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hi all,
i have a surface pro 3 with a type cover 4 (i got the surface pro4 type cover) running windows 10 and the type cover is no longer being recognized out of the blue.
I have tried many troubleshooting methods, but none have worked so far.
I opened device manager and i noticed the only keyboard category driver i have is the HID Keyboard. Looking in other threads on this issue, it seems i should have a driver for 'Surface Type Cover Filter Device' or for 'Surface Type Cover'
Does anyone know where i can find the driver for the type cover 4?
Troubleshooting steps i already initiated and none of them have worked so far:
* unclicked and reclicked the keyboard many times, while connected to the internet
* did a two button shutdown/reboot
* brought the computer up to date on windows update, did reboots, shutdowns, nothing
* reset the laptop (while maintaining all data) and then installed windows updates again + some more reboots
* installed the latest 'SurfacePro3_Win10_10586_1702002_0.msi' drivers & firmware pack for surface pro3 from Download Surface Pro 3 from Official Microsoft Download Center
* *tried* to install the latest 'SurfacePro4_Win10_15063_1702001_0.msi' drivers & firmware pack for surface pro4 from Download Surface Pro 4 Drivers and Firmware from Official Microsoft Download Center but it did not work since i have the surface pro 3
i cannot get the driver to show up anymore, and given that i never uninstalled or deleted it, i don't know what else i can do.
I am traveling and don't have access to a microsoft store to purchase a new keyboard so i am stuck and i would appreciate any help in further troubleshooting or locating the proper driver for the keyboard.
thanks in advance!
Experimental image of surface acoustic waves on a crystal of tellurium oxide[1]

A surface acoustic wave (SAW) is an acoustic wave traveling along the surface of a material exhibiting elasticity, with an amplitude that typically decays exponentially with depth into the material.

Discovery[edit]

SAWs were first explained in 1885 by Lord Rayleigh, who described the surface acoustic mode of propagation and predicted its properties in his classic paper.[2] Named after their discoverer, Rayleigh waves have a longitudinal and a vertical shear component that can couple with any media in contact with the surface. This coupling strongly affects the amplitude and velocity of the wave, allowing SAW sensors to directly sense mass and mechanical properties.

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SAW devices[edit]

SAW devices use SAW in electronic components to provide a number of different functions, including delay lines, filters, correlators and DC to DC converters.

Application in electronic components[edit]

This kind of wave is commonly used in devices called SAW devices in electroniccircuits. SAW devices are used as filters, oscillators and transformers, devices that are based on the transduction of acoustic waves. The transduction from electric energy to mechanical energy (in the form of SAWs) is accomplished by the use of piezoelectric materials.

Surface Type Cover Filter Device (v1.1.504.0) References. Learn about the terminology that Microsoft uses to describe software updates. Last Updated: 12-Jul-2017. Surface Type Cover Filter Device - Driver Download. Vendor: Microsoft. Product: Surface Type Cover Filter Device. Hardware Class: Keyboard. Search For More Drivers. True Type Cover alternatives for the Surface Go — ones that connect to the bottom of the tablet and fold up like a cover — are currently hard to come by, but Chesona makes a case and keyboard.

Schematic picture of a typical SAW device design

Electronic devices employing SAWs normally use one or more interdigital transducers (IDTs) to convert acoustic waves to electrical signals and vice versa by exploiting the piezoelectric effect of certain materials (like quartz, lithium niobate, lithium tantalate, lanthanum gallium silicate, etc.) from the list of piezoelectric materials.[3] These devices are fabricated by substrate cleaning/treatments like polishing, metallisation, photolithography, and passivation/protection (dielectric) layer manufacturing. These are typical process steps used in manufacturing of semiconductor like silicon integrated circuits.

All parts of the device (substrate, it's surface, metallisation material type, thickness of metallisation, its edges formed by photolithography, layers - like passivation coating the metallisation) have effect on the performance of the SAW devices because propagation of Rayleigh waves is highly dependent on the substrate material surface, its quality and all layers in contact with the substrate. For example in SAW filters the sampling frequency is dependent on the width of the IDT fingers, the power handling capability is related to the thickness and material(s) of the IDT fingers, and the temperature stability depends not only of the temperature behavior of the substrate but also on the metal(s) selected for the IDT electrodes and the possible dielectric layer(s) coating the substrate and the electrodes.

