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Basic operation
Put simply, an An acoustic wave sensor sends and receives acoustic waves "within" the device to promote an effect uses mechanical (acoustic) waves to sense multiple phenomena from the device's environment on these waves, which are registered as changes in the wave's phase, amplitude, and/or frequency relative to some reference. For surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors, the device operation itself is fairly simple:
- An electromagnetic impulse signal is sent to the device via wired connection or wireless antenna
- An input interdigital transducer (IDT) transduces the The electromagnetic signal is transduced into an a surface acoustic wave by an interdigital transducer (IDT)
- The surface acoustic wave propagates along the delay line and is affected by the environment along the waysurface of the substrate
- The An output IDT transduces the acoustic impulse response wave is transduced back into an electromagnetic signal
- The electromagnetic response signal is transmitted for processing
The electromagnetic response is then analyzed to determine what changes the acoustic wave underwent during its propagation. These changes in frequency, phase, and amplitude can in turn be used to determine the properties of the environment through which the acoustic wave traveled.
Figure 1: Overview of surface acoustic wave sensor operation. Graphics edited from source7.
SAW sensors may also include a filtering element as a first step to sensing, for example, a particular chemical or biological compound. The acoustic wave sensor in this case is not directly sensing the compound, but instead sensing the response of the filtering element to the presence of the compoundThe electromagnetic response is then analyzed to compare its frequency, phase, and amplitude to some reference. Based on this comparison, certain properties of the device's environment may be deduced, such as temperature, strain, pressure, force, and mass.
Basic device components
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A piezoelectric substrate which generates electrical charges from mechanical force, and vice versa
- At least one interdigitalA transducer interdigital transducer (IDT) to convert electromagnetic waves to acoustic waves, and vice versa
- An area of propagation, oftentimes in some cases conceived as a delay line (see below), through which the acoustic wave propagates
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Figure 2: Diagram of a surface acoustic wave sensor using a delay line. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Surface_Acoustic_Wave_Sensor_Interdigitated_Transducer_Diagram.png
SAW sensors may also include an additional filtering or packaging element to sense many types of phenomena indirectly. The sensor in this case is not directly sensing the phenomenon, but instead sensing the response of the filtering or packaging element to its presence.
The piezoelectric effect
The IDTs and propagation area of a SAW sensor is built on a piezoelectric substrate, which device uses the piezoelectric effect to respond to mechanical forces by generating a voltage, and vice versa. This voltage is proportional to the amount of force applied to the device as well as the type of force applied (i.e. tension and compression produce opposite polarities). Furthermore, this effect is reciprocal, so the device will also respond to an electric field by generating a mechanical response that is proportional to the field's strength and polarity.
The material of the device's piezoelectric substrate determines the velocity of the acoustic wave, which is in the range of 1500-4800 m/s. This is 105 times slower than the electromagnetic wave velocity, allowing for a longer long delay along a shorter delay line. The most common piezoelectric substrate materials are quartz, lithium niobate, lithium tantalate, zinc oxide, and bismuth germanium oxide.relatively short area of propagation.
Interdigital transducers (IDTs)
An interdigital transducer consists of a series of comb-like conductive structures with an interleaving pattern that resembles fingers, or "digits" (see Figure 3). Using the piezoelectric effect, the IDTs convert the electromagnetic current of the impulse signal into acoustic waves and vice versa.
Figure 3: A generic IDT with pitch p (left); Frequency response of a generic IDT (right). Adapted from source9.
The acoustic waves propagate in both directions of each "digit," creating constructive and destructive interference among the waves. Where constructive interference (and therefore wave amplitude) is maximized, the wave is said to be at the synchronous frequency, or fs (also termed the characteristic frequency). The period length, or pitch, between an IDT's fingers affects this frequency respective to the velocity of the waves along the propagation area. This relationship is expressed as:
This relationship shows that changes in either an IDT's pitch or in the velocity of the SAW can be identified by determining the synchronous frequency of the device and comparing it to some reference.
Device configurations
Typically, SAW devices use either a one-port resonator or a two-port delay line configuration. The two-port delay line configuration (pictured above) consists of one input IDT, one output IDT, and an area of propagation in between called the delay line.
The one-port resonator configuration includes only Instead of multiple IDTs (as shown in the figures above), many acoustic wave sensors include only one IDT element for transducing both impulse and response signals. These devices use In these devices, the area of propagation leads to a reflector element to reflect , which reflects the acoustic wave back into the same IDT that produced it. The slow propagation speed of the mechanical wave (compared to the electromagnetic impulse) along the delay line mentioned above) allows sufficient time for a short the electromagnetic impulse input to dissipate to be completely transduced (or dissipated) before the reflected acoustic response is captured by the single IDT.
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Acoustic wave
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types
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SAW sensors are only a subset of acoustic wave sensor devices. Acoustic wave sensors are generally classified based on the propagation mode of the acoustic wave employed, firstly ordered as either a surface acoustic waves wave or a bulk acoustic waves. Some common acoustic wave types and sensors are:
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wave device.
