Priority is based on Australian Application PR 5076 filed May 21, 2001.
This invention relates to improvements in Surface Acoustic Wave [SAW] devices and particularly SAW devices used as sensors.
SAW devices have been used as sensors in liquid and gaseous environments. U.S. Pat. No. 4,562,371 discloses a SAW device comprising a ZnO piezo layer on a cut crystalline silicon substrate that propagates Rayleigh waves.
The surface acoustic waves propagate in 3 directions and can be classified as longitudinal wave motion, Normal waves or shear horizontal waves. A class of shear horizontal [SH] waves are called Love waves which are propagated in layered devices that concentrate the wave energy in a highly confined region near to the surface.
Rayleigh wave sensors have been useful in gaseous environments but they are not suitable for liquid environments because the surface-normal displacement causes strong radiative loss into the liquid. For sensing in liquids shear horizontal [SH] polarised wave modes are preferred since the particle displacement is parallel to the device surface and normal to the direction of propagation. This allows a wave to propagate in contact with a liquid without coupling excessive acoustic energy into the liquid. However the SH wave is distributed through the substrate and therefore does not have the same sensitivity as the SAW. For increased sensitivity Love waves which are SH-polarised guided surface waves may be used. The waves propagate in a layered structure consisting of a piezoelectric substrate and a guiding layer which couples the elastic waves generated in the substrate to the near surface. They are extremely sensitive to surface perturbations due to the energy confinement to the near surface. By observing the magnitude of perturbations it is possible to measure the strength of the interaction. The interactions may be caused by mass density, elastic stiffness, liquid viscosity, electric and dielectric properties. The more sensitive is the device the smaller the quantities that can be measured.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,130,257, 5,216,312, 5,283,037 and 5,321,331 disclose love mode SAW sensors used in liquid environments. The love waves are produced by cutting the piezo electric material such as lithium niobate, lithium tantalate or quartz to couple energy from the interdigital transducers [IDT's] of the SAW device into shear transverse or love waves that enable the wave energy to be trapped at the substrate surface.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,705,399 discloses a SAW sensor for liquid environments having an AT cut quartz piezo substrate with electrodes connected to a first side in contact with a liquid and a second side that is not in contact. The sensor may be used to detect biological species such as antigens.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,364,797 discloses the use of a porous material as a surface layer of high surface area for SAW devices.
Porous surfaces are used in gaseous environments to increase the contact surface area and consequently the sensitivity of the device. Porous surface have not been used in liquid media because the porous surface increases viscosity which leads to insertion losses and decreasing sensitvity.
It is an object of this invention to improve the sensitivity of SAW sensors particularly in liqid media.
To this end the present invention provides a surface acoustic wave sensor which includes a piezoelectric layer on a piezoelectric substrate.
Preferably the piezoelectric substrate is cut for propagation of love mode waves.
Preferably the piezoelectric layer is porous.
This structure provides the following advantages:
The Piezo substrate may be quartz crystal, lithium Niobate [LiNbO3] or lithium tantalate [LiTaO3].
A preferred piezo substrate is 90° rotated ST-cut quartz crystal which has a propagation speed of 5000 m/s and the dominant wave is SSBW and has zero coupling to other modes. It is dominantly a Shear Horizontal [SH] bulk wave and has a low temperature coefficient. Its major disadvantage is a high insertion loss as it changes from SSBW to love mode. When a film material is deposited on the surface it should load the substrate which means the speed of propagation in the film is less than in the substrate. In this case the mode of propagation changes to love mode. When metal oxides films are deposited on the substrate the insertion loss is decreased as the mode of operation changes from SSBW to Love mode. Its main advantage is a lower insertion loss as it decreases from SSBW to Love mode.
The preferred porous piezoelectric material is a layer of zinc oxide which is a porous surface formed by hexagonal pillars. ZnO is the best candidate for fabricating Love mode devices. It has a porous surface and is a piezoelectric material with a low phase velocity (2650 m/s). This implies that ZnO can increase the electromechanical coupling coefficient more than other deposited materials. Furthermore, ZnO consists of hexagonally shaped cylinders with gaps in between them, making the guiding layer porous. ZnO has a positive temperature coefficient whereas 90° rotated ST-cut quartz crystal has a negative temperature coefficient.
The combination of positive and negative temperature coefficients assists to is reduce the temperature coefficient of the whole structure. Around room temperature (25° C.) the temperature coefficient remains relatively lower than that of the blank SSBW structures.
A biologically sensitive layer may be deposited on the piezo layer to interact with the appropriate biochemical components to be detected. A gold film may be deposited on the surface. Gold interacts with high affinity to proteins. It can be used with specific antibodies for antigen detection. This deposit can be made on a porous surface as well as a smooth surface.
An important advantage of the present invention is the sensitivity of of the sensor. The mass detection limit is 100 pg/cm2 which is at least 10 times more sensitive than sensors using other substrates and 2 to 3 times more sensitive than quartz crystals with a non piezo layer such as SiO2.
