Forma Calibración
Forma Calibración
Forma Calibración
I. INTRODUCTION
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(1)
Applying strain biases to the sensor causes deformation of
the IDT and reflectors, changing the electrode pitch. The application of external strain biases introduces stresses into the substrate material; this modifies the stiffness coefficients of the substrate which alter the surface acoustic wave velocity [13]. The
combined result is a linear change in the resonant frequency of
the SAWR device with strain [14].
B. Wireless Measurement
The resonant frequency of the SAWR strain sensor can be determined wirelessly by using a pulsed interrogation method [15]
or a phased locked loop method [16]. For this work the Sengenuity TempTracker [17] was used to wirelessly interrogate the
SAWR strain sensors using the pulsed interrogation method. A
description of the pulsed interrogation method for SAWR strain
sensors can be found in [15].
It can be shown that a surface acoustic wave is generated
strongly at frequencies close to resonance [18]. Loading a
SAWR with a radio-frequency (RF) interrogation burst at a
frequency close to the resonance frequency will cause a surface
acoustic wave to be generated within the IDT. The acoustic
wave propagates within the cavity between the reflective gratings; upon removal of the interrogation burst a decaying RF
signal is retransmitted to the interrogator. This is caused by
reconversion of the SAW to an RF signal. Applying RF signals across the expected operational bandwidth of the SAWR
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Fig. 9. Direction of strain applied to SAWR strain sensors calibration for longitudinal and transversely applied strain.
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TABLE I
LONGITUDINAL STRAIN CALIBRATION DATA
Fig. 11. SAWR strain sensor response to strains applied perpendicular to the
direction of SAW propagation in the IDT.
Fig. 10. SAWR strain sensor response to strains applied in the direction of
SAW propagation in the IDT.
TABLE II
TRANSVERSE STRAIN CALIBRATION DATA
at 20 C. This increases up to 40
at 80 C. The increase in
hysteresis is most likely caused by degradation in the bonding
interface caused by the elevated temperature. For the mounted
SAWR a frequency shift of 34 kHz over a 40 C temperature
range was observed. This equates to a temperature sensitivity of
926 Hz C for a mounted sensor. This value is approximately
twice that for the unmounted SAW temperature response and is
attributed to stress effects influencing the turnover temperature
[26]. The temperature drift for an unstrained mounted sensor
C. The stability of
for resonators fabricated on
is 2
AT-X quartz is also far superior than that reported for ST-X cuts
[7]. Before the turnover effects of the piezoelectric substrate and
hysteresis influences due to the adhesive, the variation in
is 1.4%; however at 80 C this variation increases to 11%.
B. Transverse Strains
SAWR strain sensors were mounted with the IDT perpendicular to the applied longitudinal strain. Calibration was performed with the same procedure as that used for longitudinal
strain calibration. Transverse sensitivities are expressed as a
function of the longitudinal applied strain in Table II with the
calibration curve shown in Fig. 11.
From Figs. 10 and 11 it can be observed that altering the orientation of the IDT to applied strains has an effect on the response of the SAWR strain sensor. For certain quartz cuts the
frequency shifts in the SAWR strain sensors are a due to a combination of the changes in the IDT geometry and SAW velocity
[14]. Altering the orientation of the propagating SAW relative to
the applied strain field is a contributing factor in the reversal of
strain sensitivity; SAW velocity is sensitive to the magnitude of
transverse and longitudinal stress components in the substrate
relative to the SAW propagation direction. This change in the
frequency response when strains are applied transversely to the
direction of SAW propagation corresponds to predicted simulation results for SAW delay line device and SAWR ST-X quartz
[27], [28] where it was shown that changes in the SAW velocity
are a combination of the applied longitudinal and transverse
stresses in the substrate surface. The effects of IDT alignment
was investigated by orientating the IDT to strain fields as shown
in Fig. 12.
The changes in alignment of the SAWR change the orientation of the IDT and consequently the direction of the propagating SAW relative to applied the strain was altered. The reas a function of orientation can be
sults in the variation in
seen in Fig. 13. The shifts in resonant frequency of the SAWR
strain sensors are cancelled at an orientation of approximately
30 to the applied strain. At an orientation of 30 the sensitivity
or 4% of the strain sensitivity for
is approximately 20 Hz
longitudinal strains.
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VIII. CONCLUSIONS
A special-purpose calibration apparatus was designed and developed, and bare die one-port SAWR strain sensors have been
calibrated wirelessly using a commercially available SAWR interrogation unit. The SAWR strain sensors were bonded using a
polymer adhesive traditionally used in the attachment of foil resistive strain gauges. Good linearity was observed up to approximately 60 C after which creep effects, linear hysteresis, and
changes in sensitivities reduce sensor response to applied strain
considerably. This was attributed to a decrease in the strain coupling between the stiff SAWR strain sensor substrate and the
measurement surface, and the effects of the turnover temperature. The temperature stable strain sensitivity of this particular quartz cut makes it highly suitable for strain sensing applications. The results indicate that over a moderate temperature
range uncompensated strain measurement is possible.
The results also indicate that the strain sensitivities of SAWR
strain sensors are highly sensitive to orientation of the sensor
as well as to crystal cut and propagation direction of the SAW
relative to applied strain. As SAWR strain sensors require specialized packaging this has implications for the design of customized packaging for SAWR strain sensors.
As the behavior of a propagating SAW on quartz substrates
is highly sensitive to the rotation of the substrate as well as the
SAW propagation direction, the frequency-strain behavior described for a SAWR fabricated on AT-X quartz may not be analogous for all quartz substrates and propagation directions.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The authors wish to express sincere gratitude to Dr. Serguei
Kondratiev for his assistance and expertise during fabrication of
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Brian Donohoe received the B.A., B.A.I. degree in mechanical and manufacturing engineering from Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, in 2008. He is currently working toward the Ph.D degree at the Manufacturing Technology and
Systems research group, Trinity College.
His major research interest is the development of surface acoustic wave devices for physical sensing, including design, calibration, and integration into
machining processes.