The disclosed subject matter relates to thermally actuated valves, photovoltaic cells and arrays comprising same, and methods for producing same.
The advent of micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) has enabled the development of very small electromechanical systems. That is, MEMS structures are typically no larger than a few hundred microns. To put that into perspective, a fully functioning MEMS device (e.g., a motor with moving parts) can be smaller than a human hair. Because of the very small size of MEMS, designing MEMS challenges typical engineering in many ways. For example, because MEMS are so small they can exhibit a large surface-area-to-volume ratio. Because of this large surface-area-to-volume ratio, surface effects such as electrostatics, thermal responses, and wetting can significantly affect the MEMS volume.
Volume changes due to heat transfer have been well studied. For example, it is well known that during heat transfer, energy that is stored in the intermolecular bonds between atoms changes. As stored energy increases, typically so does the length of the molecular bond. Because of this phenomenon, solids typically expand in response to heating and contract in response to cooling. Further, most materials exhibit varying amounts of thermal expansion. For example, metals tend to exhibit greater thermal expansion than ceramics. In the design of mechanical systems, thermal expansion can play a critical role. For example, when designing supersonic jets, engineers must consider the expansion of the jets' body due to frictional heat.
Some valves utilize thermal properties to operate in temperature sensitive systems. For example, a car thermostat uses the thermal expansion of components in the thermostat to open a valve allowing coolant to flow through the engine. Accordingly, many benefits can be achieved by designing mechanical devices (e.g., valves), which utilize the thermal properties of various materials in the device.
Thermally actuated valves, photovoltaic cells and arrays comprising same, and methods for producing same are disclosed. In some embodiments, thermally actuated valves are provided, comprising: a first material defining at least one opening; and a beam attached to the first material so as to at least partially cover the at least one opening, wherein the first material and the beam comprise different thermal expansion properties, such that, when a temperature is applied to at least one of the first material and the beam, the beam buckles so as to at least partially uncover the at least one opening.
In some embodiments, arrays of valves are provided, comprising: a first material defining at least two openings; a first beam attached to the first material so as to at least partially cover one of the at least two openings; and a second beam attached to the first material so as to at least partially cover another of the at least two openings, wherein the first material and each of the first beam and the second beam comprise different thermal expansion properties, such that, when a temperature is applied to at least one of the first material and the first beam, the first beam buckles so as to at least partially uncover the one of the at least two openings.
In some embodiments, photovoltaic cells are provided, comprising: a first material defining at least one opening; and a beam attached to the first material so as to at least partially cover the at least one opening, wherein the first material and the beam comprise different thermal expansion properties, such that, when a temperature is applied to at least one of the first material and the beam, the beam buckles so as to at least partially uncover the at least one opening.
In some embodiments, methods for producing thermally actuated valves are provided, the methods comprising: producing a first material defining at least one opening; producing a beam having different thermal expansion properties from the first material on the first material so that the beam at least partially covers the at least one opening, wherein when a temperature change is applied to at least one of the first material and the beam, the beam buckles at least partially uncovering the at least one opening.
The disclosed subject matter will be apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with accompanying drawings, in which:
Thermally actuated valves, photovoltaic cells and arrays comprising same, and methods for producing same are disclosed.
In some embodiments, thermal expansion and MEMS-sized components can be combined to produce a thermally actuated micro-valve. For example, in some instances, a valve can be formed from a MEMS-sized beam attached to a substrate with an opening in it and using a material for the MEMS-sized beam that exhibits a larger amount of thermal expansion than the substrate. Such a selection of materials attached to each other can cause buckling (i.e., bending of the beam due to a force on it) of the MEMS-sized beam when the beam and the substrate are heated, resulting in the valve being opened. Thus, in use, for example, if the substrate has coolant on one side of it, when enough heat is applied, the valve will open and then the coolant will flow through the hole. When lower amounts of heat are applied, the hole is covered by the MEMS-sized beam and the coolant is inhibited from flowing through the hole. After the valve is opened, when the beam returns to a lower temperature, it can return to its original pre-buckling position and cover the hole.
In some embodiments, the temperature at which the beam buckles can be tailored to a specific temperature based on its geometry and material properties. This can be done over a wide range of temperatures (e.g., 65 C to 150 C). For example, the beam can be eccentric and this eccentricity can make the beam slightly asymmetric, which in turn can amplify deflections associated with buckling. For example, the eccentricity in the beam produces larger deflections at a given temperature rise or amount of thermal expansion.
