ANISOTROPIC PIEZOELECTRIC DEVICE, SYSTEM, AND METHOD
A micro electromechanical (mem) device includes a first electrode, a second electrode, and a shaped carbon nanotube with a first end and a second end. The first end of the shaped carbon nanotube is conductively connected to the first electrode and the second end is conductively connected to the second electrode. A system for making the device includes a plurality of electrodes placed outside the growth region of a furnace to produce a controlled, time-varying electric field. A controller for the system is connected to a power supply to deliver controlled voltages to the electrodes to produce the electric field. A mixture of gases is passed through the furnace with the temperature raised to cause chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of carbon on a catalyst. The sequentially time-varying electric field parameterizes a growing nanotube into a predetermined shape.
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This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/280,096, filed Sep. 29, 2016, entitled “Anisotropic Piezoelectric Device, System, and Method,” which is assigned to the same assignee as the present application and is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
FIELDThis invention related to artificial piezoelectric materials and devices made from artificial piezoelectric materials. This invention is also related to systems and methods for making such materials and devices.
BACKGROUNDPiezoelectric materials exhibit a phenomenon known as the piezoelectric effect. This effect can be manifested as a change in electrical properties as a result of applied stress or a stress resulting from an applied electric field. Most piezoelectric materials are crystalline in nature.
Crystalline piezoelectric materials can be described as “electrically stiff” in that relatively large amounts of electric field energy are required to change interatomic distances in the material by a relatively small percentage. As an example, maximum deflection for crystalline piezoelectric materials tends to be around 0.5% in a strong field. An example of a relatively strong field might be one of over 100 V/m.
SUMMARYIn at least some embodiments, a micro electromechanical (mem) device includes a first electrode, a second electrode, and a shaped carbon nanotube with a first end and a second end. The first end of the shaped carbon nanotube is conductively connected to the first electrode and the second end of the shaped carbon nanotube is conductively connected to the second electrode.
In at least some embodiments, a system for producing a mem device includes a furnace further including a growth region for carbon nanotubes. The furnace is configured to permit establishment of a controlled, time-varying electric field within the growth region. The system further includes a plurality of electrodes to produce the controlled, time-varying electric field, and a power supply connected to the plurality of electrodes. A controller for the system is connected to the power supply to control the power supply to deliver controlled voltages to the electrodes. These controlled voltages cause the electrodes to produce the controlled time-varying electric field.
In at least some embodiments, a method of making a mem device includes depositing a catalyst on a substrate and placing the substrate with the catalyst in a growth region of a furnace. The temperature of the growth region is raised. A mixture of gases is passed through the furnace, wherein the mixture of gases is tailored to cause chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of carbon on the catalyst. The method further includes sequentially controlling a time-varying electric field within the growth region to parameterize a growing nanotube of carbon into a predetermined shape.
Embodiments of the invention provide a mem device that has piezoelectric properties. A many-layer stack of these devices is indistinguishable from a solid material. A voltage placed across the material (or set of devices) will cause an expansion of the material in one direction. This expansion can be 100-1600% of the original length. The material is anisotropic; it extends in only one direction. A voltage across a substrate plane will create a current along those substrates without causing the device to change length.
This detailed description of embodiments refers to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate specific embodiments of the disclosure. Other embodiments having different structures and operations do not depart from the scope of the present disclosure. Like reference numerals may refer to the same element or component in the different drawings.
The carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in example embodiments are grown under the influence of an electric field that is varied in three dimensions during growth. Carbon nanotubes grow in the direction of an applied electric field. In the case of example embodiments, each carbon nanotube is grown out from the substrate some distance and then is grown into the form of an outward spiral in a plane parallel to the plane of the substrate. Upon reaching a desired outer radius (depending on direction of spiral growth) the nanotube is grown away from the substrate some distance again, then grown into an inward spiral. This may be repeated any number of times. At the end of growth, the nanotube is grown up to and against a second substrate. This second substrate should be conductive either as a whole (such as a metal substrate) or in selected areas to which the nanotubes are grown via use of an electrode as described above. If the substrates are conductive they can serve as the electrodes.
