1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a measuring element provided on a diaphragm portion for thermally insulating a heating resistor and a thermal sensitive resistor from a semiconductor substrate. The present invention particularly relates to an air flow meter that measures a flow rate of air flowing through a suction air passage of an internal combustion engine.
2. Description of the Related Art
An air flow meter provided in a suction air passage of an internal combustion engine for an automobile and the like so as to measure an amount of suction air is required to achieve high speed response, high sensitivity, and long-term stability for the purpose of optimally controlling an engine based on an output signal to reduce fuel consumption. To meet the request, an air flow meter with high sensitivity is achieved on the basis of a semiconductor thin film layer formation technique and a micromachining technique, and employs a measuring element including a resistor that serves as a heater and that is thermally insulated from a semiconductor substrate (for example, see JP Patent Application Publication No. 8-271308). Heating the resistor as the heater on the semiconductor substrate to a high temperature leads to an improvement in flow rate detection sensitivity of a sensor. In addition, such heating burns off organic-based materials such as oil mixed in the environment, thereby leading to an improvement in contamination resistance of the sensor. Moreover, a water-repellent or oil-repellent coating is provided on a sensor element to suppress degradation of property fluctuation caused by dirt adhering to the sensor element during operation, so that long-term stability is achieved (for example, see JP Patent Application Publication No. 2000-169795).
The present invention particularly prevents adhesion of salt to a resistor type air flow meter among contaminated water, petroleum, droplets, silicone oil, soot, salt, hydrocarbon, and dust particles that exist in the installation environment. There is a problem that when rain or snow including sea salt in a coastal area or snow melting salt in a cold district is sucked, the salt intensively accumulates and adheres to the resistor. Accumulation and adhesion of the salt to the resistor cause degradation in measurement accuracy of the air flow meter over time, and also cause corrosion of materials of components including the resistor and a wiring.
Here, a behavior of accumulation and adhesion of the salt to the resistor will be described using a behavior of water droplets including salt on a heat transfer surface. The following four states are included in a phenomenon in which a water droplet on a surface of a material is heated to disappear.
1. Convection: the water droplet is heated to evaporate through convection at a temperature of not more than a boiling start temperature.
2. Nucleate boiling: the water droplet boils only at a portion on a depression or projection of the heat transfer surface; convection occurs in the other portion.
3. Transition boiling: the water droplet is in a transitional state from nucleate boiling to film boiling.
4. Film boiling: the entire heat transfer surface is covered with vapors.
Heat transfer under the temperature conditions of film boiling is smaller than that in nucleate boiling because the entire heat transfer surface is covered with vapors. Specifically, film boiling is quiet stable boiling caused by heat transfer within a vapor film while the heat is transferred from the heat transfer surface only through the vapor film. When a salt concentration in the water droplet increases by evaporation of the water droplet and the salt concentration exceeds the saturated concentration, the salt starts to be deposited. The water droplet is not in contact with the heat transfer surface, but is in contact with only the vapor film. For that reason, the salt gets deposited while floating in the air, and the adhesion of the salt onto the heat transfer surface is quite low. In other words, in this state, the salt does not adhere closely to the heat transfer surface. On the other hand, under the temperature conditions of transition boiling and nucleate boiling, the heat transfer surface partly has a boiling region and a non-boiling region. In the non-boiling region, the heat transfer surface is in contact with the water droplet. The salt concentration in the water droplet increases as the water evaporates. The salt starts to be deposited when the salt concentration exceeds the saturated concentration. The adhesion of the salt onto the heat transfer surface is high because the water droplet is in contact with the heat transfer surface and the salt gets deposited on the heat transfer surface. In other words, in this state, the salt adheres closely to the heat transfer surface. From above, under the condition that the heating resistor is at or below the temperature of transition boiling and that of nucleate boiling, the salt accumulates and fixedly adheres to the heat transfer surface.
In the above-mentioned related art, an attempt has been made to provide a sensor element with a water-repellent or oil-repellent coating made of an organic-based material to prevent accumulation and adhesion of the salt on the resistor when the liquid droplets including the salt evaporate and disappear while being in contact with the resistor. However, when a surface temperature of the resistor is high, the water-repellent or oil-repellent coating made of an organic-based material is degraded due to thermal oxidation. Thus, use of such a water repellent or oil-repellent coating has risks of reducing the water-repellent and oil-repellent effects, and fluctuating properties of the resistor.
An object of the present invention is to prevent accumulation and adhesion of salt included in liquid droplets contacting a surface of a heating resistor, thereby to reduce contamination and corrosion of the heating resistor and to suppress reduction in measurement accuracy of a heating resistor type air flow meter.
In order to achieve the above-mentioned object, a water-repellent or oil-repellent material used in a semiconductor process and having such a property that liquid droplets contacting a sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling at 200° C., for example, is used for a thin layer of the topmost surface layer of a thin film diaphragm; a material that can be used at a high temperature in the environment, for example, not less than 300° C. is used for the heating resistor; and a temperature of the heating resistor is set at a temperature equal to or higher than the temperature at which the liquid droplets contacting the sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling during operation of a heating resistor type air flow rate sensor. Here, the temperature of the heating resistor is not intended to be set as high as possible. If the temperature is set too high, the life of the heating resistor in the heating resistance type air flow rate measuring device is remarkably short, or electronic components and a connection portion mounted on an electronic circuit may be degraded or broken down due to constant exposure to the high temperature. Accordingly, the maximum temperature is set at 460° C. or less, for example.
