Wide-range humidity sensing and monitoring applications including instrumentation, agriculture, meteorology, biomedicine, and food processing have attracted long-standing interests, where recently substantial progress is made in both sensing-material science and microfabrication technologies to achieve portable, reliable and low-cost humidity sensing instruments. Due to their high sensitivity, enormous miniaturization potential, and welldeveloped high-volume microfabrication technologies, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS)-based piezoresistive cantilever devices covered by large-surface-area nanostructures of hygroscopic materials offer an ideal platform for highly sensitive humidity detection.Since resonant gravimetric sensing is the dominant humidity sensing technique in recent research works, in this paper, resonant actuation principles for microcantilevers (i.e. the dynamic operation mode) are addressed and compared with respect to the quality of the amplitude and phase signals, as required for on-line frequency tracking using a phase-locked loop circuit. Parasitic feedthrough effects are considered between the resonance-mode (f 0 ) excitation element and the piezoresistive detection circuit, which can lead to a reduction of stop-band attenuation, the generation of a parallel resonance in close vicinity of f 0 , a hardly detectable 90° phase jump, and a long-term drift of resonance frequency and phase shift. Methods for eliminating these parasitic feedthrough effects have been considered, including de-embedding of the motional signal by later data processing and the integration of a reference cantilever or circuit.Then, different concepts of environmental sensing using microcantilevers are described, including detection of particulate matter and gas molecules/volatile organic compounds. Depending on the condition of the cantilever during sensing operation, two different modes have been used to sense the target analyte (i.e. static and dynamic modes). In a static operation mode, mass change of the cantilever, surface stress, or swelling of a layer on top related to the uptake and binding of particles or molecules on the cantilever are detectable via a deformation of the cantilever (i.e. by deflection or strain), which can be sensed by an integrated
In this paper, the asymmetric resonance frequency (f0) responses of thermally in-plane excited silicon cantilevers for a pocket-sized, cantilever-based airborne nanoparticle detector (Cantor) are analysed. By measuring the shift of f0 caused by the deposition of nanoparticles (NPs), the cantilevers are used as a microbalance. The cantilever sensors are low cost manufactured from silicon by bulk-micromachining techniques and contain an integrated p-type heating actuator and a sensing piezoresistive Wheatstone bridge. f0 is tracked by a homemade phase-locked loop (PPL) for real-time measurements. To optimize the sensor performance, a new cantilever geometry was designed, fabricated and characterized by its frequency responses. The most significant characterisation parameters of our application are f0 and the quality factor (Q), which have high influences on sensitivity and efficiency of the NP detector. Regarding the asymmetric resonance signal, a novel fitting function based on the Fano resonance replacing the conventionally used function of the simple harmonic oscillator and a method to calculate Q by its fitting parameters were developed for a quantitative evaluation. To obtain a better understanding of the resonance behaviours, we analysed the origin of the asymmetric line shapes. Therefore, we compared the frequency response of the on-chip thermal excitation with an external excitation using an in-plane piezo actuator. In correspondence to the Fano effect, we could reconstruct the measured resonance curves by coupling two signals with constant amplitude and the expected signal of the cantilever, respectively. Moreover, the phase of the measurement signal can be analysed by this method, which is important to understand the locking process of the PLL circuit. Besides the frequency analysis, experimental results and calibration measurements with different particle types are presented. Using the described analysis method, decent results to optimize a next generation of Cantor are expected.
In this work, we demonstrate the potential of a piezoelectric resonator for developing a low-cost sensor system to detect microscopic particles in real-time, which can be present in a wide variety of environments and workplaces. The sensor working principle is based on the resonance frequency shift caused by particles collected on the resonator surface. To test the sensor sensitivity obtained from mass-loading effects, an Aluminum Nitride-based piezoelectric resonator was exposed to cigarette particles in a sealed chamber. In order to determine the resonance parameters of interest, an interface circuit was implemented and included within both open-loop and closed-loop schemes for comparison. The system was capable of tracking the resonance frequency with a mass sensitivity of 8.8 Hz/ng. Although the tests shown here were proven by collecting particles from a cigarette, the results obtained in this application may have interest and can be extended towards other applications, such as monitoring of nanoparticles in a workplace environment.
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