Underwater acoustic transducers often include a stack of thickness polarized
piezoelectric material pieces of alternating polarity interspersed with
electrodes, bonded together and electrically connected in parallel. The stack
is normally much shorter than a quarter wavelength at the fundamental resonance
frequency, so that the mechanical behavior of the transducer is not affected by
the segmentation. When the transducer bandwidth is less than a half octave, as
has conventionally been the case, stack segmentation has no significant effect
on the mechanical behavior of the device. However, when a high coupling
coefficient material such as PMN-PT is used to achieve a wider bandwidth, the
difference between a segmented stack and a similar piezoelectric section with
electrodes only at the two ends can be significant. This paper investigates the
effects of stack segmentation on the performance of wideband underwater
acoustic transducers, particularly tonpilz transducer elements. Included is
discussion of transducer designs using single crystal piezoelectric material
with high coupling coefficient compared with more traditional PZT ceramics.Comment: 26 pages including 14 figures, one table and one appendi