DocumentCode
960340
Title
Fabrication, characterization, and computational modeling of a piezoelectrically actuated microvalve for liquid flow control
Author
Lee, Choonsup ; Yang, Eui-Hyeok ; Saeidi, S. Mahdi ; Khodadadi, Jay M.
Author_Institution
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume
15
Issue
3
fYear
2006
fDate
6/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
686
Lastpage
696
Abstract
Liquid-compatible piezoelectric microvalves have been modeled, fabricated, and characterized. The microvalve was designed for proportional flow control of liquid propellant for integrated spacecraft micropropulsion. The microvalve consists of a custom-designed piezoelectric stack actuator bonded onto silicon valve components with the entire assembly contained within a stainless steel housing. The valve seat configuration includes narrow-edge seating rings and tensile-stressed silicon tethers that enable the normally closed and leak-tight operation. A concentric series of narrow rings simulates a "knife-edge" seal by greatly reducing the valve contact area, thereby increasing the seating pressure and consequently reducing leak. Leak testing of the microvalve, conducted using a Helium leak detector, showed a leak rate of approximately 3×10-6 scc/s for Helium gas. During operation, the valve flow rate was measured using an external Mass Flow Meter (MFM) with a measurement resolution of approximately 10-2 scc/s. The measured forward flow rate for deionized (DI) water is approximately 64 mg/min at an inlet pressure of 20 psi and an applied voltage of 50 V. The mechanical resonance frequency of the microvalve structure was measured at 11.1 kHz. The measured dynamic power consumption of the microvalve is approximately 60 mW when operated at 50 Hz. The measured static power consumption is approximately 2.5 mW at 20 V. Computational modeling of liquid flow within the piezoelectrically actuated microvalve has also been performed. The commercial computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code FLUENT was utilized for solving the continuity and momentum equations. The pressure drop between the inlet and outlet ports was determined as a function of the inlet mass flow rate, and a pressure drop coefficient was determined for each valve plate deflection value. The model-predicted values were compared to the experimental data, and confirmed the sensitivity of the results to the value of the deflection.
Keywords
aerospace propulsion; computational fluid dynamics; flow control; flowmeters; helium; microfluidics; piezoelectric actuators; 11.1 kHz; 20 V; computational fluid dynamics; deionized water; helium gas; helium leak detector; integrated spacecraft micropropulsion; knife-edge seal; liquid flow control; liquid propellant; mass flow meter; narrow-edge seating rings; piezoelectric stack actuator; piezoelectrically actuated microvalve; proportional flow control; silicon valve components; stainless steel housing; tensile-stressed silicon tethers; valve contact area; valve seat configuration; Computational modeling; Fabrication; Fluid flow; Fluid flow measurement; Frequency measurement; Helium; Mechanical variables measurement; Microvalves; Silicon; Valves; Computational fluid dynamics (CFD); liquid flow; liquid-compatible; low-power consumption; microfluidics; microvalve; modeling; piezoelectric; proportional flow control;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1057-7157
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JMEMS.2006.876783
Filename
1638496
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