SAW filters are now used in mobile telephones, and provide technical advantages in performance, cost, and size over other filter technologies such as quartz crystals (based on bulk waves), LC filters, and waveguide filters specifically at frequencies below 1.5-2.5 GHz depending on the RF power needed to be filtered. Complementing technology to SAW for frequencies above 1.5-2.5 GHz is based on thin-film bulk acoustic resonators (TFBAR, or FBAR).

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Much research has been done in the last 20 years in the area of surface acoustic wave sensors.[4]Sensor applications include all areas of sensing (such as chemical, optical, thermal, pressure, acceleration, torque and biological). SAW sensors have seen relatively modest commercial success to date, but are commonly commercially available for some applications such as touchscreen displays.

SAW device applications in radio and television[edit]

SAW resonators are used in many of the same applications in which quartz crystals are used, because they can operate at higher frequency.[5] They are often used in radio transmitters where tunability is not required. They are often used in applications such as garage door opener remote controls, short range radio frequency links for computer peripherals, and other devices where channelization is not required. Where a radio link might use several channels, quartz crystal oscillators are more commonly used to drive a phase locked loop. Since the resonant frequency of a SAW device is set by the mechanical properties of the crystal, it does not drift as much as a simple LC oscillator, where conditions such as capacitor performance and battery voltage will vary substantially with temperature and age.

SAW filters are also often used in radio receivers, as they can have precisely determined and narrow passbands. This is helpful in applications where a single antenna must be shared between a transmitter and a receiver operating at closely spaced frequencies. SAW filters are also frequently used in television receivers, for extracting subcarriers from the signal; until the analog switchoff, the extraction of digital audio subcarriers from the intermediate frequency strip of a television receiver or video recorder was one of the main markets for SAW filters.

Early pioneer Jeffery Collins incorporated surface acoustic wave devices in a Skynet receiver he developed in the 1970s. It synchronised signals faster than existing technology.[6]

They are also often used in digital receivers, and are well suited to superhet applications. This is because the intermediate frequency signal is always at a fixed frequency after the local oscillator has been mixed with the received signal, and so a filter with a fixed frequency and high Q provides excellent removal of unwanted or interference signals.

Surface Type Cover Driver

In these applications, SAW filters are almost always used with a phase locked loop synthesized local oscillator, or a varicap driven oscillator.

SAW in geophysics[edit]

In seismology surface acoustic waves travelling along the Earth's surface play an important role, since they can be the most destructive type of seismic wave produced by earthquakes.[7]

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SAW in microfluidics[edit]

In recent years, attention has been drawn to using SAWs to drive microfluidic actuation and a variety of other processes. Owing to the mismatch of sound velocities in the SAW substrate and fluid, SAWs can be efficiently transferred into the fluid, creating significant inertial forces and fluid velocities. This mechanism can be exploited to drive fluid actions such as pumping, mixing, and jetting.[8] To drive these processes, there is a change of mode of the wave at the liquid-substrate interface. In the substrate, the SAW wave is a transverse wave and upon entering the droplet the wave becomes a longitudinal wave.[9] It is this longitudinal wave that creates the flow of fluid within the microfluidic droplet, allowing mixing to take place. This technique can be used as an alternative to microchannels and microvalves for manipulation of substrates, allowing for an open system.[8]

This mechanism has also been used in droplet-based microfluidics for droplet manipulation. Notably, using SAW as an actuation mechanism, droplets were pushed towards two[9][10] or more[11] outlets for sorting. Moreover, SAWs were used for droplet size modulation,[12][13] splitting,[14][9][15] trapping,[16] tweezing,[17] and nanofluidic pipetting.[15] Droplet impact on flat and inclined surfaces has been manipulated and controlled using SAW [18][19].