Referring to
In some embodiments, opening 110 can be produced by removing at least some material from first material 115. For example, drilling a hole in first material 115 can produce opening 110. Drilling a hole may produce, for example, a circular shape in the surface of first material 115 for opening 110. In some instances, the shape on the surface of first material 115 for opening 110 is at least one of circular, square, rectangular, or any other shape deemed suitable. For example, in some instances, the shape on the surface of first material 115 for opening 110 is designed to increase or decrease flow (e.g., coolant flow, etc.) through opening 110. In some instances, the shape on the surface of first material 115 can increase the frictional forces on the coolant thereby decreasing flow through opening 110. In some instances, opening 110 is produced by, for example, drilling, laser removal, chemical etching, or any other means deemed suitable. In some instances, first material 115 can be at least one of molded (e.g., poured in as a liquid and allowed to cure, etc.), deposited (e.g., spin cast, solution cast, thermally evaporated, electrostatically spun, etc.), and patterned (e.g., using photolithography, soft lithography, printing, etc.) around an object (e.g., a pin, cone, block, chemical substrate, etc.). Later, that object can be removed (e.g., thermal evaporation, peeled away, chemically removed, etc.) producing opening 110. In some instances, more than one opening 110 can be created in first material 115. For example, a plurality of openings may be located in first material 115 creating an array of openings. An array of openings can, for example, be produced to cause coolant flow through first material 115.
In some embodiments, first material 115 can include a substantially homogenous material. For example, first material 115 can include a monolithic silicon substrate. In other instances, first material 115 can include a non-homogenous material (e.g., a mixture, a blend, etc.). For example, first material 115 can include a mixture of a metal (e.g., nickel, molybdenum, cobalt, etc.) and a ceramic. As another example, first material 115 can include a mixture of nickel-titanium alloy (e.g., to include in first material 115 some amount of shape memory) and a ceramic (e.g., to include in first material 115 some lessened thermal expansion). In some instances, first material can include a mixture of silicon and carbon (e.g., silicon carbide) for at least increasing functionality at higher temperatures. In some instances, first material 115 can be substantially rectangular in shape. In other instances, first material 115 can be square, curved, or any other shape deemed suitable.
In some embodiments, first material 115 can include a material that exhibits different amounts (e.g., substantially lesser amounts) of thermal expansion than beam 105. For example, first material 115 can be a metalloid (e.g., a silicon substrate), a metal (e.g., tungsten), a ceramic, a glass, or any other material deemed suitable. First material 115 can include any material that exhibits substantially less thermal expansion than the thermal expansion exhibited by beam 105.
In some embodiments, beam 105 can include a material that exhibits different amounts (e.g., substantially higher amounts) of thermal expansion than first material 115. For example, beam 105 can include a metal (e.g., electroplated nickel, zinc, lead, aluminum, tin, etc.), alloys (e.g., nickel-titanium, aluminum alloy, tin alloy, etc.), or any other material deemed suitable. In some embodiments, first material 115 and beam 105 can be two dissimilar materials. In some embodiments, beam 105 can be substantially rectangular. For example, beam 105 can include a thickness of about 10-100 microns, a width of about 50-500 microns, and a length of about 500-5000 microns.
In some embodiments, beam 105 can be a membrane (e.g., a thin flat surface) or a plate. Similar to a rectangular beam 105, a membrane or a plate shaped beam can be attached on at least two sides and can exhibit thermally induced compressive stresses that can lead to thermal buckling. In some embodiments, beam 105 can be a clamped structure that can buckle in many different ways. For example, a flat square plate beam clamped on all four edges that can buckle at elevated temperatures. This flat square plate beam can exhibit a dome shape (e.g., the center of the flat square plate beam can buckle away from first material 115) form of buckling when heated. This dome shaped form of buckling can increase flow through the gap underneath it. In other instances, beam 105 can be disc shaped, substantially flat, or any other shape deemed suitable. For example, beam 105 can be substantially disc shaped for at least partially covering a round opening 110.
