Towards NEMS Fluid Sensors Based on Suspended Nanomaterials
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1222-DD05-31
Towards NEMS Fluid Sensors Based on Suspended Nanomaterials Luis A. Jauregui1, 3, Hao Lu4, 5, Jun Lou4, 5, Yong P. Chen2, 3, 1 1. School of Electrical and Computer Engineering , Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA. 2. Department of Physics , Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA. 3. Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA. 4. Department of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA. 5. Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA.
ABSTRACT: Nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) based on nanomaterials, especially NEMS resonators made of suspended nanowires, nanotubes or nanosheets have emerged as promising devices for many sensing applications. However, operation of such NEMS resonators in liquids is usually difficult due to strong viscous damping. Here we present our progress in developing NEMS devices based on suspended nanomaterials that can operate in liquids. We present our measurements performed on suspended metallic nanowires driven by AC currents in a magnetic field in liquids.
INTRODUCTION: Nanoelectromechanical systems based on nanomaterials promise extraordinary sensitivity in the detection of displacement, mass, force and charge. Adsorption of molecules is measured by changes on the resonant frequency. However mostly they have been operated under vacuum conditions. Air or fluidic environments [1] introduces damping effects which degrades the quality factor of the resonators, reducing its sensitivity, making almost impossible to measure small masses under fluidic environments. Few experiments have been realized to analyze the behavior of nanoelectromechanical systems in fluids such as air [2] and MEMS devices in liquid environments [3]. Motivated by this we explore the discrimination of different liquids with different viscosity by the time dependant measurements of the mechanical motions (eg., driven or damped oscillations).
EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS: We use magnetomotive driving forces [4] in order to make our devices oscillate and use electrical read-outs to get their response under different magnetic fields. We create suspended gold nanowires on 300nm silicon oxide substrates (with etched trenches of 300nm), with Au/Ti (100nm/5nm) electrodes defined by e-Beam lithography.
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Figure 1. a) magnetomotive experimental layout, where the magnetic field is pointing out the plane. b)Nanowire clamped by gold electrodes, defined by eBeam lithography, before suspension process. After that, we characterize by atomic force microscope to get the geometrical factors of the suspended nanowires. The device is wire bonded and mounted in the cavity of a liquid-tight ceramic package, and then it is inserted in a variable temperature insert (VTI) and maintained at a temperature of ~300K. The VTI is equipped with a superconducting magnet that can provide a maximum magnetic field of 7 T (while the sample is in an isolated various temperature/pressure chamber) in or
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