Surface Type Filter Device Driver

PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane) is a material that can be used to create microchannels and microfluidic chips. It has many uses, including in experiments where living cells are to be tested or processed. If living organisms need to be kept alive, it is important to monitor and control their environment, such as heat and pH levels; however, if these elements are not regulated, the cells may die or it may result in unwanted reactions.[20] PDMS has been found to absorb acoustic energy, causing the PDMS to heat up quickly (exceeding 2000 Kelvin/second).[21] The use of SAW as a way to heat these PDMS devices, along with liquids inside microchannels, is now a technique that can be done in a controlled manner with the ability to manipulate the temperature to within 0.1 °C.[21][22]

SAW in flow measurement[edit]

Surface acoustic waves can be used for flow measurement. SAW relies on the propagation of a wave front, which appears similar to seismic activities. The waves are generated at the excitation centre and spread out along the surface of a solid material. An electric pulse induces them to generate SAWs that propagate like the waves of an earthquake. Interdigital transducer acts as sender and as receiver. When one is in sender mode, the two most distant ones act as receivers. The SAWs travel along the surface of the measuring tube, but a portion will couple out to the liquid. The decoupling angle depends on the liquid respectively the propagation velocity of the wave which is specific to the liquid. On the other side of the measuring tube, portions of the wave will couple into the tube and continue their way along its surface to the next interdigital transducer. Another portion will be coupled out again and travels back to the other side of the measuring tube where the effect repeats itself and the transducer on this side detects the wave. That means excitation of any one transducer here will lead to a sequence of input signals on two other transducers in the distance. Two of the transducers send their signals in the direction of flow, two in the other direction.[23]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Applied Solid State Physics Laboratory - Hokkaido University. Kino-ap.eng.hokudai.ac.jp (2013-11-28). Retrieved on 2013-12-09.
  2. ^Lord Rayleigh (1885). 'On Waves Propagated along the Plane Surface of an Elastic Solid'. Proc. London Math. Soc. s1-17 (1): 4–11. doi:10.1112/plms/s1-17.1.4.
  3. ^Weigel, R.; Morgan, D.P.; Owens, J.M.; Ballato, A.; Lakin, K.M.; Hashimoto, K.; Ruppel, C.C.W. (2002). 'Microwave acoustic materials, devices, and applications'. IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques. 50 (3): 738–749. Bibcode:2002ITMTT..50..738W. doi:10.1109/22.989958.
  4. ^Benes, E.; Gröschl, M.; Seifert, F. (1998). 'Comparison Between BAW and SAW Sensor Principles'. IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Ferro. Freq. Control. 45: 5–20. doi:10.1109/FREQ.1997.638514. ISBN978-0-7803-3728-2.
  5. ^Biryukov, S.V.; Gulyaev, Y.V.; Krylov, V.V.; Plessky, V.P. (1995). Surface Acoustic Waves in Inhomogeneous Media. Springer. ISBN9783540584605.
  6. ^'Jeffrey Collins Obituary Herald Newspaper'.
  7. ^Aki, Keiiti; Richards, Paul G. (1980). Quantitative seismology. Freeman.
  8. ^Yang, Chun-Guang; Xu, Zhang-Run; Wang, Jian-Hua (February 2010). 'Manipulation of droplets in microfluidic systems'. TrAC Trends in Analytical Chemistry. 29 (2): 141–157. doi:10.1016/j.trac.2009.11.002.
  9. ^ abSesen, Muhsincan; Alan, Tuncay; Neild, Adrian (2015). 'Microfluidic plug steering using surface acoustic waves'. Lab on a Chip. 15 (14): 3030–3038. doi:10.1039/c5lc00468c. ISSN1473-0197. PMID26079216.
