Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 17 Oct 2005

Use of a Beryllium Hopkinson Bar To Characterize a Piezoresistive Accelerometer In Shock Environments

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Page Range: 33 – 39
DOI: 10.17764/jiet.2.39.6.y6k35113751547tt
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The characteristics of a piezoresistive accelerometer in shock environments are being studied at Sandia National Laboratories in the Mechanical Shock Testing Laboratory. A Hopkinson bar capability has been developed to extend our understanding of the piezoresistive accelerometer, in two mechanical configurations, in the high-frequency, high-shock environments where measurements are being made. In this paper, the beryllium Hopkinson bar configuration with a laser doppler vibrometer as the reference measurement is described. The in-axis performance of the piezoresistive accelerometer for frequencies of dc-50 kHz and shock magnitudes of up to 70,000 g as determined from measurements with a beryllium Hopkinson bar are presented. Preliminary results of characterizations of the accelerometers, subjected to cross-axis shocks in a split beryllium Hopkinson bar configuration are presented.

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