What are the categories of sensors?

Image of electrochemical ammonia sensor hrt-4nh3-200
Image of electrochemical ammonia sensor hrt-4nh3-200

What are the categories of sensors?

First, I have to recall the basics of sensors, and different classification criteria may have different results. For example, according to the working principle, measured parameters, application fields and so on.

First of all, according to the measured parameters, the common should be temperature, pressure, light, and motion. Temperature sensors such as thermocouples and thermistors; The pressure sensor may be piezoelectric; Photoelectric sensor includes photoresistor, photodiode and so on. Motion sensors, accelerometers, gyroscopes, those are all. However, it is important to note that some sensors may belong to more than one category, for example, accelerometers may belong to both motion sensors and mechanical categories.

Then there is the principle of operation, which may involve more physical or chemical principles. Such as resistive, capacitive, inductive, these are based on changes in electrical characteristics. The piezoelectric type uses the piezoelectric effect, and the photoelectric type is based on the photoelectric effect. There are thermoelectric, magnetoelectric, chemical sensors, such as gas sensors, biosensors and so on. This part requires distinguishing the differences between different principles to avoid confusion.

When the output signal is classified, digital and analog should be the two main types. Digital sensors output discrete signals, such as switching or digitally coded signals; Analog sensors output continuous signals, such as changes in voltage or current. However, many sensors may now integrate analog-to-digital conversion, so the output may look digital, but it may still be analog in nature. This needs to be stated.

Application areas, industrial, medical, automotive, consumer electronics, environmental monitoring these are common. Each field may have specific sensor types, such as oxygen sensors in automobiles, tire pressure monitoring, blood sugar sensors in medical care, electrocardiogram electrodes, and so on. This section needs specific examples to make it easier for users to understand.

The classification of materials and structures may be slightly more complex, such as MEMS sensors are micro-electromechanical systems, which belong to miniaturized structures; Fiber optic sensors are based on optical materials. There are also flexible sensors, which may use polymers or other flexible materials. This section may need more examples to illustrate the characteristics of different materials and structures.

Energy is supplied by means of active and passive sensors. Active ones require an external power source, such as most electronic sensors; Passive ones provide their own energy, such as thermocouples that use temperature differences to generate electricity, or piezoelectric sensors that generate electric charges when they are stressed. Here it is necessary to clarify the difference between the two and typical examples.

Smart sensors are a rapidly developing direction in recent years, integrating processing power or communication functions, such as sensor nodes with microprocessors, or sensors in IoT devices. This part needs to emphasize the characteristics of intelligence, such as self-calibration, data processing, etc.

In addition, other classification methods may also be considered, such as contact and non-contact, or according to the use of the environment (high temperature, waterproof, etc.). However, it may be that users are mainly concerned with the first few categories, so it can be briefly mentioned.

You need to make sure that all categories are comprehensive and that there are no important categories left out. For example, a biosensor may belong to a chemical/biological class classified by measured parameters or operating principles, and it may be necessary to clarify its attribution. At the same time, whether there are emerging sensor types that need to be supplemented, such as quantum sensors or nanosensors, but this may belong to a more specialized field, and the basic classification may not need to be involved.

In summary, your answers should be clearly structured, listing the main types and examples under each classification, avoiding overly technical terms, and keeping them understandable. Also note the intersection between different categories, such as a sensor may belong to more than one category at the same time, can be appropriately stated. In this way, users can fully understand the different classification methods of sensors to meet the needs of different application scenarios.

There are many kinds of sensors and various classification methods. The following are the common classification methods and their main types:

1. By Measured Physical Quantity (Application Target)

  • Temperature Sensors: Thermocouples, thermistors, infrared sensors.
  • Pressure Sensors: Piezoelectric, piezoresistive, capacitive sensors.
  • Light Sensors: Photoresistors, photodiodes, CCD/CMOS (image sensors).
  • Motion Sensors: Accelerometers, gyroscopes, displacement sensors.
  • Force/Torque Sensors: Load cells, torque sensors.
  • Magnetic Sensors: Hall effect sensors, magnetoresistive sensors.
  • Chemical Sensors: Gas sensors (e.g., CO₂, formaldehyde), pH sensors.
  • Biological Sensors: Glucose sensors, DNA sensors, heart rate sensors.
  • Humidity Sensors: Capacitive, resistive humidity sensors.
  • Acoustic Sensors: Microphones, ultrasonic sensors.

2. By Working Principle

  • Resistive Sensors: Detect via resistance changes (e.g., strain gauges, thermistors).
  • Capacitive Sensors: Utilize capacitance changes (e.g., liquid level sensors, touchscreens).
  • Inductive Sensors: Based on electromagnetic induction (e.g., proximity switches).
  • Piezoelectric Sensors: Use piezoelectric effects (e.g., pressure/vibration detection).
  • Photoelectric Sensors: Rely on photoelectric effects (e.g., photodiodes, fiber-optic sensors).
  • Thermoelectric Sensors: Leverage thermoelectric effects (e.g., thermocouples).
  • Magnetoelectric Sensors: Detect magnetic field changes (e.g., Hall sensors).
  • Chemical/Biological Sensors: Use chemical reactions or bio-recognition (e.g., enzyme electrodes, gas sensors).

3. By Output Signal Type

  • Analog Sensors: Output continuous signals (e.g., voltage, current).
  • Digital Sensors: Output discrete signals (e.g., switch signals, digital codes).
  • Pulse/Frequency Sensors: Generate pulse/frequency signals (e.g., tachometers).

4. By Power Supply

  • Active Sensors: Require external power (e.g., most electronic sensors).
  • Passive Sensors: Self-powered (e.g., thermocouples, piezoelectric sensors).

5. By Application Field

  • Industrial Sensors: Pressure, flow, temperature sensors (for automation).
  • Medical Sensors: Pulse oximeters, ECG electrodes, glucose monitors.
  • Automotive Sensors: Oxygen sensors, tire pressure monitors, ADAS (radar, cameras).
  • Environmental Sensors: PM2.5 detectors, water quality sensors, weather stations.
  • Consumer Electronics Sensors: Gyroscopes in smartphones, fingerprint scanners, ambient light sensors.

6. By Material/Structure

  • MEMS Sensors: Micro-electromechanical systems (e.g., accelerometers, microphones).
  • Fiber-Optic Sensors: Use optical signals (e.g., temperature/strain detection).
  • Flexible Sensors: Bendable materials (e.g., electronic skin, wearables).

7. By Intelligence Level

  • Traditional Sensors: Output raw signals.
  • Smart Sensors: Integrated signal processing, self-calibration, or communication (e.g., IoT sensors).

8. Other Special Classifications

  • Contact vs. Non-contact: Contact temperature sensors vs. infrared sensors.
  • Environmental Adaptability: Waterproof, explosion-proof, high-temperature-resistant sensors (e.g., industrial-grade).

Summary

Sensor classifications are not rigid—many overlap categories (e.g., a MEMS accelerometer is both a motion sensor and a digital sensor). Selection depends on measurement requirements, environment, accuracy, and cost.