2021-03-04 04:27 AM
I am working on a biomedical research project to study how a head impact, such as in American Football, is transmitted through the brain.
To make this work, I need to embed the smallest IMUs into a synthetic brain. The IMUs need to be able to measure angular motion at 1000-2000 deg/s (no problem) and also be able to measure linear acceleration in the 200 - 400 g range.
After days of searching, I am unable to find any IMUs that meet this criteria.
Does anyone have any ideas??
Thanks, John
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2021-03-04 07:00 AM
Hi John @JLloy.2 ,
I confirm you that the current best trade-off for an IMU with a mid-g accelerometer is the LSM6DSO32.
The high-g accelerometer (i.e. above 100g) are so far stand-alone products but not so much because the gyro would risk being damaged by those shocks (since IMUs can sustain up to 10.000g shocks), but because the gyro sensitivity will not be accurate at those linear acceleration intensities.
You could think to combine a stand alone gyro such as the L3GD20H, and a stand alone high-g accelerometer, such as the H3LIS331DLTR.
Should be the device you are looking for a medical-graded device?
Anyway, in case ST will introduce a new product with the characteristics you are requiring (it would be useful -but not strictly necessary- to have the related total addressable market and the business volume), we will notify it to you.
-Eleon
2021-03-04 05:19 AM
Hi JLIoy.2,
Please see the iNEMO-Inertial Modules provided by ST.
I really hope this is helpful.
Best Regards,
Ons.
2021-03-04 05:29 AM
Thank you. The INEMO IMUs would be perfect, but it seems max linear acceleration is only +/- 32g. I need 200-400g, such as the H3LIS331DLTR, combined with a gyro, but cannot find any such product.
2021-03-04 06:07 AM
Hi JLIoy.2,
Okay I will report your question about maximum range acceleration and provide you with the answer sooner.
Best Regards,
Ons.
2021-03-04 07:00 AM
Hi John @JLloy.2 ,
I confirm you that the current best trade-off for an IMU with a mid-g accelerometer is the LSM6DSO32.
The high-g accelerometer (i.e. above 100g) are so far stand-alone products but not so much because the gyro would risk being damaged by those shocks (since IMUs can sustain up to 10.000g shocks), but because the gyro sensitivity will not be accurate at those linear acceleration intensities.
You could think to combine a stand alone gyro such as the L3GD20H, and a stand alone high-g accelerometer, such as the H3LIS331DLTR.
Should be the device you are looking for a medical-graded device?
Anyway, in case ST will introduce a new product with the characteristics you are requiring (it would be useful -but not strictly necessary- to have the related total addressable market and the business volume), we will notify it to you.
-Eleon