HP Enables Better, Faster Decision Making With Breakthrough Sensing
Technology
Ultrasensitive Inertial Mems Accelerometers Benefit Applications Such as
Bridge, Infrastructure and Seismic Monitoring
PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--HP (NYSE:HPQ) today announced new inertial sensing technology that
enables the development of digital micro-electro-mechanical systems
(MEMS) accelerometers that are up to 1,000 times more sensitive than
high-volume products currently available.
A MEMS accelerometer is a sensor that can be used to measure vibration,
shock or change in velocity. By deploying many of these detectors as
part of a complete sensor network, HP will enable real-time data
collection, management evaluation and analysis. This information
empowers people to make better, faster decisions, and take subsequent
action to improve safety, security and sustainability for a range of
applications, such as bridge and infrastructure health monitoring,
geophysical mapping, mine exploration and earthquake monitoring.
The new sensing technology represents a breakthrough in nano sensing
research and uses the fluidic MEMS technology co-developed over the past
25 years by HP
Labs – the company’s central research arm – and the company’s
Imaging and Printing Group.
“HP is already the world’s leading MEMS provider for fluidic devices,
which are present in hundreds of millions of print cartridges each year,
and we have proven capabilities for deep technology integration and
commercialization into high-volume products,” said Ken Abbott, director,
Emerging Technology, Technology Development Organization, HP. “This,
coupled with our position as a leading technology company, uniquely
positions HP to deliver sensing solutions and services on a global
scale.”
The HP sensing technology enables a new class of ultrasensitive,
low-power MEMS accelerometers. Up to 1,000 times more sensitive than
high-volume, commercial products, sensors based on this technology can
achieve noise density performance in the sub 100 nano-g per square root
Hz range to enable dramatic improvements in data quality. The MEMS
device can be customized with single or multiple axes per chip to meet
individual system requirements.
The sensing technology is a key enabler of HP’s vision for a new
information ecosystem, the Central Nervous System for the Earth (CeNSE).
Integrating the devices within a complete system that encompasses
numerous sensor types, networks, storage, computation and software
solutions enables a new level of awareness, revolutionizing
communication between objects and people.
“With a trillion sensors embedded in the environment – all connected by
computing systems, software and services – it will be possible to hear
the heartbeat of the Earth, impacting human interaction with the globe
as profoundly as the Internet has revolutionized communication,” said
Peter Hartwell, senior researcher, HP Labs.
About HP
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on people, businesses, governments and society. The world’s largest
technology company, HP brings together a portfolio that spans printing,
personal computing, software, services and IT infrastructure to solve
customer problems. More information about HP is available at http://www.hp.com/.
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