In bulk acoustic wave (BAW)
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sensors, the acoustic wave travels through the
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interior, or "bulk", of the piezoelectric substrate. Some sub-classifications are: thickness shear mode (TSM) resonators; shear-horizontal acoustic plate mode
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(SH-APM) sensors.
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In surface acoustic wave (SAW)
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sensors, the acoustic wave travels on the surface of the substrate
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. Some sub-classifications are: Rayleigh surface
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wave sensors (generally known as
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SAW
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sensors); shear-horizontal surface acoustic wave
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(SH-SAW) sensors, also known as
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surface transverse wave
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(STW) sensors.
SAW devices are typically more sensitive to velocity and amplitude changes due to the propagation of the wave on the surface of the delay line, where it can be affected more easily by the external environment. This results in higher sensitivity to environmental stimuli such as humidity, radiation, and viscosity.
Figure 34: Propagation of a Rayleigh SAW with shear vertical component.
Source: http://www.tjhsst.edu/~jlafever/wanimate/Wave_Properties2.html
Figure 45: Propagation of a Love SAW with shear horizontal component.
Source: http://www.tjhsst.edu/~jlafever/wanimate/Wave_Properties2.html
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SH-SAW sensors employing acoustic waves without a shear vertical component (e.g. Love surface transverse waves) are better suited for operation in liquid environments since their shear horizontal components do not lose much energy into liquids external to the device.
Sensor characteristics
Transfer functions
Due to the application-specific nature of IDTs, substrate materials, device configurations, and other considerations, transfer functions for SAW sensors are also often application-specific and based on experimental data.
However, transfer functions for the two-port delay line configuration may be generalized. One such transfer function used for rapid simulation tools is as follows11:
where where f is the frequency, k is the piezoelectric coupling coefficient, τ is the delay between IDTs in wavelengths, CS is the capacitance for an IDT digit pair per unit length, NP is the number of IDT digit pairs, and X is defined as:
A more simplified transfer function for a two-port delay line can be written as:
where H_1and H_2 are individual IDT transfer functions, and τ is the delay of the electric signal due to the delay line.
While the magnitude of the delay line transfer function depends on the characteristics of the individual IDTs, the phase of the response is only dependent on the delay and signal and synchronous frequencies:
Some sample frequency responses of various SAW sensors are given in the figures below:
Figure 6: This SAW Hg sensor responds to Mercury concentrations with varying frequency response slopes. Plotting the initial frequency slopes results in a fairly linear response that can be used to accurately determine Mercury concentration.1
Figure 7: This SAW NO sensor responds to Nitric Oxide concentraions with varying frequency response magnitudes. As with the example above, the sensor's response can be approximated linearly to an extent1.
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Sensitivity
SAW sensor sensitivities are also dependant on their wavetype, configuration, components, materials, and applications. Some typical sensitivities are listed below:
Physical quantity | Linear coefficient |
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Temperature | up to 100 ppm*/K |
Pressure, stress | 2 ppm/kPa |
Force | 10 ppm/kN |
Mass loading | 30 ppm/μg·cm2 |
Voltage | 1 ppm/V |
Electric field | 30 ppm/V·μm−1 |
Figure 8: Linear coefficients for physical effects on SAW sensors6. *ppm = parts per million. For example, when measuring pressure, a change in SAW frequency of 2x10-6 corresponds to a change in pressure of 1 kPa.
SAW sensors are often valued for their high degree of sensitivity due to the concentration of energy at the device’s surface, where the external environment can have a greater effect. However, this is oftentimes a design challenge. For example, whereas surface acoustic waves with shear vertical components are very sensitive to changes in gaseous environments, they can undergo severe damping in liquid environments. Furthermore, in environments with large temperature fluctuations, a SAW sensor’s piezoelectric substrate can be affected by these fluctuations, often necessitating an additional “reference” configuration to control for such effects.
Interface electronic circuits
Excitation
SAW sensors are fundamentally passive, in that they need no additional energy other than an excitation impulse to operate. However, the sensor’s response must be processed to evaluate synchronous frequency, amplitude, and/or phase shift before any useful data is recovered from the sensor system.
Signal conditioning
Input impedance varies depending on the sensor package, but is typically ~50 ohms for easy impedance matching with test equipment.
As SAW devices often use a low-power signal for excitation input, and response signal power is derived from the input signal, response signals typically require amplification for processing. However, wireless signal transmission from the SAW is possible without amplification up to short distances.
Highly sensitive SAW sensor systems may need to quantitatively determine very small signal changes. High-precision methods for phase detection and frequency response analysis are often needed for such applications, requiring digital signal processing techniques like the fast Fourier transform, zero-crossing, and sine-wave fitting.
