The invention relates to a micromechanical sensor arrangement for use in process measuring technology, in particular a sensor arrangement with a micromechanical, metal resonator excited with the aid of Lorentz forces for measuring the viscosity and/or density of liquids.
Viscoelastic properties of liquids, in particular including those with complex flow behavior (such as for example non-Newtonian fluids), are usually measured in the laboratory, for example with the aid of oscillating viscometers. The oscillating properties of an oscillating body under the influence of the viscous liquid are in this case measured up to a frequency of several hundred hertz. To determine the viscosity, it may be necessary to know the density of the liquid or measure it at the same time.
In process measuring technology, MEMS components or oscillating quartz crystals, which typically operate at much higher frequencies, such as for example at several megahertz in the case of TSM oscillating quartz crystals (TSM stands for: “thickness shear mode”), are used as viscosity sensors for the online monitoring of processes. For this reason, viscosity sensors that are available at present for process measuring technology are mainly used in the monitoring of simple (Newtonian) liquids, the viscous behavior of which can be described by a single viscosity parameter (for example the dynamic viscosity r). However, the measurement results achieved with such sensors at high frequencies for the viscosity of non-Newtonian fluids often cannot be compared with reference values determined in the laboratory.
In the latest developments it is being attempted to use spring-mounted oscillating plates produced by semiconductor technology at lower oscillating frequencies (to about 16 kHz) for viscosity measurement, the oscillating amplitude being measured with the aid of piezoresistive silicon layers. However, such sensors are complex to produce and, among other things, present difficulties with conducting liquids.
The object on which the invention is based is to provide a sensor arrangement that can be used in process measuring technology for measuring physical properties of liquids, in particular viscosity, which is easy to produce and which can be operated at such low frequencies that the measured values achieved can be compared with conventionally determined laboratory values.
This object is achieved by a sensor arrangement for viscosity or density measurement and by a measuring method.
According to one example of the invention, a sensor arrangement for measuring properties (for example viscosity, density) of liquids comprises the following: a carrier substrate with an opening; a metal, plate-shaped oscillating element, which is disposed on a surface of the carrier substrate and parallel thereto over the hole; at least two metal contact electrodes, which are disposed on the carrier substrate; at least two metal spring elements, the contact electrodes being respectively connected to the oscillating element by way of a spring element, so that said oscillating element is mounted on the carrier substrate by way of the spring elements; and a magnet, which is disposed in the vicinity of the carrier substrate in such a way that the magnetic field lines pass through the plate-shaped oscillating element.
A sensor built up according to the invention is suitable for rapid online measurements of, for example, viscosity and/or density in process measuring technology. If a suitable metal is used, the sensor can be of a high-temperature-resistant and/or acid-resistant form. The amount of liquid required for a measurement is very small. The sensor can be produced at low cost and, if required, also be installed in a handheld device. On account of the metal oscillating element, the sensor arrangement may also be used for measurements in conductive liquids.
A further example of the invention concerns a method for measuring properties of liquids, such as for example viscosity and/or density, with a sensor arrangement which has at least the aforementioned features. The method comprises the following steps: feeding the excitation current with an adjustable frequency into the oscillating element by way of the spring elements, so that a resonance of the oscillating element is excited; measuring the voltage induced in the oscillating element on account of the in-plane oscillation for different frequencies of a prescribed frequency range of the excitation current; determining a frequency response for the induced voltage over the prescribed frequency range and detecting a resonance in the frequency response or determining a frequency response for the ratio of induced voltage and excitation current over the prescribed frequency range and detecting a resonance in the frequency response; calculating a characteristic value characterizing the detected resonance; calculating a property that describes the physical behavior of the liquid surrounding the oscillating element and is dependent on the characteristic value.
A characteristic value characterizing the resonance may be, for example, the resonant frequency or a damping factor of the resonance (or the quality factor). A property describing the physical behavior of the liquid may be, for example, the dynamic viscosity or density thereof. The oscillation measurement by way of the voltage induced in the oscillating element allows a simple and low-cost structure of the sensor.
