DocumentCode :
24447
Title :
Cyclical Electrical Stimulation of Hydrogel Microactuators Employing Parylene-N Coated Electrodes
Author :
Saunders, Joseph Ryan C. ; Moussa, Walied A.
Author_Institution :
Mech. Eng. Dept., Univ. of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Feb. 2014
Firstpage :
230
Lastpage :
242
Abstract :
This work presents the cyclical actuation of electric field sensitive microscale hydrogels employing dielectric coated coplanar electrodes. Microscale hydrogels are photopolymerized in-situ, and AC frequency-based actuation combined with pulse width modulation enabled controlled manipulation of hydrogel deformation. Stable actuation cycles are achieved with applied electric potentials from 20 Vpk-pk to 40 Vpk-pk, with a maximum true strain of 29% and a minimum rise time of 4.7 s. The peak and trough osmotic pressure for each system´ s cycle is also analytically determined, with a peak pressure at 40 Vpk-pk of 201.1±38.3 kPa. A plateau in the peak-to-trough true strain is observed above 30 Vpk-pk. For comparative purposes a system without dielectric coated electrodes and employing external syringe pumps is also examined, and stable cyclical actuation was achieved for applied electric potentials of 5 Vpk-pk and 10 Vpk-pk. For this system the maximum stable rise time, true strain, and osmotic pressure are 8.1 s, 57%, and 429.2±81.9 kPa, respectively. The difference between the two systems highlights how optimization of the dielectric layer´s thickness and uniformity can further enhance actuation performance. The electronically responsive hydrogel-based cyclical actuator developed within this work could be further employed for microfluidic regulation in portable low-power systems.
Keywords :
dielectric materials; electrodes; hydrogels; microactuators; microfluidics; AC frequency based actuation; cyclical actuation; cyclical electrical stimulation; dielectric coated coplanar electrodes; electric field sensitive microscale hydrogels; external syringe pumps; hydrogel deformation; hydrogel microactuators; microfluidic regulation; parylene n coated electrodes; photopolymerization; portable low power systems; pulse width modulation; voltage 20 V to 40 V; voltage 5 V to 10 V; Electrically stimulated hydrogel; Parylene-N; cyclical actuation; electrochemical actuator;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1057-7157
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JMEMS.2013.2268382
Filename :
6553223
Link To Document :
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