To achieve the above-mentioned object, tetraethoxysilane (Si(OC2H5)4, hereinafter, referred to as TEOS) or the like is used for the topmost surface layer of a thin film diaphragm. Ta, Mo, Ti, W, Co, Ni, Nb, Hf, Cr, Zr or Fe is used for a metal layer in a heating resistor of the thin film diaphragm. A temperature of the heating resistor is set at a temperature equal to or higher than the temperature at which the liquid droplets contacting a sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling during operation of a heating resistor type air flow meter.
Accumulation and adhesion of the salt included in the liquid droplets contacting the surface of the heating resistor are prevented to reduce contamination and corrosion of the heating resistor and to suppress reduction in measurement accuracy of the heating resistor type air flow meter.
Hereinafter, an embodiment according to the present invention will be described.
Hereinafter, a heat type air flow rate sensor using a diaphragm sensor according to the present invention will be described as an example.
A heating resistance type air flow rate measuring device 20 having the above-mentioned configuration includes a support 21 that supports the measurement element 1, an external circuit, and the like, as shown in
The heating resistor 3 of the heating resistance type air flow rate measuring device 20 is heated and controlled during air flow rate measurement, i.e., while an engine is being driven. The heating resistor has a constant difference between the heating temperature of the heating resistor and the suction air temperature. Accordingly, when the suction air temperature (outdoor air temperature) is lower (for example, in a cold district), a surface temperature of the heating resistor is relatively lower.
Although the heating temperature of the heating resistor 3 is different depending on models, the heating resistance type air flow rate measuring device 20 usually uses the control circuit 26 to control the heating temperature of the heating resistor 3 so that the heating resistor 3 may be 200° C. higher than the suction air temperature. Because a range of the suction air temperature is −40 to 120° C., the surface temperature of the heating resistor is set at 160 to 320° C. When the temperature of the heating resistor 3 is 320° C., there is a risk that the water-repellent and oil-repellent protective coating provided in the heating resistor described as a related art may be thermally degraded, which in turn reduces the water repellent and oil-repellent effects so that the properties of the heating resistor may be fluctuated. A related art in which an organic water-repellent and oil-repellent protective coating is decomposed to disappear at a high temperature is also reported. However, there is a conceivable risk that insufficient decomposition and disappearance of the protective coating undesirably fluctuates the properties of the heating resistor in the environment where the suction air temperature changes in the range of −40 to 120° C.
According to the description above, a heating resistance type air flow meter is configured as follows. A heating resistance type air flow rate measuring device includes: a heating resistor having a surface temperature set to detect a flow rate of air sucked by an internal combustion engine; and an electronic circuit that is electrically connected to the heating resistor and outputs an signal according to the flow rate of the suction air, on the basis of an amount of heat dissipated from the heating resistor or a detected temperature. As for the heating resistance type air flow meter, a water-repellent or oil-repellent material which has such properties that liquid droplets contacting a sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling at a low temperature (for example, 200° C.) is used for a thin film for a topmost surface layer of a thin film diaphragm. Moreover, a thin film material that can be used at a high temperature (for example, 340° C.) in the environment is used for a heating resistor thin film. Furthermore, a temperature of the heating resistor is set at a temperature equal to or higher than the temperature at which the liquid droplets contacting the sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling during operation of the heating resistor type air flow meter.
Here, description will be given of the water-repellent or oil-repellent material which has such properties that liquid droplets contacting a sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling at a low temperature (for example, 200° C.) and the thin film material that can be used at a high temperature (for example, 360° C.) in the environment.
First, the water-repellent or oil-repellent material which has such properties that liquid droplets contacting a sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling at a low temperature (for example, 200° C.) will be described.
When a material, such as TEOS, which has water repellency and oil repellency in the vicinity of 200° C., is used for a thin film of a different surface layer of the thin film diaphragm, fluctuation of properties due to adhering salt can be reduced. However, there is a conceivable risk that resistance may change over time at 200° C., depending on the material of the heating resistor. Accordingly, description will be given next of the thin film material that can be used in a high temperature in the environment.
From a viewpoint of resistance change over time of the heating resistor at a high temperature in the environment, the control circuit 26 generally controls the heating element so as to have a temperature 100 to 200° C. higher than the suction air temperature detected by the thermal sensitive resistor 4. Because a range of the suction air temperature is −40 to 120° C., the surface temperature of the heating resistor of conventional products is set at 160 to 320° C. or 60 to 220° C. At this temperature, not only SiO2 but also TEOS does not exhibit water repellency and oil repellency during operation. As a heating resistor that can be used at a high temperature (for example, 350° C.) in the environment, Pt, Ta, Mo, Ti, W, Co, Ni, Nb, Hf, Cr, Zr, Fe or the like is used for a metal layer. For example, when the control circuit 26 controls the heating element so as to have a temperature 300° C. higher than the suction air temperature detected by the thermal sensitive resistor 4, the surface temperature of the heating resistor according to the present invention can be set at 260 to 420° C. because the range of the suction air temperature is −40 to 120° C. At this set temperature, if TEOS is used for the thin film of the topmost surface layer of the thin film diaphragm and is used as a water-repellent or oil-repellent material which has such properties that the liquid droplets contacting the sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling at a low temperature (for example, 200° C.), then no salt accumulate and adhere to the heating resistor in any environments where automobiles are in use.
As described above, the water-repellent or oil-repellent material which has such properties that the liquid droplets contacting the sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling at 200° C., for example, is used for the thin film of the topmost surface layer of the thin film diaphragm; the material that can be used at a high temperature in the environment of not less than 300° C., for example, is used for the heating resistor; and a temperature of the heating resistor is set at a temperature equal to or higher than the temperature at which the liquid droplets contacting the sensor surface evaporate and disappear by film boiling during operation of the heating resistor type air flow meter. Thus, fluctuation of properties due to the adhering salt as well as fluctuation of properties due to the resistance change over time can be reduced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-219893 | Sep 2009 | JP | national |