The invention is explained in more detail below on the basis of exemplary embodiments that are represented in the figures, in which:
In the figures, the same reference numerals designate the same components or signals with the same meaning.
The exemplary embodiments of the present invention that are described below concern a sensor arrangement for viscosity measurement. With minor modifications, which will be further discussed later at the end, however, it is also possible in addition to measure the mass per unit area (i.e. the density) of the liquid.
The sensor arrangement according to the invention makes it possible to measure the viscosity at oscillating frequencies of several kilohertz (for example 0 to 20 kHz), and consequently on the one hand makes it possible to determine viscosity values that can be compared with measured values of high-quality laboratory measuring instruments and on the other hand closes the gap in terms of frequency with known viscosity sensors operating at high frequency.
The basic structure of a sensor arrangement 100 given by way of example for measuring the viscosity and/or the density of a fluid is explained below on the basis of the schematic perspective representation in
The sensor element 1 itself comprises, inter alia, a plate-shaped oscillating element 12 (i.e. a metal membrane), which is mounted with the aid of at least two—in the present case four—spring elements 13. The oscillating element 12 and the four spring elements 13 consist completely of metal or a metal alloy (for example nickel-brass), which is accompanied by a comparatively great mass (measured in terms of the spatial size of the sensor element) and a correspondingly good electrical conductivity. Optionally, a gold coating may improve the surface properties (for example the corrosion resistance) of the oscillating element 12. A suitable choice of the metal (for example tantalum) makes a temperature-resistant sensor possible, for measurements at high temperatures. In addition, if required, for example for passivating purposes, the sensor element 1 may also be provided with nonconducting layers. A metal oscillating element should be understood as meaning that the oscillating body itself (i.e. the oscillating structural element as a whole) consists substantially (i.e. apart from a possibly present passivating layer) of a metal. In this way, the oscillating element differs, for example, from known sensor arrangements in which the oscillating body consists, for example, of a semiconductor (silicon) or an insulator on which conductor tracks have to be separately applied.
The sensor arrangement 100 further comprises for at least two (in the case presented four) of the spring elements 13 corresponding contact electrodes 14, which lie in one plane with the oscillating element 12 and the spring elements 13 and may be made of the same material. The contact electrodes 14 are disposed on a carrier substrate 15 (not represented in
The oscillating element 12, the spring elements 13 and the contact electrodes 14 may be produced from a thin metal layer (for example 100 μm in thickness), for example with the aid of wet etching methods. Details of the production of the sensor arrangement 100 are described more precisely further below on the basis of
A magnet is disposed parallel to the plane of the oscillating element 12 in such a way that the magnetic field generated by it passes through the oscillating element 12. The magnetic field lines are in this case approximately at right angles to the plane of the plate of the plate-shaped oscillating element 12. The use of a permanent magnet 11 makes a simple and compact structure of the sensor element 1 possible.
For the electronic activation, two of the contact electrodes (in
In simple terms, the spring-mounted oscillating element 12 immersed in viscous liquid forms a spring-mass-damper system, the resonant frequency of which depends on the mass of the oscillating element 12, the effective spring constant of the resilient suspension of the oscillating element 12 with the aid of the spring elements 13 and the damping. The damping of the system—and with it the quality factor (Q factor) of the resonance—is thereby substantially determined by the viscosity of the viscous liquid surrounding the oscillating element 12.
To be able to evaluate the damping of the system, and draw conclusions from it concerning the viscosity of the medium surrounding the sensor, the oscillating amplitude of the oscillating element 12 must be measured. This can be easily determined by measuring the voltage U induced as a result of the magnetic field B and the oscillating movement of the oscillating element 12 at two opposite contact electrodes 14 with different oscillating frequencies, i.e. by recording a frequency response of the oscillation in the frequency range of interest (for example 500 Hz to 10 kHz). The voltage U induced in the oscillating element as a result of the oscillation in the magnetic field is used as a measure of the change (1st derivative with respect to time) of the oscillating amplitude. The damping factor D (=1/Q) of interest can be calculated from the frequency-dependent amplitude and phase response of the induced voltage U, and from it the viscosity η of the liquid surrounding the sensor can be concluded. The phase of the induced voltage U is measured in relation to the phase position of the input signal UEx generated by the function generator. As an alternative to the frequency response of the induced voltage U, the frequency response of the (complex) impedance may also be measured, that is to say the frequency response U/iEx of the ratio between the induced voltage U and the excitation current iEX.
