Three Dimensional Dynamic Analysis of a Piezoelectric Valveless Micropump: Effects of Working Fluid

Author(s):  
Ersin Sayar ◽  
Bakhtier Farouk

Coupled structural and fluid flow analysis of a piezoelectric valveless micropump is carried out for liquid transport applications. The valveless micropump consists of trapezoidal prism inlet/outlet elements; the pump chamber, a thin structural layer (Pyrex glass) and a piezoelectric element (PZT-5A), as the actuator. Two-way coupling of forces and displacements between the solid and the liquid domains in the systems are considered where actuator deflection and motion causes fluid flow and vice-versa. Flow contraction and expansion (through the trapezoidal prism inlet and outlet respectively) generates net fluid flow. The pressure, velocity, flow rate and pump membrane deflections of the micropump are investigated for six different working fluids (acetone, methanol, ethanol, water, and two hypothetical fluids). For the compressible flow formulation, an isothermal equation of state for the working fluid is employed. Three-dimensional governing equations for the flow fields and the structural-piezoelectric bi-layer membrane motions are considered. Comparison of the pumping characteristics of the micropumps operating with different working fluids can be utilized to optimize the design of MEMS based micropumps in drug delivery and biomedical applications.

Author(s):  
Ersin Sayar ◽  
Bakhtier Farouk

Dynamic structural and fluid flow analysis of bulk acoustic wave piezoelectric valveless micropumps are carried out for the transport of water. The micropumps consist of trapezoidal prism inlet/outlet elements; the pump chamber, a thin structural layer and a piezoelectric element (PZT-5A), as the actuator. Governing equations for the flow fields and the structural-piezoelectric bi-layer membrane motions are considered. For the compressible flow formulation, an isothermal equation of state for the working fluid is employed. Two-way dynamic coupling of forces and displacements between the solid and the liquid domains in the systems are considered where actuator deflection and motion causes fluid flow and vice-versa. The effects of inlet-outlet port angles and overall pump size on the flow rate are investigated. The flow rate is found to increase with decreasing outlet convergence angle and increasing inlet divergence angle. In the second part of the present work, the size of the entire micropump is scaled to 50%, 100%, and 200% respectively while electrical parameters are kept constant.


Author(s):  
Ersin Sayar ◽  
Bakhtier Farouk

Dynamic structural and fluid flow analysis of bulk acoustic wave piezoelectric valveless micropumps are carried out for the transport of water. The micropumps consist of trapezoidal prism inlet/outlet elements; the pump chamber, a thin structural layer (Pyrex glass) and a piezoelectric transducer element (PZT-5A, PZT-4, or BaTiO3), as the actuator. Flow contraction and expansion, through the trapezoidal prism inlet and outlet respectively, generates net fluid flow. Governing equations for the flow fields and the structural-piezoelectric bi-layer membrane motions are considered. For the compressible flow formulation, an isothermal equation of state for the working fluid is employed. Two-way dynamic coupling of forces and displacements between the solid and the liquid domains in the systems are considered where actuator deflection and motion causes fluid flow and vice-versa. The effects of the piezoelectric transducer material on the flow rate are investigated for several commonly used actuators: PZT-5A, PZT-4, and BaTiO3. The net flow rate developed by the pump varies with the piezoelectric material. PZT-5A actuator generates the largest pump net flow, and the BaTiO3 actuator results in the lowest pump flow.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. 1198-1206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Kamioka ◽  
Yoshitaka Kameo ◽  
Yuichi Imai ◽  
Astrid D. Bakker ◽  
Rommel G. Bacabac ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
pp. 447-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hirokazu HIRANO ◽  
Shigeru WATANABE ◽  
Akira MARUOKA ◽  
Ken-ichi SANO

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