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Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
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    Polarization manipulation of surface acoustic waves by metallization patterns on a piezoelectric substrate
    (Melville, NY : AIP Publishing, 2020) Weser, R.; Darinskii, A.N.; Schmidt, H.
    Surface acoustic waves (SAWs) with large normal (vertical) surface displacement at the surface are commonly utilized in microfluidic actuators in order to provide the desired momentum transfer to the fluid. We present an alternative concept using a SAW with comparatively small vertical displacement. Such a SAW passes underneath the microfluidic vessel walls with minimum losses but it needs to be converted inside the vessel into surface vibrations with large vertical displacements. The principal operability of the above idea is illustrated by experimental and numerical studies of the polarization conversion of a leaky SAW on 64° rotated Y-cut of lithium niobate owing to the partial metallization of the substrate surface. In particular, it is found that vertical displacements on the metallized surface can be up to 3.5 times higher as compared to their values on the free surface. Results of computations agree reasonably well with measurements carried out with a laser Doppler vibrometer and allow the clarification of some specific features of this polarization conversion by means of spatial frequency analysis. © 2020 Author(s).
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    High temperature behavior of rual thin films on piezoelectric CTGS and LGS substrates
    (Basel : MDPI AG, 2020) Seifert, M.
    This paper reports on a significant further improvement of the high temperature stability of RuAl thin films (110 nm) on the piezoelectric Ca3TaGa3Si2O14 (CTGS) and La3Ga5SiO14 (LGS) substrates. RuAl thin films with AlN or SiO2 cover layers and barriers to the substrate (each 20 nm), as well as a combination of both were prepared on thermally oxidized Si substrates, which serve as a reference for fundamental studies, and the piezoelectric CTGS, as well as LGS substrates. In somefilms, additional Al layers were added. To study their high temperature stability, the samples were annealed in air and in high vacuum up to 900 °C, and subsequently their cross-sections, phase formation, film chemistry, and electrical resistivity were analyzed. It was shown that on thermally oxidized Si substrates, all films were stable after annealing in air up to 800 °C and in high vacuum up to 900 °C. The high temperature stability of RuAl thin films on CTGS substrates was improved up to 900 °C in high vacuum by the application of a combined AlN/SiO2 barrier layer and up to 800 °C in air using a SiO2 barrier. On LGS, the films were only stable up to 600 °C in air; however, a single SiO2 barrier layer was sufficient to prevent oxidation during annealing at 900 °C in high vacuum.
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    In situ surface acoustic wave field probing in microfluidic structures using optical transmission interferometry
    (Melville, NY : American Inst. of Physics, 2021) Weser, R.; Schmidt, H.
    The generation of mechanical driving forces in fluids at the microscale can be efficiently realized using acoustic actuators. For this purpose, bulk or surface acoustic waves (SAWs) are typically excited by an electroacoustic transducer, and the acoustic energy is subsequently coupled to the fluid. The resultant acoustic pressure field in the fluid allows for precise manipulation of immersed objects and also for the agitation of the fluid itself. In general, the fluidic actuation capability is mainly determined by the mechanical displacement amplitude at the interface between the fluid and the acoustically active surface. In the case of SAW-based actuators, the fluid most often is directly attached to the substrate surface along which the surface waves propagate. Hence, the lateral distribution of surface displacement amplitude, i.e., the surface acoustic wave field, at the fluid–substrate interface is of particular interest in order to achieve full control of the fluidic actuation. Here, we present a reliable experimental method for the in situ determination of the SAW field on fluid loaded substrate surfaces based on laser interferometry. The optical accessibility of the fluid–substrate interface is realized via transmission through the anisotropic, piezoelectric substrate material requiring only an additional calibration procedure in order to compensate the parasitic influence of effects based on different indices of refraction as well as on complex acousto-optic effects. Finally, the proposed method is demonstrated to yield reliable results of displacement amplitude on the fluid loaded surface and thus, to provide a valuable insight into acoustofluidic coupling that was not available so far.
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    Slowness curve surface acoustic wave transducers for optimized acoustic streaming
    (Cambridge : Royal Society of Chemistry, 2020) O'Rorke, R.; Winkler, A.; Collins, D.; Ai, Y.
    Surface acoustic waves can induce force gradients on the length scales of micro- and nanoparticles, allowing precise manipulation for particle capture, alignment and sorting activities. These waves typically occupy a spatial region much larger than a single particle, resulting in batch manipulation. Circular arc transducers can focus a SAW into a narrow beam on the order of the particle diameter for highly localised, single-particle manipulation by exciting wavelets which propagate to a common focal point. The anisotropic nature of SAW substrates, however, elongates and shifts the focal region. Acousto-microfluidic applications are highly dependent on the morphology of the underlying substrate displacement and, thus, become dependent on the microchannel position relative to the circular arc transducer. This requires either direct measurement or computational modelling of the SAW displacement field. We show that the directly measured elongation and shift in the focal region are recapitulated by an analytical model of beam steering, derived from a simulated slowness curve for 128° Y-cut lithium niobate. We show how the negative effects of beam steering can be negated by adjusting the curvature of arced transducers according to the slowness curve of the substrate, for which we present a simple function for convenient implementation in computational design software. Slowness-curve adjusted transducers do not require direct measurement of the SAW displacement field for microchannel placement and can capture smaller particles within the streaming vortices than can circular arc IDTs.