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In some embodiments, a general-purpose processor such as a digital signal processor, microcontroller, controller, or microprocessor (μP) is used and non-transitory firmware, software, or microcode can be stored in a tangible storage medium that is associated with the system or apparatus. Such a medium may be a memory integrated into the processor, may be a memory chip or memory chips that is/are addressed by the processor to perform control functions, or maybe a flash drive, magnetic disk drive, or optical disk. Such firmware, software or microcode is executable by the processor and when executed, causes the microcontroller unit to perform its control functions. Such firmware or software could also be stored in or on a tangible medium such as an optical disk or traditional removable or fixed magnetic medium such as a disk drive used to load the firmware or software into a an apparatus of system for maintenance, update, manufacturing, or other purposes. The software causes the processor or controller to control voltages applied to electrodes to produce the electric fields over time to grow carbon nanotubes as described herein. It should be noted that the described control functions could be provided by hard-wired circuitry or an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) as opposed to a programmed processor or controller. Such hard-wired circuitry or such an ASIC may still be referred to as a “controller.”
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Additional details of the programming sequence in example embodiments can be understood from an example implemented in Wolfram Mathematica™. The purpose of the formula programming sequence is to parameterize the desired shape of the nanotube and, using an established nanotube growth rate, parameterize the applied electric field as a function of time. The segment wherein the tube is intended to be grown directly away from the substrate (the +z direction), the electric field should be in the +Z direction with a sufficient and constant magnitude. For a segment wherein the tube is intended to be grown in a spiral, the electric field would be described by a constant magnitude but a direction that varies with time. The two components (x, y) of this field would vary in time as A*{cos(θ(t)), sin(θ(t))}, where A is a constant of sufficient strength, θ(t) indicates the direction in which the nanotube is designed to be growing at any given moment t. To ensure that the constant growth rate of the nanotube is taken into account, r(θ)(dθ/dt) must be constant in time. An example pattern might be to start at 40 nm spiral diameter and to end at 140 nm spiral diameter after 10 loops, each loop of nanotube path is separated 10 nm from the previous course. In this case, r(θ)=40 nm+10 nm*(θ/2π), the length of a turn increases with radius (and therefore time) and is approximately 2πraverage=2π(40 nm+10 nm*(θaverage/2π), and for a 10μ/min growth rate,
with t measured in minutes.
In example embodiments, segments 2 through 5 above are repeated 4 times to make 5 pairs of spirals, i.e. 10 spirals and segment 1 is repeated to grow the nanotube to and against the second substrate. In this example, total growth time is 15.7 minutes, total nanotube length=157 microns, and the substrate separation is between 34 and 44 microns. In most applications, there would be a desire to have tighter spirals with more loops, smaller inner diameters and larger out diameters, but the above device is somewhat simplified for clarity of illustration.
The above explains how to determine the electric field direction. The strength of the electric field should be of a magnitude to be effective for controlling the direction of growth of carbon nanotubes. In example embodiments, a field of about 0.1 V/μm has been shown to be effective. In a two-step sequence, the computer program controlling the application of the electric field is fed this parameterization and applies an electric field of a sufficient strength in the required direction as that direction varies with time.
With some minimal experimentation, the above technique alone can lead to successful mem devices. However, optionally, an additional step can be performed prior to finalizing the parameterization of the control software. If one acknowledges that the electric field is in fact a vector field, meaning its strength and direction are a function of position, it can be understood that desired field direction and magnitude must be present at the location of the tip of the nanotube. While the change in the location of the tip with time is small on a macroscopic scale, the change and the impact of the local environment on the electric field may not be negligible. It is, however, predictable, and the practitioner desiring first time success can use finite element modeling (in a program such as FEKO™ by Altair Engineering) of static electric fields in the presence of the substrates and the nanotube at its current stage of growth to refine the algorithm. Such an analysis inherently includes any dielectric polarization or other near-field effects of the substrates and the growing nanotube. This analysis will generate a convolution function whereby the user can determine the applied electrical field that will cause the desired electric field at the tip at a certain time (or stage of growth). This electric field's time evolution is what is finally fed into the control software. This sequence of steps helps ensure that the nanotube can be grown in the desired conformation with relatively little or no experimentation with actual growths.
