Title :
Response of quartz crystal resonators possessing a superhydrophobic surface
Author :
Roach, P. ; Evans, C.R. ; Shirtcliffe, N.J. ; McHale, G. ; Newton, M.I.
Author_Institution :
Nottingham Trent Univ., Nottingham
fDate :
May 29 2007-June 1 2007
Abstract :
A quartz crystal resonator immersed in a water-glycerol solution has a systematically reducing resonant frequency and an increase in bandwidth of the resonance as the concentration of glycerol increases. This behavior is well-known and is accurately described by the Kanazawa and Gordon model, which provides a clear proportionality to the square root of the density-viscosity product of the mixture. It is also well-known that a hydrophobic surface having high aspect ratio protrusions can become superhydrophobic so that the liquid no longer retains contact with all points on the surface. In such a situation for a quartz crystal surface, it is expected that a decoupling of the acoustic wave will occur and the response may not then conform to the Kanazawa and Gordon model. In this work, we report on the behavior of quartz crystal resonators fabricated with 5-18 micron tall micro-post structures both before and after they have been treated with a fluorochemical to make them hydrophobic. We report contact angle data showing that the hydrophobic surfaces are super-repellent for the entire range of water-glycerol mixtures. We obtain and fit the impedance spectra to the Butterworth-van-Dyke model and show, in this extreme case, a complete change in acoustic response occurs. The impedance spectra show a rich mixture of behavior including resonances that become sharper as the concentration of glycerol increases and surfaces showing a decoupling of the acoustic wave response.
Keywords :
acoustic waves; crystal resonators; Butterworth-van-Dyke model; Gordon model; Kanazawa model; acoustic wave response; density-viscosity product; impedance spectra; micropost structures; quartz crystal resonators; resonant frequency; superhydrophobic surface; water-glycerol mixtures; water-glycerol solution; Bandwidth; Elasticity; Equations; Resonance; Resonant frequency; Rough surfaces; Surface acoustic waves; Surface roughness; Surface topography; Viscosity;
Conference_Titel :
Frequency Control Symposium, 2007 Joint with the 21st European Frequency and Time Forum. IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Geneva
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0646-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1075-6787
DOI :
10.1109/FREQ.2007.4319139