­on of Ra­di­ati­on. A laser beam can be ge­ne­ra­ted over a wide range of the op­ti­cal spect­rum. In simp­le terms, this means that di­rec­ted light waves are bund­led into a beam in high con­cent­ra­ti­on.

Dif­fe­ren­ces Between Laser Dis­tan­ce Sen­sors and Ult­ra­so­nic Sen­sors

  • Dis­tan­ce sen­sors and ult­ra­so­nic sen­sors dif­fer in the size of the de­tec­ti­on range

  • Ult­ra­so­nic sen­sors work with a wide sonic cone 

  • Laser dis­tan­ce sen­sors work with a fine laser beam
     

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