This invention provides piezoelectric layers on piezoelectric substrates. The Substrate's cut belongs to a class of crystal cuts that support Surface Skimming Bulk Wave (SSBW). The layers are of different of piezoelectric materials that can be deposited as a highly directional film on the substrate, which let acoustic waves propagate on shear horizontal direction. Speed of propagation of acoustic wave in the layers must be less than the substrate to support Love mode of propagation.
In
A sensing layer 6 is deposited on to the wave propagation layer 5 to form a surface which is physically, chemically or biologically active, selectively to agents in the liquid or gaseous media to which the surface 6 is exposed.
The protective layer 10 may also be SiO2.
In
In
The piezoelectric substrate must support SSBW mode of operation. A few examples of suitable piezoelectric materials are shown in table 1.
The surface film must be a piezoelectric. A few examples piezoelectric films are shown in table 2.
A dual line ZnO/90° rotated ST-Cut Quartz crystal structure is fabricated with a ZnO layer ranging from 0 to 3.2 microns. A 15 nm Cr(5 nm)/Au(12 nm) layer is deposited as the sensitive layer over one of the delay lines. Cr/Au grows along the ZnO cylinders which increases the sensing surface of the gold.
Coupling coefficient, temperature coefficient velocity, insertion loss have been studied as a function of layer thickness. Magnitudes have been compared with SiO2/90° rotated ST-cut quartz crystal structure. The love wave transducers are fabricated on 0.5 mm thick 90° rotated ST-cut quartz crystal wafers. The transmit and receive IDT's consisted of 64 and 16 finger pairs in input and output ports respectively. The utilised acoustic wavelength is 50 microns. The acoustic centre to centre distance of transmitting and receiving IDT's is 60 wavelengths and aperture was chosen as 50 wavelengths.
ZnO films of different thicknesses were deposited by a r.f. magnetron sputterer.
ZnO is a piezoelectric material of hexagonal crystalline structure. It is a wurtzite type crystal with a 6 mm symmetry. Layers occupied by zinc atoms alternate with layers occupied by oxygen atoms. The effective ionic charges are about 1 to 1.2 which results in polar c axis.
The epitaxial growth of ZnO films is influenced by deposition rate, substrate temperature, sputtering gas pressure and target configuration.
Table 3 illustrates the conditions of epitaxial ZnO film on ST-cut quartz crystal wafers.
The film deposited at 270° C. showed a resistivity as high as 5×106 ohm/cm. Electro mechanical coupling coefficients for ZnO and SiO2 films on ST-cut quartz wafers are shown in
An example of the response of the system to a sequence of different solutions is shown in
The sensitive layer is gold. A flow of IgG (Immuno-Globulin G, 10 ng/ml) and BSA (Bovine Serum Albumin, 0.01 mg/ml) in 7.4 pH buffer pumped into the liquid cell with a flow rate of 0.05 ml/minute.
With the purge of IgG solution in buffer, IgG particles are adsorb to Au surface. It causes a frequency shift of about 4 KHz. Then the flow of buffer continues till all IgG dissociate from the surface. Afterwards, BSA is used to cover the Au surface and the surface of the reference transducer. By covering the sensitive layer there will be no adsorption and response occurs with another flow of IgG solution. Afterwards, Au surface was cleaned with a purge of Sodium Acetate solution. Then IgG solution liquid would be pumped and there will be the same frequency shift due to the adsorption of IgG particles on the Au surface. It shows the experiment is repeatable and only responds to the selective layer.
Other methods that can be used for protein immobilization are:
For gas sensing experiments, the thickness of the ZnO layer was 2.8 μm giving an operational frequency of 90 MHz for the periodicity of 50 μm. The sensor was heated to 350° C. by a micro-heater located beneath the device.
The sensor was exposed to different concentrations of oxygen in nitrogen gas to investigate the response the Love mode SAW sensor. The response to 100 ppm of oxygen in nitrogen is shown in
The response of the sensor to different oxygen concentrations is shown in
From the above it can be seen that this invention provides a unique sensor structure with significant advantages. Those skilled in the art of biological sensing will realise that the sensor of this invention can be adapted to detect a wide variety of biological or chemical moieties in both liquid and gaseous media.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PR 5076 | May 2001 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/AU02/00616 | 5/20/2002 | WO | 00 | 11/18/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/095940 | 11/28/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4454440 | Cullen | Jun 1984 | A |
4562371 | Asai et al. | Dec 1985 | A |
4672254 | Dolat et al. | Jun 1987 | A |
5130257 | Baer et al. | Jul 1992 | A |
5216312 | Baer et al. | Jun 1993 | A |
5283037 | Baer et al. | Feb 1994 | A |
5321331 | Baer et al. | Jun 1994 | A |
5364797 | Olson et al. | Nov 1994 | A |
5432392 | Kadota et al. | Jul 1995 | A |
5453652 | Eda et al. | Sep 1995 | A |
5705399 | Larue | Jan 1998 | A |
5847486 | Kadota et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5888646 | Takahashi et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
6121713 | Inoue et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6378370 | Haskell et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
11097973 | Apr 1999 | JP |
11136082 | May 1999 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040133348 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |