Flow sensor based on the snap-through detection of a curved micromechanical beam
read the original abstract
We report on a flow velocity measurement technique based on snap-through detection of an electrostatically actuated, bistable micromechanical beam. We show that induced elecro-thermal Joule heating and the convective air cooling change the beam curvature and consequently the critical snap-through voltage ($V_{ST}$). Using single crystal silicon beams, we demonstrate the snap-through voltage to flow velocity sensitivity of $dV_{\text{ST}}/du \approx0.13$ V s m$^{-1}$ with a power consumption of $\approx360\; \mu$W. Our experimental results were in accord with the reduced order, coupled, thermo-electro-mechanical model prediction. We anticipate that electrostatically induced snap-through in curved, micromechanical beams will open new directions for the design and implementation of downscaled flow sensors for autonomous applications and environmental sensors.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.