Title :
An electrostatic microactuator system for application in high-speed jets
Author :
Huang, Chunchieh ; Christophorou, Christophoros ; Najafi, Khalil ; Naguib, Ahmed ; Nagib, Hassan M.
Author_Institution :
Center for Wireless Integrated Microsystems, Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
fDate :
6/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The development of an electrostatic microactuator system for the study and control of high-speed jet flows is presented. The electrostatic actuator is 1.3 mm wide, 14 μm thick and has a head that overhangs a glass substrate, intruding into the flow by 200 μm. The actuator has been fabricated using a bulk-silicon dissolved-wafer process to increase device thickness for increased stiffness in the flow direction. Characterization of the new actuators demonstrated their ability to oscillate with amplitudes of up to 70 μm peak-to-peak at resonant frequencies of 5 and 14 kHz. This is a very large motion at such high frequencies when compared to existing macro or micro mechanical actuators. The full actuator system was mounted around the exit of a high-speed jet using several sector-shaped PC boards. This enabled detailed examination of the ability of the actuators to withstand the flow environment and generate substantial flow disturbances. The results showed that the microactuators functioned properly up to jet speeds of 300 m/s while generating disturbances in the shear layer surrounding the jet comparable to those produced by other macro-scale methodologies
Keywords :
aeroacoustics; electrostatic actuators; flow control; jets; micromachining; silicon; supersonic flow; 1.3 mm; 14 micron; 300 m/s; Si; actuator models; boundary layer; bulk-silicon dissolved-wafer process; device thickness; electrostatic microactuator system; flow control; flow disturbances; glass substrate; high-resonant-frequency MEMS-based actuator; high-speed jet flows; increased flow direction stiffness; large-scale vortical structures; lateral comb drive actuator; matched-frequency actuators; micromachined silicon microstructures; sector-shaped PC boards; shear layer; supersonic jet screech noise; suspension designs; very large motion; Actuators; Control systems; Electrostatics; Fluid dynamics; Frequency; Microactuators; Micromechanical devices; Noise generators; Shape control; Working environment noise;
Journal_Title :
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JMEMS.2002.1007401