A mem device according to example embodiments can be configured and connected in various ways. Electrodes in the form of electrical leads are present on the initial substrate to connect electrically to the catalyst particle(s). Thus a voltage can be placed across the nanotubes, and a current can be driven along the conductive carbon nanotubes. With the spiral shapes discussed herein, each CNT is a solenoid and a current through that solenoid will create a magnetic field. This magnetic field has some energy density and the net energy of the magnetic field is classically described as:
UB=N2AI2l−1,
where N is the number of loops in the solenoid, A is the cross-sectional area of the solenoid, l is the current in the solenoid, and l is the length of the solenoid.
Since the net energy of the magnetic field above is inversely proportional to the length of the solenoid, energy can be minimized by increasing the length of the solenoid. While nanotubes are renowned for being stiff in their length direction, they are flexible in the other directions, which in this case allows the nanotubes to expand in the direction of the solenoid. Thus there is a force pushing two plates away from each other. In the absence of a current and a magnetic field, the nanotubes will retract to their original conformations, with some stiffness.
An individual nanotube can be fabricated between two substrates in this configuration to make a very small individual transducer, such as for use within a more complex mems device. A large array of these nanotubes connecting the same two substrates can be used as a larger transducer. A stack of such arrays, wherein the termination location on one substrate is electrically connected to a catalyst on the other side of the substrate such that another “cell” of arrays can be constructed to a third substrate, and a fourth, etc., can be used as a larger transducer with increased extent.
Generally, materials that respond to a voltage by changing length in the direction of the voltage difference are called converse piezoelectric materials. (Piezoelectric materials are ones that respond to an applied strain by generating a voltage or charge separation; converse materials go the other way and all ordinary piezoelectric materials are also converse piezoelectric materials.) The unit cell of this device is compact enough that a stack of arrays may be considered a piece of material. In this consideration, a collection of these devices comprises an artificial piezoelectric material and a device built around such material is an artificial piezoelectric device. This material and the corresponding device are anisotropic; they are capable of extending in only one direction. A voltage across any individual substrate plane will simply create a current along that substrate. The shaped carbon nanotubes within a device of this material have high aspect ratios and low bending stiffness, allowing each shaped carbon nanotube, when carrying a current, to respond to the forces on the moving electrons in that current.
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A mem device like those shown in
The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of embodiments of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.
The corresponding structures, materials, acts, and equivalents of all means or step plus function elements in the claims below are intended to include any structure, material, or act for performing the function in combination with other claimed elements as specifically claimed. The description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, but is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to embodiments of the invention in the form disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of embodiments of the invention. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of embodiments of the invention and the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand embodiments of the invention for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, those of ordinary skill in the art appreciate that any arrangement which is calculated to achieve the same purpose may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown and that embodiments of the invention have other applications in other environments. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the present invention. The following claims are in no way intended to limit the scope of embodiments of the invention to the specific embodiments described herein.
Claims
1-7. (canceled)
8. A system for producing a micro electromechanical (mem) device, the system comprising:
- a furnace including a growth region for carbon nanotubes, the furnace being configured to permit establishment of a controlled, time-varying electric field within the growth region;
- a plurality of electrodes placed outside the growth region to produce the controlled, time-varying electric field;
- a power supply connected to the plurality of electrodes; and
- a controller connected to the power supply to control the power supply to deliver controlled voltages to the electrodes to cause the electrodes to produce the controlled time-varying electric field.
9. The system of claim 8 wherein the plurality of electrodes further comprises three electrode pairs positioned and aligned to produce the time-varying electric field comprising three independent, orthogonal, time-varying electric fields.
