JOURNAL ARTICLE

Smooth Contact Capacitive Pressure Sensors in Touch- and Peeling-Mode Operation

Jeahyeong HanMark A. Shannon

Year: 2009 Journal:   IEEE Sensors Journal Vol: 9 (3)Pages: 199-206   Publisher: IEEE Sensors Council

Abstract

Capacitive (C) pressure sensors typically sense quadratic changes in C as a pressure difference (P) deflects a flexible conducting diaphragm near a rigid ground plane. Touch-mode capacitive pressure (C-P) sensors, where the conducting diaphragm touches a dielectric coated ground plane, often show a more linear response, but with less sensitivity, particularly at low-P. Initial contact of the diaphragm often occurs at a critical P. Until P crit is reached, the sensitivity is typically too low for accurate measurements. In this work, two different types of electrodes with ldquoparabolicrdquo and ldquodonutrdquo cavity-shapes have been designed, fabricated, and tested to achieve high-sensitivity at low-pressures. A flexible conducting diaphragm touches the bottom electrode smoothly, and both cavity shapes permit initial contact at a zero-pressure differential. This type of C-P sensors can have touch-mode and peeling-mode operations. The sensitivities of these sensors in two operation modes were measured, and their resolutions were smaller than 0.1 Pa at a mean pressure of 10 5 Pa. Both sensors in two modes have the resolution over total-pressure less than 10 6 , which is difficult to achieve at atmospheric pressure.

Keywords:
Capacitive sensing Diaphragm (acoustics) Sensitivity (control systems) Pressure sensor Electrode Plane (geometry) Ground plane Materials science Atmospheric pressure Dielectric Electrical engineering Acoustics Physics Optoelectronics Electronic engineering Engineering Mechanical engineering Mathematics Geometry

Metrics

46
Cited By
2.39
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
26
Refs
0.90
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced MEMS and NEMS Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Mechanical and Optical Resonators
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics

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