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Journal ArticleDOI

Tailoring Beam Mechanics Towards Enhancing Detection of Hazardous Biological Species

S. Morshed, +1 more
- 26 Jan 2007 - 
- Vol. 47, Iss: 3, pp 405-415
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TLDR
In this paper, a numerical study is performed to assess the influence of microcantilever geometry on mass sensitivity in order to improve these devices for better detection of hazardous biological agents in liquid environments.
Abstract
Microcantilever based sensors have been widely employed for measuring or detecting various hazardous chemical agents and biological agents. Although they have been successful in detecting agents of interest, researchers desire to improve their performance by enhancing their mass sensitivity towards developing “detect to warn” detection capabilities. Moreover, there has been little work aimed at tailoring beam mechanics as a means to enhance mass sensitivity. In this paper, a numerical study is performed to assess the influence of microcantilever geometry on mass sensitivity in order to improve these devices for better detection of hazardous biological agents in liquid environments. Modal analysis was performed on microcantilevers of different geometries and shapes using ANSYS software and compared to the basic rectangular shaped microcantilever structures employed by most researchers. These structures all possessed a 50 μm length, 0.5 μm thickness and 25 μm width where the cantilever is clamped to the substrate, and were analyzed for their basic resonance frequency as well as the frequency shift for the attachment of a 0.285 pg of mass attached on their surfaces. These numerical results indicated that two parameters dominate their behavior, (1) the effective mass of the cantilever at the free end and (2) the clamping width at the fixed end. The ideal geometry was a triangular shape, which minimized effective mass and maximized clamping width, resulting in an order of magnitude increase in mass sensitivity (1,775 Hz/pg) over rectangular shaped cantilevers (172 Hz/pg) of identical length and clamping width. The most practical geometry was triangular shaped cantilever with a square pad at the free end for capturing the agent of interest. This geometry resulted in a mass sensitivity of 628 Hz/pg or nearly a 4-fold increase in performance over their rectangular counterparts.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microcantilever-based Sensors

TL;DR: In this paper, different geometries of microcantilevers have been analyzed, and their performances in terms of deflection and shift in resonance frequency due to additional mass of analyte have been simulated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Closed-form empirical relations to predict the static pull-in parameters of electrostatically actuated microcantilevers having linear width variation

TL;DR: In this paper, a single degree-of-freedom model is employed in the setting of Ritz energy technique to extract the static pull-in parameters of the distributed electromechanical model that takes into account the effects of fringing field capacitance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface stress-induced deflection of a microcantilever with various widths and overall microcantilever sensitivity enhancement via geometry modification

TL;DR: In this paper, a remarkably precise and simple analytical formula for calculating surface stress-induced deflection of a microcantilever with various widths is deduced, which is validated by the finite element method simulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validity and Accuracy of Resonance Shift Prediction Formulas for Microcantilevers: A Review and Comparative Study

TL;DR: A review of mass-induced resonance shifts in microcantilevers is provided in this article, which combines a review of factors that influence resonance frequency shifts, such as material properties, size effects, and support compliance with a comparative study of predicting resonance shifts due to mass adsorption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shape optimization of electrostatically actuated microbeams for extending static and dynamic operating ranges

TL;DR: In this paper, a generic shape optimization methodology is proposed to enhance the static and dynamic pull-in ranges of electrostatically actuated microbeams, which can achieve an increase in the travel range by as much as 20%.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Miniaturized total chemical analysis systems: A novel concept for chemical sensing

TL;DR: In this paper, a modular construction of a miniaturized "total chemical analysis system" is proposed, and theoretical performances of such systems based on flow injection analysis, chromatography and electrophoresis are compared with those of existing chemical sensors and analysis systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Micromechanical cantilever-based biosensors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize how cantilever-based sensors can be operated, and their working principle is presented in few selected biosensing experiments which have been performed recently in our groups in the study of biotin-streptavidin and antigen-antibody interactions, and specific surface charge development of organic molecules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attogram detection using nanoelectromechanical oscillators

TL;DR: In this article, the rotational inertia correction to the frequency is on the order of γ(l 0/l)2, where γ is the attached mass normalized to the mass of the beam.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single cell detection with micromechanical oscillators

TL;DR: A resonant frequency-based mass sensor, comprised of low-stress silicon nitride cantilever beams for the detection of Escherichia coli (E. coli)-cell-antibody binding events with detection sensitivity down to a single cell, is presented.
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