scholarly journals Study and Analysis of the Effective Geometries for the Piezoresistive Pressure Sensors

Author(s):  
S.Suganthi Et.al

THE REPORTED WORK IS ON THE DESIGN AND SIMULATION OF MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS (MEMS) BASED SILICON PIEZORESISTIVE PRESSURE SENSOR DEPLOYED TOSENSE PRESSURE IN THE RANGE OF 0 TO 1.1 BAR. THE PRESSURE IS APPLIED ON THE DIAPHRAGM CONSISTING OF FOUR PIEZORESISTORS CONNECTED IN THE WHEATSTONE BRIDGE CONFIGURATION. THE INDUCED STRESS AS A RESULT OF THE PRESSURE CAUSES CHANGE IN RESISTANCE OF PIEZORESISTORS DUE TO PIEZORESISTIVE EFFECT. THE DESIGN AND SIMULATION OF THE SENSORS PRIOR TO FABRICATION HELPS US TO OPTIMIZE THE DIAPHRAGM THICKNESS AND SIZE. MEANDER SHAPED PIEZORESISTORS WITH DIFFERENT NUMBER OF TURNS ARE STUDIED IN ORDER TO FIND OUT THE BEST CONFIGURATION FOR HIGH SENSITIVITY AND LINEARITY. THE DESIGN AND SIMULATION IS CARRIED OUT USING FEM (FINITE ELEMENT METHOD) BASED COMSOLMULTIPHYSICS. BASED ON THE SIMULATION RESULTS, THE TWO-TURN CONFIGURATION IS FOUND TO HAVE THE BEST SENSITIVITY OF 4.181 MV/V/BAR AND THE ONE TURN CONFIGURATION GIVES THE LEAST NON-LINEARITY OF 0.5051 %

2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 (HITEC) ◽  
pp. 000373-000378
Author(s):  
R. Otmani ◽  
N. Benmoussa ◽  
K. Ghaffour

Piezoresistive pressure sensors based on Silicon have a large thermal drift because of their high sensitivity to temperature (ten times more sensitive to temperature than metals). So the study of the thermal behavior of these sensors is essential to define the parameters that cause the drift of the output characteristics. In this study, we adopted the behavior of 2nd degree gauges depending on the temperature. Then we model the thermal behavior of the sensor and its characteristics.


Author(s):  
Tran Anh Vang ◽  
Xianmin Zhang ◽  
Benliang Zhu

The sensitivity and linearity trade-off problem has become the hotly important issues in designing the piezoresistive pressure sensors. To solve these trade-off problems, this paper presents the design, optimization, fabrication, and experiment of a novel piezoresistive pressure sensor for micro pressure measurement based on a combined cross beam - membrane and peninsula (CBMP) structure diaphragm. Through using finite element method (FEM), the proposed sensor performances as well as comparisons with other sensor structures are simulated and analyzed. Compared with the cross beam-membrane (CBM) structure, the sensitivity of CBMP structure sensor is increased about 38.7 % and nonlinearity error is reduced nearly 8%. In comparison with the peninsula structure, the maximum non-linearity error of CBMP sensor is decreased about 40% and the maximum deflection is extremely reduced 73%. Besides, the proposed sensor fabrication is performed on the n-type single crystal silicon wafer. The experimental results of the fabricated sensor with CBMP membrane has a high sensitivity of 23.4 mV/kPa and a low non-linearity of −0.53% FSS in the pressure range 0–10 kPa at the room temperature. According to the excellent performance, the sensor can be applied to measure micro-pressure lower than 10 kPa.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ang Li ◽  
Ce Cui ◽  
Weijie Wang ◽  
Yue Zhang ◽  
Jianyu Zhai ◽  
...  

Abstract Graphene is complexed with cellulose fibers to construct 3D aerogels, which is generally considered to be an environmentally friendly and simple strategy to achieve wide sensing, high sensitivity and low detection of wearable piezoresistive pressure sensors. Here, graphene is incorporated into waste paper fibers with cellulose as the main component to prepare graphene coated waste paper aerogel (GWA) using a simple “filtration-oven drying” method under atmospheric pressure. The GWA was further annealed to obtain the carbonized graphene coated waste paper aerogel (C-GWA) to achieve low density and excellent resilience. The result shows that the C-GWA has a rough outer surface due to the 3D structure formed by interpenetrated fibers and the carbon skeleton with wrinkles. The sensor based on GCA shows low density (25mg/cm3), a wide detection range of 0-132 kPa, an ultra-low detection limit of 2.5 Pa (a green bean, ≈ 53.4 mg), and a high sensitivity of 31.6 kPa− 1. In addition, the sensor based on C-GWA with the excellent performance can be used to detect human motions including the pulse of the human body, cheek blowing and bending of human joints. The result indicates that the sensor based on C-GWA shows great potential for wearable electronic products.


