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Are mechanical laws different at small scales? YES! If we scale quantities by a factor ‘S’ Area  S 2 Volume  S 3 Surface tension  SElectrostatic forces.

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Presentation on theme: "Are mechanical laws different at small scales? YES! If we scale quantities by a factor ‘S’ Area  S 2 Volume  S 3 Surface tension  SElectrostatic forces."— Presentation transcript:

1 Are mechanical laws different at small scales? YES! If we scale quantities by a factor ‘S’ Area  S 2 Volume  S 3 Surface tension  SElectrostatic forces  S 2  agnetic forces  S 3 Gravitational forces  S 4 Surface Area/Volume effects Stiction: “Sticky friction”, due to molecular forces - surface tension pulls things together SCALING OF: Mechanical systems Fluidic systems Thermal systems Electrical and Magnetic systems Chemical and Biological systems

2 Which dynamical variables are scaled? - depends on our choice e.g. Mechanical systems Constant stress  Scale independent elastic deformation, scale independent shape Electromagnetic systems Constant electrostatic stresses/field strengths Thermal systems Constant heat capacity & thermal conductivity

3 Scaling Issues in Fluids Viscosity & Surface Tension Definition: A fluid cannot resist shear stresses Re is the ratio of inertial and viscous forces, v: velocity,  : density. l: linear dimension Viscosity dominates at: Re < 1 Re for whale swimming at 10 m/second ~ 300,000,000 Re for a mosquito larva, moving at 1mm/sec ~ 0.3 Re marks the transition between Laminar/Smooth flow & Turbulent Flow (mixing) In MEMS: always laminar flow!

4 Thermal Issues Thermal Mass (specific heat X Volume) scales as l 3, but heat removal scales as l 2 (proportional to area) Evaporation or Heat loss increases as Surface Area/Volume increases Easier to remove heat from a smaller sample

5 Electrophoresis - Stirring vs. Diffusion, Diffusion is the dominant mixing process in MEMS - Separation of bio-molecules, cells by the application of electric fields Separation of different types of blood cells E = 0 E > 0

6 Micro-fabricated DNA capture chip (Cepheid, CA) Fast, on-site, real time testing Miniature Clinical Diagnostic Systems Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) for DNA amplification Principle: High Isolation, Low Mass, Localized heating possible Scaling of Minimal Analytic Sample Size

7 Scaling in Electricity and Magnetism Potentiometric devices (measure voltage) are scale invariant Amperometric devices (measure current) are more sensitive when miniaturized e.g.,  -array electrochemical detectors (Kel-F) for trace amounts of ions Electroplating is faster in MEMS Courtesy: M. Schoning

8 Scaling in electromagnetic systems Voltage  Electrostatic field · length  L Resistance  Length  L -1 Ohmic current  Voltage  L 2 Current density (I/A) is scale invariant Constant electrostatic stresses/field strengths Area Resistance

9 Scaling in Electricity and Magnetism Electric:  : dielectric permittivity (8.85. 10 -12 F/m) E: electric field (Breakdown for air: 30 kV/cm) Magnetic:  : permeability (4     ) B: Magnetic field Rotor Stator Human Hair ! Sandia MEMS

10 Judy, Smart Mater. Struc, 10, 1115, (2001) Electrostatics is more commonly used in MEMS Macroscopic machines: Magnetic based Microscopic machines: Electrostatics based

11 Electrostatic force  Area · (Electrostatic field) 2  L 2 Electrostatic energy  Volume · (Electrostatic field) 2  L 3 Electrostatics vs. magnetostatics Magnetic field  Current  L distance Magnetic force  Area · (magnetic field) 2  L 4 Magnetic forces are much weaker compared to electrostatic forces Magnetic energy  Volume · (Magnetic field) 2  L 5

12 Power and Power density scaling Power  Force · speed  L 2 Power density  Power  L -1 Volume Small devices made through strong materials can have very large power densities e.g. 10 nN force in a 1  m 3 volume  ~ 10 3 J/mm 2 c.f. a thin-film battery  ~ 1J/mm 2

13 Power in MEMS Compact power sources needed, but Power scales by mass Energy stored in 1 mm 3 Currently: Fuel cells, micro-combustors, Radio frequency/optical sources Power capacitor 4  J/mm 3 1  W for 4 s Thick Film Battery1 J/mm 3 270  W for 1 hour Thin Film Battery2.5 J/mm 3 0.7 mW for 1 hour Solar Cell (1 X 1 X 0.1 mm 3 )0.1 mW Gasoline300 J/mm 3 3 mW for 1 day 178 Hf> 10 MJ/mm 3 160 mW

14 MEMS devices: How do we make them? Sandia MEMS Gear chain Hinge Gear within a gear A mechanism

15 Making MEMS How to make a MEMS device - deposit and etch out materials Introduction to Micro-machining - Wet and Dry etching - Bulk and surface micro-machining What kinds of materials are used in MEMS? -Semiconductors - Metals - Polymers


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