Frederick Doering
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, UC Berkeley
BSAC Graduate Student Researcher
April 24, 2012 | 12:00 to 01:00 | 540 Cory Hall, DOP Center Conference Room
Host: Igor Paprotny
The design, fabrication, and experimental results of a MEMS air-microfluidic sensor for measuring the concentrations of airborne particulate matter (PM) such as tobacco smoke or diesel exhaust is presented. Our sensor (25 mm × 21 mm × 2 mm in size) consists of an air-microfluidic circuit that separates the particles by size, then transports and deposits the selected particles onto the surface of a mass-sensitive film bulk acoustic resonator (FBAR). The rate of frequency change of the FBAR due to mass-loading corresponds to the particle concentration in the sampled air-volume. Our sensors exhibit a low-end detection limit of single μg/m3. The small size of our sensor, combined with high sensitivity, enables it to be used in a portable PM monitor that can record personal PM exposure levels.
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