Switch

Piezo Switches

Piezo Switch

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What are Piezo Switches?

Piezo Switches
2 Wire leads Piezo Switches
Piezo Switches
3 Wire leads Piezo Switches
A piezo switch is an electrical switch based on the Piezoelectric Effect.
The charge generated by the piezoelectric element in the switch is typically used to turn on an integrated semiconductor device such as a field effect transistor (FET), causing the switch assembly's output to be active, or "on". When the FET is on, current can flow through it as with a conventional metal contact-based switch. After the voltage pulse is dissipated in the gate resistor, the FET turns back "off", its normal high impedance state. The Piezoelectric Effect uses the fact that force applied to certain materials causes stresses that generate this electric charge. In the case of piezo switches, the force could be compressive pressure that causes the (typically disc-shaped) piezo element to bend very slightly like a drumhead.
Thus piezo switches produce a single, brief "on" pulse. This pulse can vary with the amount of pressure which is applied, since higher pressures generate higher voltages which take longer to dissipate. A capacitor may be used to store the charge in order to lengthen the time constant of the gate circuit and therefore the width of the pulse. With additional circuitry this pulse can be extended further or used to change the state of an output from steady "Off" to steady "On" by toggling a flip-flop.
Piezo switches have some interesting advantages over their conventional mechanical counterparts. One is that there are no moving parts necessary for them to do their job. This means the lifetime of such a switch can be ensured to be tens of millions of operations, since there is no wear involved.
Another advantage is that they may easily be completely sealed from the environment and thus made weatherproof. They are often constructed with stainless steel housings such that they are resistant to damage by vandals or heavy use.

Applications

  • In and out of water applications
  • Medical equipment
  • Testing equipment
  • Automatic gas pumps
  • Mining equipment
  • Car wash systems
  • Control panels
  • Packaging
  • Cosmetics
  • Paints
  • Petrochemical
  • Fertilizers
  • Pharmaceutical
  • Bakeries
  • Dairies
  • Food packing
  • Food Preparation
  • Meat processing
  • Gate access
  • Process control
  • Public telephones
  • Security doors
  • Irrigation systems
  • Locomotive control panels
  • Vending machines

How a Piezo switch works:
Piezo Switch Works
Finger pressure is applied to the surface of the switch-housing which deflects about 2 microns.
This pressure activates the piezo crystal that converts this pressure to an electrical signal that is amplified by electronics imbedded within the housing.

Technical Characteristics:

    Mechanical Specifications:
  • Water Resistance: Up through IP68
  • Materials: Aluminum & Stainless Steel
  • Minimum Actuation Force: 2~6N+ (Typical)
  • Mechanism: 100% Solid-state, No Moving Parts
  • Operational Life: +20mm cycle, -60C to 85C (Typical)
    Electrical Specifications:
  • Voltage: +5 VDC, 10 - 24 VDC ± 5% or per customer specifications
  • Current: 100mA or per customer specifications
  • Contact Resistance: None
  • Contact Bounce: None
  • EMI/RFI: No Effect
    Functional Operation Specifications:
  • Momentary / Latching
  • Normally Open / Normally Closed
  • Impact: 1kg Shock Test
  • Make / Break via Transistor

Wiring Schemes:

3 Wire leads
3 Wire leads
2 Wire leads
2 Wire leads

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