TY - JOUR
T1 - Millimeter Wave Metamaterial-based Strain Sensor Concept
AU - Schossmann, Alexander
AU - Bergmann, Alexander
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Authors
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - We present a fully telemetric strain sensor concept based on a novel millimeter wave metamaterial and show the experimental proof of concept. The metamaterial consists of a single layer of copper structures that are embedded between two sheets of thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU). Our metamaterial design specifically exploits the significant difference in elastic modulus between copper and TPU, so that the sensor effect does not require deformation of the copper structures. This prevents degradation due to delamination or cracking of the copper layer. The metamaterial is manufacturable with low-cost state-of-the-art manufacturing methods of conformable electronics. The geometrical parameters of the unit cell structures are determined from finite element simulations. We present a semi-analytical model of the sensor effect that allows for a low computational cost calculation of the sensitivity and provides a detailed analysis of the metamaterial unit cell components in terms of their contribution to the sensitivity. Our model shows that the change in relative permittivity due to strain, an effect analogous to inverse electrostriction, contributes significantly to the sensitivity. We recorded reflection spectra of a sample using millimeter wave laboratory equipment and determined the sensitivity from the strain-induced shift of the characteristic minima in the reflection spectra. The experiment gives a sensitivity of (13 117 ± 465) Hz/microstrain. The distinguishing features of our proposed sensor concept are the minimal strain-induced delamination due to negligible deformation of the metallic structures and that read-out is implemented in reflection which allows for measurement on metal components.
AB - We present a fully telemetric strain sensor concept based on a novel millimeter wave metamaterial and show the experimental proof of concept. The metamaterial consists of a single layer of copper structures that are embedded between two sheets of thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU). Our metamaterial design specifically exploits the significant difference in elastic modulus between copper and TPU, so that the sensor effect does not require deformation of the copper structures. This prevents degradation due to delamination or cracking of the copper layer. The metamaterial is manufacturable with low-cost state-of-the-art manufacturing methods of conformable electronics. The geometrical parameters of the unit cell structures are determined from finite element simulations. We present a semi-analytical model of the sensor effect that allows for a low computational cost calculation of the sensitivity and provides a detailed analysis of the metamaterial unit cell components in terms of their contribution to the sensitivity. Our model shows that the change in relative permittivity due to strain, an effect analogous to inverse electrostriction, contributes significantly to the sensitivity. We recorded reflection spectra of a sample using millimeter wave laboratory equipment and determined the sensitivity from the strain-induced shift of the characteristic minima in the reflection spectra. The experiment gives a sensitivity of (13 117 ± 465) Hz/microstrain. The distinguishing features of our proposed sensor concept are the minimal strain-induced delamination due to negligible deformation of the metallic structures and that read-out is implemented in reflection which allows for measurement on metal components.
KW - conformable electronic
KW - metamaterial
KW - millimeter wave sensor
KW - Strain gauge
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85189642093&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/JSEN.2024.3382758
DO - 10.1109/JSEN.2024.3382758
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85189642093
SN - 1530-437X
SP - 1
JO - IEEE Sensors Journal
JF - IEEE Sensors Journal
ER -