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Registered Member #1792
Joined: Fri Oct 31 2008, 08:12PM
Location: University of California
Posts: 527
You take the volume resistivity in ohm-meters and multiply it by the length over cross-sectional area. Length is along the direction that the current flows, and the cross-sectional area is in the plane perpendicular to this. There's a nice diagram here:
wrote ... How do I find the resistance of a square of this foam, 10mmX10mm, if I place it between two plates on the 10mmX10mm surfaces, each
In your example, the length would be the thickness you choose of the sheet, and the area be the the 10mm x 10mm area of the foam.
You can ignore the surface resistivity (aka sheet resistivity) values that they provide in the datasheet, that will depend on the thickness of the sheet so they are just providing a range of values.
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Tara, notice that the resistance figures in the data sheet are spread across a range, perhaps because of an uneven distribution of bubbles in the foam.
Because of the foam's heterogenous nature, perhaps it might be better to determine R empirically, by experiment, as there might be a significant difference of R between any one 100 mm² sample and another.
There might also be an edge effect, if you imagine one edge bisecting a line of non-conducting bubbles, with such an effect become more significant as the size of the contact area is reduced.
Registered Member #3859
Joined: Sun May 01 2011, 03:47PM
Location:
Posts: 179
I will determine resistance empirically when I pay for it and buy it.
At this point I need to know the range of resistance values my hypothetical device will create so I can choose the best approach to the design or eliminate this idea all together.
Registered Member #3414
Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
I have some here, and some more in the shed. I've just been messing around with it and a DMM set to Ohms.
I thought maybe I could give you some figures, but a few problems come to mind. Firstly, on the Vermason website, it gives a range of values, and says the resistance is 'in between'. Secondly, I'm sure the stuff in the shed is damp, and this will obviously affect the resistance. I can't be certain that the stuff I have indoors isn't slightly damp either, due to humidity.
This raises the question 'How can you be sure that humidity won't affect the resistance of your proposed device?'
It will have to be in some sort of sealed, air-tight container, I suppose.
I also can't be certain that the stuff I have is the same specification as the stuff you propose to use, as it is just packaging that other stuff came in, although I suspect that it came from Vermason.
It's quite fun though, to see the resistance go down and up again as I squash it.
Registered Member #72
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 08:29AM
Location: UK St. Albans
Posts: 1659
If you design your force sensors correctly, you can make them read ratio rather than absolute, so detecting the ratio between a stressed and an unstressed portion of foam. This will make your circuit largely independent of the absolute resistivity. That way, you will be able to use foam from any manufacturer, or a dead bit kicking about in your component box, without worrying too much about its provenance.
OT, it is through carbon loaded foam that I discovered an arc is a short-circuit. I skewered a piece the size of a pencil eraser with the two cores of some bell-wire, and got about 100 ohms when I measured the resistance (YMwillV). I applied mains, and blew a 13A fuse.
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