174 research outputs found
WIRELESS AND BATTERYLESS SURFACE ACOUSTIC WAVE SENSORS FOR HIGH TEMPERATURE ENVIRONMENTS
International audienceSurface acoustic wave (SAW) devices are widely used as filter, resonator or delay line in electronic systems in a wide range of applications: mobile communication, TVs, radar, stable resonator for clock generation, etc. The resonance frequency and the delay line of SAW devices are depending on the properties of materials forming the device and could be very sensitive to the physical parameters of the environment. Since SAW devices are more and more used as sensor for a large variety of area: gas, pressure, force, temperature, strain, radiation, etc. The sensors based SAW present the advantage to be passive (batteryless) and/or wireless. These interesting properties combined with a small size, a low cost radio request system and a small antennas when operating at high frequency, offer new and exiting perspectives for wireless measurement processes and IDTAG applications. When the materials constituting the devices are properly selected, it becomes possible to use those sensors without embedded electronic in hostile environments (as high temperature, nuclear site, …) where no solutions are currently used. General principle of the SAW sensor in wired and wireless configurations will be developed and a review of recent works concerning the field of high temperature applications will be presented with specific attention given to the choice of materials constituting the SAW device
Locally Resonant Metagrating by Elastic Impedance Modulation
The optical and acoustic metagratings have addressed the limitations of
low-efficiency wave manipulation and high-complexity fabrication of
metamaterials and metasurfaces. In this research, we introduce the concept of
elastic metagrating and present the theoretical and experimental demonstration
of locally resonant elastic metagrating (LREM). Remarkably, the LREM, with
dimensions two orders of magnitude smaller than the relevant wavelength,
overcomes the size limitations of conventional metagratings and offers a unique
design paradigm for highly efficient wave manipulation with an extremely
compact structure in elastic wave systems. Based on a distinctive elastic
impedance engineering with hybridization of intrinsic evanescent waves, the
proposed LREM achieves wide-angle perfect absorption. This tackles a
fundamental challenge faced by all elastic metastructures designed for wave
manipulation, which consists in the unavoidable vibration modes in finite
structures hindering their implementations in real-world applications
Perfect anomalous splitter by acoustic meta-grating
As an inversely designed artificial device, metasurface usually means densely
arranged meta-atoms with complex substructures. In acoustics, those meta-atoms
are usually constructed by multi-folded channels or multi-connected cavities of
deep sub-wavelength feature, which limits their implementation in pragmatic
applications. We propose here a comprehensive concept of a perfect anomalous
splitter based on an acoustic meta-grating. The beam splitter is designed by
etching only two or four straight-walled grooves per period on a planar hard
surface. Different from the recently reported reflectors or splitters, our
device can perfectly split an incident wave into different desired directions
with arbitrary power flow partition. In addition, because ultrathin
substructures with thin walls and narrow channels are avoided in our design
procedure, the proposed beam splitter can be used for waves with much shorter
wavelength compared to the previous suggested systems. The design is
established by rigorous formulae developed under the framework of the grating
theory and a genetic optimization algorithm. Numerical simulation and
experimental evidence are provided to discuss the involved physical mechanism
and to give the proof-of-concept for the proposed perfect anomalous acoustic
splitter.Comment: 5 figure
Fabrication of sub-100 nm IDT SAW devices on insulating, semiconducting and conductive substrates
This work describes the electron-beam (e-beam) lithography process developed to manufacture nano interdigital transducers (IDTs) to be used in high frequency (GHz) surface acoustic wave (SAW) applications. The combination of electron-beam (e-beam) lithography and lift-off process is shown to be effective in fabricating well-defined IDT finger patterns with a line width below 100 nm with a good yield. Working with insulating piezoelectric substrates brings about e-beam deflection. It is also shown how a very thin organic anti-static layer works well in avoiding this charge accumulation during e-beam lithography on the resist layer. However, the use of this anti-static layer is not required with the insulating piezoelectric layer laying on a semiconducting substrate such as highly doped silicon. The effect of the e-beam dose on a number of different layers (of insulating, insulating on semiconducting, semiconducting, and conductive natures) is provided. Among other advantages, the use of reduced e-beam doses increases the manufacturing time.
The principal aim of this work is to explain the interrelation among e-beam dose, substrate nature and IDT structure. An extensive study of the e-beam lithography of long IDT-fingers is provided, in a wide variety of electrode widths, electrode numbers and electrode pitches. It is worthy to highlight that this work shows the influence of the e-beam dose on five substrates of different conductive natur
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