10. The system of claim 9 wherein the furnace is configured to allow passage of gasses into and out of the growth region to enable chemical vapor deposition (CVD) growth of the carbon nanotubes.
11. The system of claim 10 wherein the furnace comprises a tube furnace.
12. The system of claim 11 wherein the three electrode pairs further comprise:
- a first electrode pair further comprising two electrodes parallel to an axis of the tube furnace and centered above and below the growth region;
- a second electrode pair further comprising two electrodes parallel to each other placed in front of and in back of the growth region, between the two electrodes of the first electrode pair, and at an angle relative to the axis of the tube furnace; and
- a third electrode pair further comprising two electrodes parallel to each other placed in front of and in back of the growth region, between the two electrodes of the first electrode pair, at an angle relative to the axis of the tube furnace, and at an angle relative to the two electrodes of the second electrode pair.
13. A method of making a micro electromechanical (mem) device, the method comprising:
- depositing a catalyst on a first substrate;
- placing the first substrate with the catalyst in a growth region of a furnace;
- raising a temperature of the growth region;
- passing a mixture of gases through the furnace, wherein the mixture of gases is tailored to cause chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of carbon on the catalyst; and
- sequentially controlling a time-varying electric field within the growth region to parameterize a growing nanotube of carbon into a predetermined shape that defines a shaped carbon nanotube.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein the predetermined shape comprises a spiral.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein the mixture of gasses comprises hydrogen and acetylene.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein the catalyst comprises iron.
17. The method of claim 16 wherein the temperature in the growth region is raised to from 600 degrees C. to 800 degrees C.
18. The method of claim 17 wherein the passing of the mixture of gasses further comprises:
- causing a gas flow of hydrogen of 2500 sccm;
- causing a gas flow of argon of 2000 sccm; and
- causing a gas flow of acetylene of 2500 sccm.
19. The method of claim 13 wherein the sequentially controlling a time-varying electric field further comprises running a programming sequence to control voltages applied to three electrode pairs positioned and aligned to produce the time-varying electric field as three independent, orthogonal, time-varying electric fields.
20. The method of claim 19 the parameterizing of the growing nanotube of carbon into a predetermined shape comprises:
- growing the nanotube of carbon away from the first substrate; and
- growing the nanotube of carbon in a spiral substantially parallel to the first substrate.
21. The method of claim 20 wherein the parameterizing of the growing nanotube of carbon into a predetermined shape comprises growing the nanotube of carbon in at least a second spiral by growing the nanotube of carbon further away from the substrate and growing the nanotube of carbon in at least the second spiral substantially parallel to the substrate.
22. The method of claim 13 wherein the shaped carbon nanotube is disposed between the first substrate and a second substrate.
23. The method of claim 22 wherein the second substrate is movable relative to the first substrate.
24. The method of claim 23 further comprising:
- attaching a first electrode to the first substrate;
- attaching a second electrode to the second substrate;
- conductively connecting a first end of the shaped carbon nanotube to the first electrode; and
- conductively connecting a second end of the shaped carbon nanotube to the second electrode.
25. The method of claim 24, wherein the predetermined shape of the growing nanotube of carbon comprises a plurality of shaped carbon nanotubes connected in parallel between the first electrode and the second electrode.
26. The method of claim 24, wherein the predetermined shape of the growing nanotube of carbon comprises a plurality of shaped carbon nanotubes connected in series between the first electrode and the second electrode.
27. The method of claim 24 further comprising:
- connecting a power supply to the first electrode and the second electrode, the power supply being configurable to deliver an electric current through the first electrode, the shaped carbon nanotube and the second electrode over a range of voltage and frequency;
- connecting a controller to the power supply to configure and control the power supply; and
- wherein the first electrode is rigidly attached to the first substrate and the second electrode is flexibly attached to the second substrate so that the second substrate is movable relative to the first substrate.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 11, 2019
Publication Date: Jan 2, 2020
Applicant:
Inventors: Keith D. Humfeld (Federal Way, WA), Morteza Safai (Newcastle, WA)
Application Number: 16/567,286