A scanning probe microscope(SPM)stage controlled by three stepper motors is designed,which has more flexibilitiesthan that of one motor controlled stage,while the control whom is more complicated.In this project,we bu...A scanning probe microscope(SPM)stage controlled by three stepper motors is designed,which has more flexibilitiesthan that of one motor controlled stage,while the control whom is more complicated.In this project,we build the stageactions in an Arduino microcontroller,and finite state machine(FSM)is also built in the Arduino micro controller to communicatewith a computer and a radio frequency(RF)controller.A special displaying scheme with five states is employed to indicatethe operation of the stage.Finally,the stage is fully tested and has a700nm resolution in Z motion of the SPM.展开更多
This paper presents the design and implementation of a Stepper Motor using Nexys2 circuit board based on a Xilinx Spartan 3E Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) device with VHDL code. The algorithm implemented on FPG...This paper presents the design and implementation of a Stepper Motor using Nexys2 circuit board based on a Xilinx Spartan 3E Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) device with VHDL code. The algorithm implemented on FPGA allows a substantial decrease of the equivalent processing time developed by different velocity controllers. The Stepper Speed control is achieved using VHDL code, and the hardware digital circuit is designed for a programmable rotational stepper motor using VHDL as a tool and FPGA as a target technology. The 50 MHZ provided by the starter kit is divided to obtain the necessary delay time between the motor phases that ranges between 2 - 10 m seconds. Though output selections, the direction of rotation of the stepper motor besides the magnitude of the angle of movement and the rotation speed can be controlled. The major advantage of using reconfigurable hardware (FPGA) in implementing the Stepper Motor instead of a discrete digital component is that it makes modifications to the design easy and quick and also, the total design hence represents an embedded system (works without computer). The total programmable hardware design that controlled on the stepper motor movement, occupied an area that did not exceed 12% of the chip resources.展开更多
文摘A scanning probe microscope(SPM)stage controlled by three stepper motors is designed,which has more flexibilitiesthan that of one motor controlled stage,while the control whom is more complicated.In this project,we build the stageactions in an Arduino microcontroller,and finite state machine(FSM)is also built in the Arduino micro controller to communicatewith a computer and a radio frequency(RF)controller.A special displaying scheme with five states is employed to indicatethe operation of the stage.Finally,the stage is fully tested and has a700nm resolution in Z motion of the SPM.
文摘This paper presents the design and implementation of a Stepper Motor using Nexys2 circuit board based on a Xilinx Spartan 3E Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) device with VHDL code. The algorithm implemented on FPGA allows a substantial decrease of the equivalent processing time developed by different velocity controllers. The Stepper Speed control is achieved using VHDL code, and the hardware digital circuit is designed for a programmable rotational stepper motor using VHDL as a tool and FPGA as a target technology. The 50 MHZ provided by the starter kit is divided to obtain the necessary delay time between the motor phases that ranges between 2 - 10 m seconds. Though output selections, the direction of rotation of the stepper motor besides the magnitude of the angle of movement and the rotation speed can be controlled. The major advantage of using reconfigurable hardware (FPGA) in implementing the Stepper Motor instead of a discrete digital component is that it makes modifications to the design easy and quick and also, the total design hence represents an embedded system (works without computer). The total programmable hardware design that controlled on the stepper motor movement, occupied an area that did not exceed 12% of the chip resources.