  10. ^Franke, Thomas; Abate, Adam R.; Weitz, David A.; Wixforth, Achim (2009). 'Surface acoustic wave (SAW) directed droplet flow in microfluidics for PDMS devices'. Lab on a Chip. 9 (18): 2625–7. doi:10.1039/b906819h. ISSN1473-0197. PMID19704975.
  11. ^Ding, Xiaoyun; Lin, Sz-Chin Steven; Lapsley, Michael Ian; Li, Sixing; Guo, Xiang; Chan, Chung Yu; Chiang, I-Kao; Wang, Lin; McCoy, J. Philip (2012). 'Standing surface acoustic wave (SSAW) based multichannel cell sorting'. Lab on a Chip. 12 (21): 4228–31. doi:10.1039/c2lc40751e. ISSN1473-0197. PMC3956451. PMID22992833.
  12. ^Schmid, Lothar; Franke, Thomas (2013). 'SAW-controlled drop size for flow focusing'. Lab on a Chip. 13 (9): 1691–4. doi:10.1039/c3lc41233d. ISSN1473-0197. PMID23515518.
  13. ^Schmid, Lothar; Franke, Thomas (2014-03-31). 'Acoustic modulation of droplet size in a T-junction'. Applied Physics Letters. 104 (13): 133501. Bibcode:2014ApPhL.104m3501S. doi:10.1063/1.4869536. ISSN0003-6951.
  14. ^Jung, Jin Ho; Destgeer, Ghulam; Ha, Byunghang; Park, Jinsoo; Sung, Hyung Jin (2016). 'On-demand droplet splitting using surface acoustic waves'. Lab on a Chip. 16 (17): 3235–3243. doi:10.1039/C6LC00648E. ISSN1473-0197. PMID27435869.
  15. ^ abSesen, Muhsincan; Devendran, Citsabehsan; Malikides, Sean; Alan, Tuncay; Neild, Adrian (2017). 'Surface acoustic wave enabled pipette on a chip'. Lab on a Chip. 17 (3): 438–447. doi:10.1039/c6lc01318j. hdl:10044/1/74636. ISSN1473-0197. PMID27995242.
  16. ^Jung, Jin Ho; Destgeer, Ghulam; Park, Jinsoo; Ahmed, Husnain; Park, Kwangseok; Sung, Hyung Jin (2017-02-21). 'On-Demand Droplet Capture and Release Using Microwell-Assisted Surface Acoustic Waves'. Analytical Chemistry. 89 (4): 2211–2215. doi:10.1021/acs.analchem.6b04542. ISSN0003-2700. PMID28192923.
  17. ^Sesen, Muhsincan; Alan, Tuncay; Neild, Adrian (2014). 'Microfluidic on-demand droplet merging using surface acoustic waves'. Lab Chip. 14 (17): 3325–3333. doi:10.1039/c4lc00456f. ISSN1473-0197. PMID24972001.
  18. ^H. Biroun, Mehdi; Rahmati, Mohammad; Tao, Ran; Torun, Hamdi; Jangi, Mehdi; Fu, Yongqing (2020-08-07). 'Dynamic behavior of droplet impact on inclined surfaces with acoustic waves'. Langmuir. doi:10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c01628. ISSN0743-7463.
  19. ^Biroun, Mehdi H.; Li, Jie; Tao, Ran; Rahmati, Mohammad; McHale, Glen; Dong, Linxi; Jangi, Mehdi; Torun, Hamdi; Fu, YongQing (2020-08-12). 'Acoustic Waves for Active Reduction of Contact Time in Droplet Impact'. Physical Review Applied. 14 (2): 024029. doi:10.1103/PhysRevApplied.14.024029.
  20. ^Hagen, Stephen J; Son, Minjun (27 January 2017). 'Origins of heterogeneity in competence: interpreting an environment-sensitive signaling pathway'. Physical Biology. 14 (1): 015001. Bibcode:2017PhBio..14a5001H. doi:10.1088/1478-3975/aa546c. PMC5336344. PMID28129205.
  21. ^ abHa, Byung Hang; Lee, Kang Soo; Destgeer, Ghulam; Park, Jinsoo; Choung, Jin Seung; Jung, Jin Ho; Shin, Jennifer Hyunjong; Sung, Hyung Jin (3 July 2015). 'Acoustothermal heating of polydimethylsiloxane microfluidic system'. Scientific Reports. 5 (1): 11851. Bibcode:2015NatSR...511851H. doi:10.1038/srep11851. PMC4490350. PMID26138310.
  22. ^Yaralioglu, Goksen (November 2011). 'Ultrasonic heating and temperature measurement in microfluidic channels'. Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. 170 (1–2): 1–7. doi:10.1016/j.sna.2011.05.012.
  23. ^Product from Bürkert Fluid Control Systems http://www.processindustryforum.com/article/patented-flow-meter-saw-technology-accurate-flow-measurement-hygienic-applications

External links[edit]

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