Ultrasonic Receivers, Transmitters

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
MB7052-211

MB7052-211

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR XL-MAXSONAR-WR

0

H2KLPY11000600

H2KLPY11000600

Unictron

ULTRASONIC SENS 1MHZ PIEZO TRAN

49

MB7062-731

MB7062-731

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR XL-MAXSONAR-WR

0

QT50ULB-CRFV

QT50ULB-CRFV

Banner Engineering

QT50U CHEMICAL RESISTANT SERIES:

2

MB7138-700

MB7138-700

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR XL-TRASHSONAR

0

MB7139-320

MB7139-320

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR XL-TRASHSONAR

0

MB7469-621

MB7469-621

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSR 4-20HR-MAXSONAR

0

MB7460-731

MB7460-731

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSR 4-20HR-MAXSONAR

0

MB7489-631

MB7489-631

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSR 4-20HR-MAXSONAR

0

MB7380-700

MB7380-700

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR HRXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7489-130

MB7489-130

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSR 4-20HR-MAXSONAR

0

MB7554-130

MB7554-130

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR SCXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7344-110

MB7344-110

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR HRXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7563-801

MB7563-801

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR SCXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7769-620

MB7769-620

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSR 4-20SC-MAXSONAR

0

MB7564-101

MB7564-101

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR SCXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7389-721

MB7389-721

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR HRXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7384-121

MB7384-121

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR HRXL-MAXSONAR

0

MB7469-121

MB7469-121

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSR 4-20HR-MAXSONAR

0

MB7070-731

MB7070-731

MaxBotix Inc.

ULTRASONIC SENSOR XL-MAXSONAR-WR

0

Ultrasonic Receivers, Transmitters

1. Overview

Ultrasonic receivers and transmitters are electroacoustic devices that convert electrical signals into ultrasonic waves (transmitters) and vice versa (receivers). Operating above 20 kHz, these devices leverage piezoelectric, capacitive, or magnetic principles to enable non-contact measurement, imaging, and communication. Their importance spans industries including medical diagnostics, industrial automation, automotive safety systems, and smart home devices.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

Type Functional Characteristics Application Examples
Piezoelectric Transducers High sensitivity, wide frequency range (40kHz-5MHz), temperature limitations Medical ultrasound imaging, industrial level sensors
Capacitive Micromachined Ultrasound Transducers (CMUT) Wide bandwidth, low-voltage operation, silicon integration Portable diagnostic devices, IoT proximity sensors
Magnetostrictive Transducers High power output, robust design, lower frequency range Underwater sonar systems, industrial cleaning equipment

3. Structure and Components

Typical construction includes:

  • Piezoelectric ceramic element (PZT or PVDF polymer)
  • Protective housing with acoustic matching layer
  • Electrical terminals with impedance matching circuitry
  • Damping material to reduce ringing
  • Environmental sealing (IP67-rated enclosures)

4. Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Description Importance
Operating Frequency 20kHz-10MHz range Determines penetration depth and resolution
Electromechanical Coupling Coefficient 0.5-0.8 typical range Measures energy conversion efficiency
Beam Angle 10 -120 variable Defines detection coverage area
Temperature Stability -40 C to +120 C Ensures consistent performance across environments

5. Application Fields

Major applications include:

  • Medical: Diagnostic ultrasound systems, Doppler blood flow measurement
  • Industrial: Non-destructive testing (NDT), fluid level monitoring
  • Automotive: Park assist sensors, blind spot detection
  • Consumer: Smart faucet sensors, robotic vacuum navigation

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

Manufacturer Product Example Key Features
TE Connectivity 898-40000-01 120dB dynamic range, 40kHz center frequency
Murata Manufacturing MA40H1S-R Compact 16mm diameter, 200Vpp operation
Panasonic WM-U2JEF-K01 Weather-resistant design, 5m detection range

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations:

  • Match frequency to application requirements (e.g., 40kHz for obstacle detection)
  • Assess environmental conditions (temperature, humidity, vibration)
  • Evaluate beam pattern requirements for coverage
  • Verify electrical compatibility (impedance, voltage ratings)
  • Consider package size and mounting options

8. Industry Trends

Future developments include:

  • Micromachined piezoelectric elements for miniaturization
  • Integration with AI for adaptive beamforming
  • Multi-frequency transducers for combined imaging modes
  • Increased adoption in autonomous vehicle LiDAR systems
  • Energy-harvesting ultrasonic sensors

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