What are Proximity Switches?

manufacturing industry

Proximity switches open or close an electrical circuit when they make contact with or come within a certain distance of an object. Proximity switches are most commonly used in manufacturing equipment, robotics, and security systems. There are four basic types of proximity switches: infrared, acoustic, capacitive, and inductive.

Infrared proximity switches work by sending out beams of invisible infrared light. A photodetector on the proximity switch detects any reflections of this light. These reflections allow infrared proximity switches to determine whether there is an object nearby. As proximity switches with just a light source and photodiode are susceptible to false readings due to background light, more complex switches modulate the transmitted light at a specific frequency and have receivers which only respond to that frequency. Even more complex proximity sensors are able to use the light reflected from an object to compute its distance from the sensor.

Acoustic proximity sensors are similar in principle to infrared models, but use sound instead of light. They use a transducer to transmit inaudible sound waves at various frequencies in a preset sequence, then measure the length of time the sound takes to hit a nearby object and return to a second transducer on the switch. Essentially, acoustic proximity sensors measure the time it takes for sound pulses to "echo" and use this measurement to calculate distance, just like sonar.

Capacitive proximity switches sense distance to objects by detecting changes in capacitance around it. A radio-frequency oscillator is connected to a metal plate. When the plate nears an object, the radio frequency changes, and the frequency detector sends a signal telling the switch to open or close. These proximity switches have the disadvantage of being more sensitive to objects that conduct electricity than to objects that do not.

Inductive proximity switches sense distance to objects by generating magnetic fields. They are similar in principle to metal detectors. A coil of wire is charged with electrical current, and an electronic circuit measures this current. If a metallic part gets close enough to the coil, the current will increase and the proximity switch will open or close accordingly. The chief disadvantage of inductive proximity switches is that they can only detect metallic objects.

Proximity switches are used in manufacturing processes -- for example, to measure the position of machine components. They are also used in security systems, in applications such as detecting the opening of a door, and in robotics, where they can monitor a robot or its components' nearness to objects and steer it accordingly.

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8
Thanks for a very great site. it helps me a lot. very substantial facts. Thanks again.
- anon53296
7
great work --thanx guys, very informative, consice, to the point - just great!!
- anon49106
6
We would like to use a proximity switch to limit switch. What kind of modifications to be done? This limit switch was in an electronic circuit.
- anon49079
5
Can proximity switches be used to detect the configuration of an object? In as much if set up to detect a jar standing up and then a jar came through laying down would this work?
- anon37085
4
Proximity switch has two states, on/off. Proximity sensor is the sensor used either for proximity switch or for what I could call proximeter which would sense the distance between the sensor and the object.
- anon35420
3
What is the difference between a proximity switch and a proximity sensor?
- anon31063
1
What kind of proximity switch would be able to give an alert when something is moving away from it and gets too far away?
- mkbuser

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Written by J. Dellaporta
Last Modified: 20 November 2009

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