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Table of Contents:

SubsystemLinks to Log/Document
Mechanical Development & Testing1st 3D Printed Prototypes
• 3D Printing: The Devil is in the Details
• Assembly and Single dot test
Two dot test
• Single Dot Test on PCB
• 12th time is the charm
Electronics/Firmware Development & Testing• Braille Cell Array Drive Circuit
Updated Drive Electronics
PCB Design of Braille Cell Evaluation Board
• Braille-Module & Driver PCB's
• Testing Electronics
• Single Dot Test on PCB
Solenoid-Coil Winding ToolCoil Winding Tool for Micro-Electromagnets
• Updated Winding Jig for Ferrite Cores vs Steel Cores
Technical DocumentsReferences & Previous Work
• BOM & Cost
CAD Design
PCB Source Files


Working Principle: 

                       Fig. 1 Braille Cell Actuation Test

This is a 3D Printed, electromagnet-based braille display module that can represent braille characters. 

The key working principle is a cam actuator, consisting of an eccentric cam that has a rare-earth magnet embedded into it which is rotated to two stable positions by the action of an electromagnetic that changes its polarity. The rotation of the eccentric cam causes a braille dot to be lifted up or taken down.

                Fig. 2 Braille Cell Working Principle

Once the Braille pin is lifted, and the cam rotates to its stable position, the weight of a finger on the pin (while reading braille) cannot back drive the cam. This not only satisfies the need for protrusion force of the braille pin but also that the electromagnet need not be powered once the pin has been lifted resulting in lower power consumption.

                               Fig. 3 Protruding Force Test


Construction:

                                                    Fig. 4  Braille Cell Construction

Prototyping is done using a high-resolution SLA 3D Printer as there are many thin-walled sections.
PR4 Resin on a 3D Systems Figure4 machine is being used for its ability to achieve 0.4mm wall thickness. Craftsman resin from Anycubic, on an Anycubic Photon Ultra, was tested to work as well. 

                                                      Fig. 5   Micromagnet

The micro 1mm x 0.5mm NdFeB magnet is what makes this project possible. Luckily there are now a handful of vendors around the world keeping these in stock as they are also used for things like jewelry clasps on thin bracelets, Kingdom Death miniatures, super thing Games Workshop miniatures, and more.

                          Fig. 6 Coil Winding Tool

The electromagnets are constructed with 50-micron enamel-insulated copper wire with a ferrite core. A 3D Printed winding tool makes winding such small electromagnets easy. 

Apart from the winding tool, all standard assembly & soldering tools are sufficient to build your own braille modules.

             Fig. 7   Three Dot Array

Up to 3 Braille cells were tested to work together, no reason by more won't work as well. As only one pin is actuated at any time, only 1W of power is consumed at any point of time.

The only drawback of the drive system was that it takes at least 100ms to change the state of one pin, and this stacks up if more cells are added up.  If we were to change the drive electronics so all pins of a single module can be driven simultaneously, then the refresh time should come down to 100ms per module, instead of 100ms per pin.

BOM & Cost

The Cost of the bill of materials at a cost of 500-1000 units of the below items is outlined below

ComponentCost per Unit ($)Quantity per cellTotal
1mm x 0.5mm N52 Magnet0.0560.3
Braille PCB0.0910.09
Ferrite Core0.0660.36
50um copper wire30$/KG0.001 Kg0.03
1.27mm 2x3 Headers0.0220.04
TOTAL0.82$