Motion Sensors - Accelerometers

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
H3LIS200DLTR

H3LIS200DLTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 100-200G I2C/SPI 16TFLGA

0

LIS3LV02DLTR

LIS3LV02DLTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 2-6G I2C/SPI 16LGA

2866

AIS2DW12TR

AIS2DW12TR

STMicroelectronics

MEMS DIGITAL OUTPUT MOTION SENSO

3705

AIS1120SXTR

AIS1120SXTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 120G SPI 8SOIC

58

LIS2DH12TR

LIS2DH12TR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2-16G I2C/SPI 12LGA

0

IIS2DHTR

IIS2DHTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2-16G I2C/SPI 12LGA

0

LIS331HHTR

LIS331HHTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 6-24G I2C/SPI 16LGA

3633

LIS331DLHTR

LIS331DLHTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 2-8G I2C/SPI 16LGA

0

LIS2DTW12TR

LIS2DTW12TR

STMicroelectronics

MEMS DIGITAL OUTPUT DUAL MOTION

9717

H3LIS100DLTR

H3LIS100DLTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 100G I2C/SPI 16LGA

5619

IIS3DWBTR

IIS3DWBTR

STMicroelectronics

ULTRA-WIDE BANDWIDTH, LOW-NOISE

1932

LIS3DHTR

LIS3DHTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2-16G I2C/SPI 16LGA LIS3DHTR

74324

LIS2DE12TR

LIS2DE12TR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2-16G I2C/SPI 12LGA

0

LIS33DETR

LIS33DETR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2.3-9.2G I2C/SPI 16LGA

0

LIS33DE

LIS33DE

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2.3-9.2G I2C/SPI 16LGA

0

LIS3L02AQ-TR

LIS3L02AQ-TR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 2-6G ANALOG 44QFN

0

LIS35DETR

LIS35DETR

STMicroelectronics

ACCEL 2.3-9.2G I2C/SPI 14LGA

0

LIS302DLHTR

LIS302DLHTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 2-8G I2C/SPI 14LGA

0

LIS2L02AS4

LIS2L02AS4

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 2-6G ANALOG 24SO

0

LIS352AXTR

LIS352AXTR

STMicroelectronics

ACCELEROMETER 2G ANALOG 14LGA

0

Motion Sensors - Accelerometers

1. Overview

Accelerometers are motion sensors that measure acceleration forces (static or dynamic) along one or multiple axes. These devices convert mechanical motion into electrical signals, enabling quantitative analysis of vibration, tilt, shock, and dynamic movement. As core components in modern sensing systems, accelerometers play critical roles in consumer electronics, industrial automation, automotive safety systems, and aerospace navigation.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
Capacitive MEMSHigh sensitivity, low power consumption, digital outputSmartphones, wearable devices
PiezoelectricSelf-powered, excellent frequency responseVibration analysis, impact detection
PiezoresistiveHigh shock tolerance, analog outputAutomotive crash testing, industrial monitoring
Servo (Force-Balance)Ultra-high precision, low noiseInertial navigation, seismic monitoring
Optical MEMSImmune to electromagnetic interferenceHigh-precision scientific instruments

3. Structure and Components

Typical accelerometers consist of: - Seismic mass with specific inertial properties - Elastic suspension elements (springs or beams) - Displacement detection circuit (capacitive, piezoelectric, or resistive) - Temperature compensation circuitry - Signal conditioning electronics - Protective housing (metal/ceramic/polymer) Modern MEMS devices integrate microstructures on silicon substrates with digital interfaces (I2C/SPI).

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Measurement Range 2g to 500gDetermines application suitability
Resolution0.1mg to 10mgImpacts measurement precision
Frequency ResponseDC to 10kHzAffects dynamic signal capture
Nonlinearity 0.1% to 1% FSMeasurement accuracy indicator
Temperature Range-40 C to +150 CEnvironmental reliability
Power Consumption5 A to 10mABattery life consideration

5. Application Fields

  • Consumer Electronics: Smartphones (screen rotation), gaming controllers
  • Automotive: Airbag deployment, electronic stability control (ESC)
  • Industrial: Predictive maintenance systems, vibration monitoring
  • Healthcare: Fall detection devices, rehabilitation equipment
  • Aerospace: Flight control systems, structural health monitoring
  • Case Study: iPhone's ADXL345 MEMS accelerometer enables step counting and orientation detection

6. Leading Manufacturers

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductKey Features
Analog DevicesADXL3453-axis, 13-bit resolution, I2C interface
STMicroelectronicsLSM6DSO6-axis IMU, AI-enabled edge computing
Bosch SensortecBMI270Low-power wearable sensor, 16Hz noise
TE ConnectivityKX134-1211 400g high-shock measurement
HoneywellQA-750Tactical-grade servo accelerometer

7. Selection Guidelines

  • Determine required measurement axes (1D/2D/3D)
  • Match range/sensitivity with application requirements
  • Assess environmental conditions (temperature, vibration)
  • Select appropriate output interface (analog/digital)
  • Evaluate power consumption constraints
  • Consider calibration requirements and long-term stability

8. Industry Trends

Key development directions include: - MEMS technology advancement towards atomic-scale sensitivity - Integration with gyroscopes and AI processing (smart sensors) - Wireless sensor network compatibility - Increased adoption in autonomous vehicles and IoT edge devices - Development of ultra-low-power wake-up accelerometers - Fiber optic accelerometer systems for aerospace applications - Enhanced shock survivability for industrial harsh environments

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top