
Digital ultraviolet index sensors will add a function to wellness monitoring
The single-chip digital ultraviolet index sensor ICs measure UV sun exposure, heart/pulse rate and blood oximetry and provide proximity/gesture control. In Silicon Labs’ optical sensor family, the Si1132 and Si114x sensor ICs are designed for activity-tracking wrist and arm bands, smart watches and smartphone handsets. In addition to enabling UV index sensing, the devices also provide ambient light and infrared (IR) proximity sensing capabilities for health and fitness applications.
Developers, Silicon Labs says, seek to differentiate wearable and handset products with new features that help protect people from harmful UV light exposure. UV sensor-equipped products can measure cumulative UV exposure and alert end users before they have reached unhealthy exposure levels while exercising outdoors. Standardised by the World Health Organization (WHO), the digital UV index is linearly related to the intensity of sunlight and is weighted according to the Erythemal Action Spectrum developed by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE). This weighting provides a standardized measure of our skin’s response to different sunlight wavelengths including UVB and UVA.
Conventional UV sensors combine UV-sensitive photodiodes with an external microcontroller, analogue-to-digital converter and signal processing firmware. Silicon Labs has combined this functionality into a single-chip in a 2 x 2 mm package. The variants comprise;
• Si1132 UV index and ambient light sensor with an industry-standard I2C interface to read digital UV index values.
• Si1145/46/47 UV and IR proximity/ambient light sensors offering a choice of one, two or three integrated LED drivers with 15 selectable drive levels for gesture detection.
When combined with an accelerometer, the Si1132 and Si114x sensors enable developers to implement sleep tracking in wearable applications. In addition, the sensors’ ability to measure both infrared and visible light levels enhances the control of LCD backlighting in mixed-light source environments. The result is an inexpensive yet effective means of adjusting backlighting to ease eyestrain and reduce power without distracting the end user.
The Si114x sensors’ LED drivers enable implementation of reflective heart rate and blood oximetry measurement capabilities for health and fitness trackers, as well as touchless interfaces that support end-user control from a distance. Offering two and three infrared LED drivers respectively, the Si1146 and Si1147 sensors enable advanced motion and gesture sensing. The Si1146 enables motion sensing and touchless control in the z- and x-axis, and the Si1147 adds a third axis to enable 3-dimensional motion sensing. Both sensors provide reflectance measurements that can be post-processed to determine gestures.
The Si1132 and Si114x sensors operate under a wide dynamic range of light sources including direct sunlight. The sensing architecture also includes an ambient light sensor capable of sensing light levels up to 128 kLux. The photodiode response and associated digital conversion circuitry provide excellent immunity to artificial light flicker noise and natural light flutter noise.
The UV index sensors’ architecture enables thinner wearable designs with smaller batteries and extends battery life with as little as 1.2 µA average current for once-per- second UV measurements. The high IR sensor sensitivity provides significantly longer battery life in motion sensing/gesture applications through the use of a single 25.6 µsec IR-LED on-time while enabling up to 50 cm sensing range. Dynamic adjustment of LED currents further minimises power consumption.
In a 10-pin 2 x 2 mm QFN package the Si1132 sensor is priced at $1.10 (10,000) and the the Si114x sensors is $1.32. A UVIrSlider2EK evaluation kit is priced at $50.
Silicon Labs, www.silabs.com/opticalsensors