Noise
Noise can distort SAW outputs due to many unwanted second-order effects, including:
- Electromagnetic feedthrough between IDTs, causing amplitude and phase ripple
- “Triple-transit interference” associated with SAW reflections, causing ripple effects
- Mass-loading by IDT digits, causing SAW velocity changes
- Unwanted bulk wave emissions accompanying SAW emissions, causing passband distortion
- Finite source and load impedances, causing frequency-dependent voltages across IDTs
- IDT diffraction similar to optical systems, causing changes in transition band and shape
- Harmonic frequencies generated by the input IDT (may be desirable or undesirable, depending on application)
Manufacturing materials and processes
Piezoelectric substrate materials
Piezoelectric substrates are ansiotropic (i.e. directionally dependent) crystalline structures, where each individual crystal inside of a substrate has its own polarity. In a polycrystalline material the different polarities of the individual crystallites may cancel each other out, but by applying a ferroelectric polarization process (heating the material while exposing it to a strong electric field), the material's individual polarities can be aligned, and the material as a whole will exhibit the piezoelectric effect just as its individual crystallites do.
While all SAW sensors require a piezoelectric crystalline material, the exact choice of material is dependent on the sensor's application. If the device is meant to measure temperature, a material with a high temperature coefficient is desirable to increase sensitivity to temperature changes. In virtually all other applications, a material with a low temperature coefficient is desirable to minimize unwanted effects due to temperature changes. As Figure 9 below shows, a substrate's temperature coefficient is dependent not only on the material used, but also the material's crystal orientation, or cut. A substrate's coupling factor, which measures efficiency of energy transduction between mechanical and electromagnetic forms, is also dependent both on cut and material.
Substrate material | Crystal cut | Linear TK* |
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Lithiumniobate LiNbO3 | rotated 128 Y/X cut Y/Z standard cut | 72 ppm**/K 92 ppm/K |
Lithiumtantalate LiTaO3 | X/112Y 36 Y/X rotated cut | 18 ppm/K 30 ppm/K |
Quartz (SiO2) | ST-X cut | 0 ppm/K |
Figure 9: Temperature coefficients at room temperature for SAW piezoelectric substrate materials. *TK = temperature coefficient. **See note on figure 8 above for explanation of ppm.
Intedigital transducer materials
The choice of metal used for IDTs also tends to be application-specific, although generally a low resistance is desirable as this typically makes the transduction process more efficient. The strength of the metal's adhesion to its substrate, and the boiling point of the metal (which determines the types of depositing processes available) are also important factors, as is cost. Figure 10 below compares these properties of common IDT materials:
Metal | Substrate adherence | Electrical resistivity (μΩ-cm) | Boiling point (K) | Cost |
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Copper | Good | 1.7 | 3200 | Low |
Aluminium | Good | 2.65 | 2792 | Low |
Gold | Poor | 2.2 | 3129 | High |
Tungsten | Average | 5.0 | 5828 | Mid |
Titanium | Good | 50 | 3560 | Mid |
Figure 10: Properties of common IDT materials3
Manufacturing process
Manufacturing a simple SAW sensor with a two-port delay line configuration requires little more than the application of the interdigital tranducers onto the piezoelectric substrate. Two alternative processes for this application are shown in Figure 11 below. A photoresist mask is used to aid in both processes. Additional processing may be required, depending on the sensor's application and configuration.
Figure 11: Process diagram for etching and lift-off processes for manufacturing a SAW sensor3
Applications
Acoustic wave sensors are very versatile in that they may be used alone or as part of a filtered sensor to measure many phenomena, including:
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Acoustic wave devices have been in commercial use for over 70 years, and their most common use is in the telecommunications industry as filters for signal processing applications. Recently, however, interest in acoustic wave devices for sensing applications has risen greatly due to their low cost, reliability, sensitivity, flexibility to measure many phenomena, and mature technology.
References and further reading
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1Vectron International, “Acoustic Wave Sensors”, (slide presentation and notes), http://www.sengenuity.com/tech_ref/AWS_WebVersion.pdf
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8Drafts, Bill (2001) “Acoustic Wave Technology Sensors”, IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Vol. 49, No. 4, April 2001, http://www2.nkfust.edu.tw/~jcyu/Paper/Acoustic%20wave%20technology%20sensors.pdf
Footnotes
9M.I.Rocha Gaso et al (2013), "Love Wave Biosensors: A Review," from "State of the Art in Biosensors - General Aspects," Intech. http://www.intechopen.com/books/state-of-the-art-in-biosensors-general-aspects/love-wave-biosensors-a-review
10C.K. Campbell (1989), “Applications of Surface Acoustic and Shallow Bulk Acoustic Wave Devices,” Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 77, Issue 10, Oct 1989.
11W.C. Wilson, G.M. Atkinson (2007), “Rapid SAW Sensor Development Tools,” NASA Langley Research CenterAThe interdigital transducers do not involve A/D conversion or digital data. Here, the term "digital" refers to the resemblance of IDTs to human fingers.