The induced voltage U may be badly affected by noise. Since, however, the frequency is known (it is the same as the frequency of the oscillation-exciting current iEX), a lock-in amplifier can be used for measuring the amplitude and the phase of the induced voltage, making it is possible to measure signals even with very unfavorable signal-to-noise ratios (SNR).
Measurement results given by way of example and obtained with the sensor arrangement 100 from
b shows in log-log representation the relationship between the damping factor D and the viscosity-density product ηρ for different liquids, the symbol η denoting the dynamic viscosity in Pa·s and the symbol ρ denoting the density of the viscous fluid in kg/m3. In the (log-log) representation, an (approximately) linear relationship can be seen between the logarithm of the damping factor log10(D)=−log10(Q) and the logarithm of the viscosity-density product log10(ηρ).
The sensor element 1 from
A further exemplary embodiment of the sensor element 1, in which the oscillating element 12 performs a rotary in-plane oscillation, is represented in
An out-of-plane oscillation may be desirable if it is intended at the same time (or alternatively) to measure the density of the fluid. This case will also be discussed more precisely at the end.
For better understanding, a sectional representation of the sensor element 1 from
The magnet 11 may be secured to the substrate 15 by way of spacers (not represented), so that the liquid is not hindered from entering the bore 16. In alternative exemplary embodiments of the invention, the magnet 11 may also be disposed outside the liquid. With an annular magnet, which is disposed concentrically in relation to the bore 16 in the vicinity of the substrate 15, a good geometry of the magnetic field lines can be achieved, whereby in turn undesired out-of-plane components of the oscillating movement of the oscillating element 12 are reduced.
The exemplary embodiments of the invention that are represented in the figures all have 4 contact electrodes 14, which are each connected to the oscillating element 12 by way of a spring element 13. The excitation current iEX is fed into the oscillating element 12 by way of two respective contact electrodes and spring elements and the induced voltage U is picked off by way of the two other contact electrodes and spring elements. However, it is also possible to use the same contact elements for feeding in the excitation current iEX and for measuring the induced voltage U, so that in principle two spring elements 13 would suffice. Also possible are sensor arrangements with three spring elements, in which only one contact electrode is used for the dual function of carrying the excitation current and picking off the voltage. In the case of such arrays, the induced alternating voltage U is however superposed by a relatively great direct component, which makes measuring the voltage more difficult. In this case, the use of a measuring bridge may be necessary for measuring the voltage. In practical tests, better results were achieved with the variant with four spring elements.
In the case of the exemplary embodiments discussed above, the magnetic field B passes through the oscillating element approximately at a right angle, which is conducive to the excitation of in-plane oscillating modes (translatory or rotary) and avoids out-of-plane oscillating modes. For a viscosity measurement it is favorable to excite as far as possible only in-plane oscillating modes. In some applications, however, it may also be advisable to align the magnetic field in such a way that it also has components in the plane of the plate of the oscillating element 12, so that out-of-plane oscillating modes are excited.
In-plane oscillating modes and out-of-plane oscillating modes have different resonant frequencies, so that, if both oscillating modes are excited, in the measured frequency response there can be detected two resonances, which can be evaluated independently of each other. As explained above—the resonance of the in-plane oscillating mode is used for calculating the viscosity η or the viscosity-density product ηρ. The resonant frequency of the out-of-plane oscillating mode can be used to calculate the density ρ. The relationship between the resonant frequency of a spring-mass-damper system and the oscillating mass (or the density of the liquid) is known per se. The spring-mass-damper model may also be used for calculating the density.
The in-plane and out-of-plane oscillating modes are superposed linearly and can therefore be considered separately from each other. With a sensor arrangement 100 according to one of the examples from
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