Temperature Stable Piezoelectric Imprint of Epitaxial Grown PZT for Zero-Bias Driving MEMS Actuator Operation.

MEMS PZT bipolar driving imprint speaker

Journal

Micromachines
ISSN: 2072-666X
Titre abrégé: Micromachines (Basel)
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101640903

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
10 Oct 2022
Historique:
received: 01 09 2022
revised: 30 09 2022
accepted: 06 10 2022
entrez: 27 10 2022
pubmed: 28 10 2022
medline: 28 10 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

In piezoelectric transducer applications, it is common to use a unipolar operation signal to avoid switching of the polarisation and the resulting nonlinearities of micro-electromechanical systems. However, semi-bipolar or bipolar operation signals have the advantages of less leakage current, lower power consumption and no additional need of a DC-DC converter for low AC driving voltages. This study investigates the potential of using piezoelectric layers with an imprint for stable bipolar operation on the basis of epitaxially grown lead zirconate titanate cantilevers with electrodes made of a metal and metal oxide stack. Due to the manufacturing process, the samples exhibit high crystallinity, rectangular shaped hysteresis and a high piezoelectric response. Furthermore, the piezoelectric layers have an imprint, indicating a strong built-in field, which shifts the polarisation versus electric field hysteresis. To obtain the stability of the imprint, laser doppler vibrometry and switching current measurements were performed at different temperatures, yielding a stable imprinted electric field of -1.83 MV/m up to at least 100 °C. The deflection of the cantilevers was measured with a constant AC driving voltage while varying the DC bias voltage to examine the influence of the imprint under operation, revealing that the same high deflection and low nonlinearities, quantified by the total harmonic distortion, can be maintained down to low bias voltages compared to unipolar operation. These findings demonstrate that a piezoelectric layer with a strong imprint makes it possible to operate with low DC or even zero DC bias, while still providing strong piezoelectric response and linear behaviour.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36296058
pii: mi13101705
doi: 10.3390/mi13101705
pmc: PMC9606857
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Références

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Auteurs

Marco Teuschel (M)

USound GmbH, 1100 Vienna, Austria.

Paul Heyes (P)

USound GmbH, 1100 Vienna, Austria.

Samu Horvath (S)

USound GmbH, 1100 Vienna, Austria.

Christian Novotny (C)

USound GmbH, 1100 Vienna, Austria.

Andrea Rusconi Clerici (A)

USound GmbH, 1100 Vienna, Austria.

Classifications MeSH