2 layout, 1 sensor coil orientation, Layout – PNI RM3100 Sensor Suite User Manual

Page 18: Sensor coil orientation, Figure 4-3: lr oscillator circuit biasing diagram

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PNI Sensor Corporation

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RM3100 & RM2100 Sensor Suite User Manual

Page 17 of 45

Because:

the total magnetic field represents the sum of the local field and the circuit-induced

field, and

the circuit-induced magnetic field has the same magnitude but opposite direction for

the two bias polarities,

the local magnetic field is proportional to the difference in the time to complete the

measurement for each bias. The difference in the number of clock oscillations between the

forward and reverse bias directions is output from the MagI2C, and this number is directly

proportional to the strength of the local magnetic field in the direction of the sensor.

Figure 4-3 provides a detail of the biasing circuit. For more on PNI’s magneto-inductive
technology, refer to the “Magneto-Inductive Technology Overview” white paper found on
PNI’s website.

Figure 4-3: LR Oscillator Circuit Biasing Diagram

Since PNI’s Geomagnetic Sensor Suite works in the frequency domain, resolution is cleanly

established by the number of circuit oscillations. Also, the output from the MagI2C is

inherently digital and can be fed directly into a microprocessor, which eliminates the need for

signal conditioning or an analog/digital interface between the sensor and host processor.

4.2 Layout

4.2.1 Sensor Coil Orientation

Figure 4-4 indicates how the three sensor coils in a RM3100 Geomagnetic Sensor should

be oriented for a system referenced as north-east-down (NED). The arrow represents the

direction of travel or pointing. The Sen-XY-f is insensitive to the location of the polarity

indicator, while the location of the polarity indicator is critical for the Sen-Z-f.

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