In some embodiment, beam 105 can be permanently attached to first material 115 through electrodeposition. For example, beam 105 can be fabricated directly onto material 115. In some embodiments, beam 105 can be attached to first material 115 by welding, gluing, casting, or by any other means deemed suitable. In some instances, beam 105 can be permanently attached to first material 115 to ensure buckling in at least one direction. For example, beam 105 can be attached to first material 115 at an angle (e.g., the area in attaching region 120 nearer to opening 110 can exhibit a slightly larger gap between the surface of first material 115 and beam 105 than the area in attaching region 120 further from opening 110). That angle, for example, can cause beam 105 to buckle away from opening 110 allowing coolant to flow through opening 110. In some instances, beam 105 can be attached to first material 115 on the external surface of first material 115 (e.g., as shown in
In some embodiments, beam 105 can buckle in a direction substantially within the same plane as first material 115. For example, unlike
In some embodiments, at ambient temperature beam 105 attached to first material 115 is pre-stressed (e.g., exhibits compressive residual stress, exhibits tensile residual stress, etc.). In some embodiments, beam 105 can be pre-stressed by varying the deposition temperature, current density, electroplating bath pH, and chemical composition. For example, a tensile residual stress can increase the temperature needed to induce buckling. That is, beam 105 will need to heat up some amount to overcome the pre-existing tension. A compressive residual stress can lower the temperature needed to induce buckling.
In some embodiments, beam 105 buckles so that the mass flow rate through the micro-valve increases nonlinearly once a given temperature is reached. For example, beam 105 can allow minimal or zero mass flow rates through first material 115 until a given temperature is reached. When that given temperature is reached, beam 105 can buckle and allow substantially larger mass flow rates through first material 115. This buckling causes a nonlinear increase in mass flow rate through first material 115 as the temperature rises at the given temperature. The given temperature for buckling can be predetermined, allowing controlled mass flow rates at a specific temperature.
Referring to
A third resistant material 345 can be deposited (e.g., spin cast, solution cast, thermally evaporated, electrostatically spun, etc.) and patterned (e.g., using photolithography, soft lithography, printing, etc.) to, for example, define the mold for beam 105, at 350. In some instances, first resistant material 305, second resistant material 325, and third resistant material 345 can include, for example, a photo resistant material (e.g., SU-8, AZ 5214E, AZ 4620, or any other light-sensitive material). In some instances, third resistant material 345 can be a substantially similar material to first resistant material 305 and second resistant material 325. At 355, a material layer 360 can be added on top of second resistant material 325 and contained by third resistant material 345. Material layer 360 can be any suitable material (e.g., metal, semiconductor, polymer, nickel metal, nickel alloy, etc.). It will be apparent that material layer 360 can become beam 105. For example, beam 105 can be produced by nickel electroplated onto second resistant material 325 and contained by third resistant material 345 using a nickel sulfamate electroplating bath. At 365, second resistant material 325 and third resistant material 344 can be removed (e.g., dissolving away in acetone in an ultrasonic bath, thermally degraded, peeled away, chemically removed, etc.). After 365, a gap 370 is produced where second resistant material 325 used to be before it was removed. At 375, hole 110 can then be produced, for example, by etching through material 310. It will be apparent that substrate 310 can become first material 115.
Referring to
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In some embodiments, a thermally actuated micro-valve can be used in photovoltaic cell, in aeronautical machines, and can be built directly electronics for cooling. For example, when the electronics are inactive they may not be dissipating heat and, thus, may be cold, and when the electronics are activated they may heat up and cause the micro-valve to open, allowing coolant to pass through. In some embodiments, many flat surfaces can function as first material 115 and an opening can be placed in that flat surface to produce opening 110. Similarly, a thermally actuated micro-valve can be built into various mechanical and electromechanical applications (e.g., gas turbine blade cooling, nuclear reactors, combustors, heat exchangers, rocket engines, hypersonic vehicles, space vehicles, etc.).
Referring to
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Referring to
In some embodiments, the clamped eccentric beam, displayed in
Referring to
In some embodiments, the maximum stress in the beam can be calculated and used to produce a thermally actuated valve. In some embodiments, a buckling beam under compressive loading is subjected to both axial and bending stress. The maximum of which can be compressive and located at the midpoint on the lower surface of the beam. In some instances, the maximum stress can be written as the sum of two components using equation 5, where b refers to the beam width and h refers to the beam thickness. Using the magnitude of the internal moment at the midpoint, as given by equation 1, equation 6 can be found and can yield the maximum stress in the buckling beam as given by equation 7. In some instances, equations 4 and 7 can define the beam central deflection and maximum stress as a function of axial load. An additional relation can be needed to relate the axial force, P, to the average beam temperature rise, ΔT.