Small ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (28) ◽  
pp. 3827-3836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zongrong Wang ◽  
Shan Wang ◽  
Jifang Zeng ◽  
Xiaochen Ren ◽  
Adrian J. Y. Chee ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd F. Miller ◽  
David J. Monk ◽  
Gary O’Brien ◽  
William P. Eaton ◽  
James H. Smith

Abstract Surface micromachining is becoming increasingly popular for microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and a new application for this process technology is pressure sensors. Uncompensated surface micromachined piezoresistive pressure sensors were fabricated by Sandia National Labs (SNL). Motorola packaged and tested the sensors over pressure, temperature and in a typical circuit application for noise characteristics. A brief overview of surface micromachining related to pressure sensors is described in the report along with the packaging and testing techniques used. The electrical data found is presented in a comparative manner between the surface micromachined SNL piezoresistive polysilicon pressure sensor and a bulk micromachined Motorola piezoresistive single crystal silicon pressure sensor.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junsong Hu ◽  
Junsheng Yu ◽  
Ying Li ◽  
Xiaoqing Liao ◽  
Xingwu Yan ◽  
...  

The reasonable design pattern of flexible pressure sensors with excellent performance and prominent features including high sensitivity and a relatively wide workable linear range has attracted significant attention owing to their potential application in the advanced wearable electronics and artificial intelligence fields. Herein, nano carbon black from kerosene soot, an atmospheric pollutant generated during the insufficient burning of hydrocarbon fuels, was utilized as the conductive material with a bottom interdigitated textile electrode screen printed using silver paste to construct a piezoresistive pressure sensor with prominent performance. Owing to the distinct loose porous structure, the lumpy surface roughness of the fabric electrodes, and the softness of polydimethylsiloxane, the piezoresistive pressure sensor exhibited superior detection performance, including high sensitivity (31.63 kPa−1 within the range of 0–2 kPa), a relatively large feasible range (0–15 kPa), a low detection limit (2.26 pa), and a rapid response time (15 ms). Thus, these sensors act as outstanding candidates for detecting the human physiological signal and large-scale limb movement, showing their broad range of application prospects in the advanced wearable electronics field.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrike Schmidt ◽  
Margarita Guenther ◽  
Gerald Gerlach

AbstractMany conventional analysis techniques to detect chemical or biological species are able to achieve a high detection sensitivity, however, they are equipment- or time-expensive due to a multi-step procedure. In this work we describe sensor concepts using piezoresistive pressure sensor chips with integrated analyte-sensitive hydrogels, that enable inexpensive and robust biochemical sensors which are miniaturizable and in-line capable. Biocompatible hydrogels were developed and tested for pH- and glucose-monitoring during the chemical and biochemical processes. For that, monomer mixtures based on hydroxypropyl methacrylate HPMA, 2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate DMAEMA, tetraethylene glycol dimethacrylate TEGDMA and ethylene glycol EG were photo-polymerized. By means of carbodiimide chemistry, glucose oxidase was bound to the pH-sensitive HPMA/DMAEMA/TEGDMA/EG hydrogel squares causing the glucose-sensitivity. The crosslinked hydrogels were integrated in piezoresistive pressure sensors of different designs. pH- and glucose-depending reversible gel swelling processes were observed by means of the output voltage of dip sensors and of a novel implantable flexible sensor set-up. Due to its biocompatible components, the latter could be used inside the human body monitoring physiological blood values, for example glucose.


2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milos Frantlovic ◽  
Ivana Jokic ◽  
Zarko Lazic ◽  
Branko Vukelic ◽  
Marko Obradov ◽  
...  

Temperature and pressure are the most common parameters to be measured and monitored not only in industrial processes but in many other fields from vehicles and healthcare to household appliances. Silicon microelectromechanical (MEMS) piezoresistive pressure sensors are the first and the most successful MEMS sensors, offering high sensitivity, solid-state reliability and small dimensions at a low cost achieved by mass production. The inherent temperature dependence of the output signal of such sensors adversely affects their pressure measurement performance, necessitating the use of correction methods in a majority of cases. However, the same effect can be utilized for temperature measurement, thus enabling new sensor applications. In this paper we perform characterization of MEMS piezoresistive pressure sensors for temperature measurement, propose a sensor correction method, and demonstrate that the measurement error as low as ? 0.3?C can be achieved.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail Basov ◽  
Denis Prigodskiy

Abstract The investigation of the pressure sensor chip’s design developed for operation in ultralow differential pressure ranges has been conducted. The optimum geometry of a membrane has been defined using available technological resources. The pressure sensor chip with an area of 6.15х6.15 mm has an average sensitivity S of 34.5 mV/кPa/V at nonlinearity 2KNL = 0.81 %FS and thermal hysteresis up to 0.6 %FS was created. Owing to the chip connection with stop elements, the burst pressure reaches 450 кPa.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail ◽  
Denis Prigodskiy

The investigation of the pressure sensor chip's design developed for operation in ultralow differential pressure ranges has been conducted. The optimum geometry of a diaphragm has been defined using available technological resources. The pressure sensor chip with an area of 6.15 × 6.15 mm has an average sensitivity S of 34.5 mV/ κPa/V at nonlinearity 2K NL = 0.81 %FS and thermal hysteresis up to 0.6 %FS was created. Owing to the chip connection with stop elements, the burst pressure reaches 450 κPa. The developed pressure sensor can be used in medicine, automotive industry and highly specialized scientific developments.


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