Title :
Smooth Vibrotactile Flow Generation Using Two Piezoelectric Actuators
Author :
Kang, Jeonggoo ; Lee, Jongsuh ; Kim, Heewon ; Cho, Kwangsu ; Wang, Semyung ; Ryu, Jeha
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mechatron., Gwangju Inst. of Sci. & Technol., Gwangju, South Korea
Abstract :
This paper proposes a method for generating a smooth directional vibrotactile flow on a thin plate. While actuating two piezoelectric actuators spatially across the plate, temporal sweeping of the input excitation frequency from zero to the first mode of the resonance frequency can smooth the perceived directional vibrotactile flow, as compared to a vibrotactile flow generated by conventional apparent tactile movement and phantom sensation methods. In order to ascertain important factors in the excitation pattern, a user study was conducted for three factors (amplitude (constant versus modulated), frequency (constant versus swept), and ending shape (sharp versus smooth)). The results showed that frequency sweeping in addition to amplitude modulation and smooth ending were the most important factors in smoothing vibrotactile flows. Moreover, an excitation signal with a smooth ending shape was important for generating nonspiky flows at the midpoint. In this study, a vibration isolation design is also proposed in order to substantially decrease the transmission of the actuator vibration to the mockup housing. As such, it is expected that the proposed vibrotactile flow generation method and vibration isolation design may be useful in applications including generating directional information in navigation maps or for identifying callers in mobile devices.
Keywords :
cartography; haptic interfaces; mobile computing; piezoelectric actuators; vibration isolation; actuator vibration; amplitude factor; amplitude modulation; apparent tactile movement; directional information; ending shape factor; excitation pattern; frequency factor; frequency sweeping; input excitation frequency; mobile device; navigation map; perceived directional vibrotactile flow; phantom sensation method; piezoelectric actuator; resonance frequency; smooth ending; smooth vibrotactile flow generation; user study; vibration isolation design; vibrotactile flow generation method; Frequency modulation; Piezoelectric actuators; Resonant frequency; Shape; Trajectory; Vibrations; Vibrotactile flow; mobile device.; piezoelectric actuator; vibration isolation;
Journal_Title :
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on