| Literature DB >> 31141949 |
Baofa Hu1,2,3, Shaoda Zhang4,5, Hong Zhang6, Wenlong Lv7, Chunquan Zhang8, Xueqin Lv9, Haisheng San10,11,12.
Abstract
High frequency surface acoustic wave (SAW) technology offers many opportunities for aerospace applications in passive wireless sensing and communication. This paper presents the design, simulation, fabrication, and test of an L-band SAW resonator based on 128° Y-X LiNbO3 substrate. The design parameters of SAW resonator were optimized by the finite element (FEM) method and the coupling-of-mode (COM) theory. Electron-beam lithography (EBL) technology was used to fabricate the submicron-scale of interdigital transducers (IDTs) and grating reflectors. The effects of some key EBL processes (e.g., the use of electron beam resist, the choice of metal deposition methods, the charge-accumulation effect, and the proximity-effect) on the fabrication precision of SAW devices were discussed. Experimentally, the LiNbO3-based SAW resonators fabricated using improved EBL technology exhibits a Rayleigh wave resonance peaks at 1.55 GHz with return loss about -12dB, and quality factor Q is 517. Based on this SAW resonator, the temperature and strain sensing tests were performed, respectively. The experimental results exhibit a well linear dependence of temperature/strain on frequency-shift, with a temperature sensitivity of 125.4 kHz/C and a strain sensitivity of -831 Hz/με, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: SAW sensing; Surface acoustic wave (SAW); electron beam lithography; resonator
Year: 2019 PMID: 31141949 PMCID: PMC6630977 DOI: 10.3390/mi10060349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Potential aerospace applications of surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of SAW resonator and the design parameters of SAW resonator
Figure 3Finite element (FEM) simulations of resonant mode and displacement distribution mapping of SAW (color bar = total displacement (nm)) (a), COM simulations of conductance response of IDT and SAW resonator and reflection spectrum of reflectors (b).
Design parameters of SAW resonator. IDT: interdigital transducer.
| Parameter | Symbol | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Bar-width of IDT |
| 600 nm |
| Bar-width of reflector |
| 600 nm |
| Period of IDT |
| 2.4 μm |
| Length of IDT aperture |
| 144 μm |
| Length of reflector |
| 144 μm |
| Pairs of IDT |
| 152 |
| Bar number of reflector |
| 100 |
| Distance between IDT and reflector |
| 2.4 μm |
Figure 4Fabrication process flow of the SAW resonator (a); photo of the SAW resonator packaged in printed circuit board (b) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of the SAW resonator (c) and the enlarged IDT structure (d).
Coupling-of-mode (COM) parameters of SAW resonator (128° Y-X LiNbO3).
| Parameter | Symbol | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Open circuit bar reflection coefficient (h/λ = 0.015) |
| 0.01958 |
| SAW velocity (h/λ < 0.02, approximate free surface) |
| 4032.4 m/s |
| SAW velocity (Open circuit reflection bar) |
| 3654.6.4 m/s |
| Static capacitance |
| 0.481 fF/μm |
| Propagation loss |
| 0.0035 dB/λ |
| Electrode square resistance (Au) (hm is the electrode thick in um) |
| 0.034/hm·Ω |
Figure 5A comparison of the experimental results of metal IDT fabrication using single-layer (a) and double-layer resist (b).
Figure 6A comparison of the experimental results and of metal IDT fabrication using magnetron sputtering (a) and thermal evaporation (b).
Figure 7A comparison of developed patterns of e-beam exposure on LiNbO3 substrate with (a) and without (b) Au layer on resist.
Figure 8A comparison of developed patterns with an under-exposure (a), an over-exposure (b), and a modulation exposure (c) based on a specially designed modulation exposure graphics with the color intensity to display exposure does (d).
Figure 9Response spectrum of S11 of SAW resonator based on 128° Y-X LiNbO3.
Figure 10Photos of measurement setups (a) and LiNbO3-based SAW temperature sensor with a thermocouple to calibrate the temperature (b); F-t&R-t (c) and F-T (d) curves of SAW sensor.
Figure 11Schematic diagram of strain measurement method (a) and photo of LiNbO3-based SAW resonator attached to a PCB cantilever with a piezo-resistive strain gauge as calibration (b); S11 response of SAW resonator under different strains (c) and Δf/f - ε curves of SAW strain sensor (d).