In some embodiments, the stress-strain relationship can be determined mathematically and can be used in the production of a thermally actuated micro-valve. For example, equation 8 considers the stress-strain relationship of a heated beam restrained from expansion in the axial direction. In equation 8, α is the difference in the coefficient of thermal expansion between the beam and the substrate, ΔT is the average rise of the beam, σA is the axial stress, and ε′ is the strain related to beam elongation. Referring to equation 10, l can be defined as the deformed beam length. The assumption of shallow beam curvatures can be written as dv/dx<<1. The integrand in equation 10 can be simplified to equation 11 and the strain term in equation 8 can be rewritten as equation 12.
Using v(x) from equation 3, both the derivative and integral from equation 12 can be evaluated. Equation 13 can be found by dropping the approximate equality, combining equation 8 and equation 12, and rearranging terms. Equation 12, can define the relationship between the applied axial load and average temperature rise of the beam stress.
In some embodiments, non-dimensional design curves and mathematical relationships can be used to produce of a thermally actuated micro-valve. In some embodiments, collectively equations 4, 7, and 13 can substantially describe the thermo-mechanical behavior of clamped-clamped eccentric beams. In some instances, several non-dimensional parameters can be defined to simplify these equations. Defining the critical load, Pcr, as the force at which a theoretically perfect beam (i.e., e=0) will buckle, equation 14 can be found. In equation 15, the critical temperature rise, ΔTcr, can be defined by evaluating equation 8 at the critical load, noting, for example, that for a perfect beam prior to buckling there is no deflection and therefore no associated strain term, ε′. Using equation 14 and 15 and by examining equations 4, 7, and 13, non-dimensional forms of deflection δ, eccentricity ε, axial load η, maximum compressive stress Σ, and temperature rise θ can be defined by equations 16-20. Non-dimensional forms of equations 4, 7, and 13 can be obtained by rearranging and substituting in equations 16-20 yielding equations 21-23.
In some embodiments, non-dimensional equations 14-23 can be solved numerically using software (e.g., MATLAB available from The MathWorks, Inc., 3 Apple Hill Drive, Natick, Mass.) to eliminate the non-dimensional axial load η. Curves for central beam deflection δ, maximum compressive stress Σ, and its corresponding stress components are shown in
In some embodiments, at low temperature rise (e.g., θ<<1) the beam behavior can be substantially controlled by axial compression and the beam deflection and stress can increase linearly with θ. In some instances, at high temperatures (e.g., θ>1), bending can begin to lead to increased deflections and therefore increased strain. At high temperatures, the strain term can limit the beam to finite deflections. At intermediate temperatures (e.g., 0.5<θ<1), the shape of the deflection and stress curves can be more sensitive to eccentricities, ε, and can exhibit very nonlinear behavior, for example, as seen in
In some embodiments, the curves of deflection as a function of temperature rise shown in
Referring to
In some embodiments, referring to
In some embodiments, the valve mechanism shown in
In some embodiments, equations 25-26 can be nondimensionalized to yield equations 28-29 where φ is the nondimensional mass flow rate per unit pressure drop given by equation 30 and θ is the nondimensional temperature rise above zero stress state given by Equation 20.
Referring to
Other embodiments, extensions, and modifications of the ideas presented above are comprehended and are within the reach of one versed in the art upon reviewing the present disclosure. Accordingly, the scope of the present invention in its various aspects is not to be limited by the examples presented above. The individual aspects of the present invention, and the entirety of the invention are to be regarded so as to allow for such design modifications and future developments within the scope of the present disclosure. Moreover, various features of the disclosed embodiments can be used in various combinations suitable to different applications. The present invention is limited only by the claims that follow.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/733,980, filed on Nov. 4, 2005, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/802,380, filed on May 22, 2006, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/817,673, filed on Jun. 30, 2006, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/830,500, filed on Jul. 13, 2006, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2006/043165 | 11/6/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/25/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60733980 | Nov 2005 | US | |
60802380 | May 2006 | US | |
60817673 | Jun 2006 | US | |
60830500 | Jul 2006 | US |