SNOA957B September   2016  – June 2021 LDC0851 , LDC1001 , LDC1001-Q1 , LDC1041 , LDC1051 , LDC1101 , LDC1312 , LDC1312-Q1 , LDC1314 , LDC1314-Q1 , LDC1612 , LDC1612-Q1 , LDC1614 , LDC1614-Q1 , LDC2112 , LDC2114 , LDC3114 , LDC3114-Q1

 

  1.   Trademarks
  2. 1The Sensor
  3. 2Eddy Currents
    1. 2.1 Image Currents and Target Size
    2. 2.2 Skin Depth
    3. 2.3 Sensors Have Two Sides
    4. 2.4 LDC Interaction Through Conductor
  4. 3Target Shape
  5. 4Target Composition
    1. 4.1 Perfect Target Material Characteristics
    2. 4.2 Aluminum Targets
    3. 4.3 Copper Targets
    4. 4.4 Steel and Magnetic Material Targets
    5. 4.5 Conductive Ink
    6. 4.6 Ineffective Target Materials
  6. 5Summary
  7. 6References
  8. 7Revision History

Copper Targets

Copper is an excellent target material, with conductivity that is 95% of silver. But it is heavier and weaker than aluminum, so from a mechanical perspective it is often not an optimum target material. Note that some copper alloys may have lower conductivity than aluminum, leading to the unexpected result of a weaker response than an Al target.

Constructing a target as a copper region on a PCB is a technique that we have utilized for many applications. Commonly available PCB fabrication can reliably produce features finer than 5 mils (0.125 mm) with 1-oz. copper on FR4. The common plating thickness of 1-oz. copper is 37 µm thick, which is one skin depth for a sensor frequency of 3.1 MHz. While operation below one skin depth is still effective, to obtain a larger response, the sensor frequency should be above 6 MHz with 1-oz. copper. Thinner copper platings perform better with a correspondingly higher sensor frequency.

Duplicating the target design onto several layers will provide some improvement in response with lower frequency sensors.

FR4 is an excellent substrate for the PCB target – it is strong, dimensionally stable, light, and has a low loss tangent at the frequencies used by LDC sensors. In addition, the FR4 has a temperature coefficient of expansion which closely matches the copper traces on the board.

If the sensor is a spiral trace on a PCB, then the thermal expansion of the PCB target has the added benefit of matching the thermal expansion of the sensor.