MODELLING AND TRIALS OF PYROELECTRIC SENSORS FOR
IMPROVING ITS APPLICATION FOR BIODEVICES
Andrés Díaz Lantada, Pilar Lafont Morgado, Héctor Hugo del Olmo, Héctor Lorenzo-Yustos
Javier Echavarri Otero, Juan Manuel Munoz-Guijosa, Julio Muñoz-García and José Luis Muñoz Sanz
Grupo de Investigación en Ingeniería de Máquinas – E.T.S.I. Industriales – Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
C/ José Gutiérrez Abascal, nº 2. 28006 – Madrid, Spain
Keywords: Pyroelectricity, Ferroelectric Polymers, Sensors Behaviour, Medical Devices.
Abstract: Active or “Intelligent” Materials are capable of responding in a controlled way to different external physical
or chemical stimuli by changing some of their properties. These materials can be used to design and develop
sensors, actuators and multifunctional systems with a large number of applications for developing medical
devices.
Pyroelectric materials, with thermoelectrical properties coupling, can be used as temperature sensors with
applications in the development of several biodevices, including the combination with other thermally
active materials, whose actuation can be improved by means of precise temperature registration.
This paper makes an introduction to pyroelectricity and its main applications in the development of
biodevices, focusing also in the pyroelectric properties of polyvinylidene fluoride or PVDF and presenting
some results related with sensors’ behaviour modelling and characterization.
1 INTRODUCTION TO
PYROELECTRICITY
Pyroelectricity is the ability of certain materials to
generate an electrical potential when they are heated
or cooled. As a result of this change in temperature,
positive and negative charges move to opposite ends
through migration (the material becomes polarized)
and, therefore, an electrical potential is established.
This kind of phenomenon appears in dielectric
materials with spontaneous polarizations due to
dipole orientation within their structure. These
effects have been known to mankind even since
Antiquity, especially regarding ceramic materials
and metallic oxides.
The name of pyroelectricity was given by
Brewster in 1824. But investigations on polymer
pyroelectricity are more recent, starting around 1955
with some initial results, which were not
commercially promising.
New attention was given to this property with
the discovery of pyroelectric effects in
polyvinylidene fluorides (PVDF and copolymers) by
Bergman in 1971, after the discovery of
piezoelectricity in these materials by Kawai in 1969.
During the last decades important progress has
been made in creating artificial pyroelectric
materials, usually in the form of a thin film, out of
gallium nitride (GaN), caesium nitrate (CsNO
3
),
polyvinylidene fluorides (PVDF and copolymers),
derivatives of phenylpyrazine cobalt phthalocyanine
and other materials.
The main applications developed so far of these
materials in biomedical devices are explained below,
before paying attention to pyroelectricity in
polymers, modelling, signal conditioning and trials.
2 PYROELECTRIC MATERIALS
AND POTENTIAL BIODEVICES
The main industrial applications are related with the
development of temperature sensors, presence
sensors, humidity and leakage sensors and for
measuring other processes which mean a
temperature change. It can also be applied in
biological or medical context as explained in the
following examples.
453
Díaz Lantada A., Lafont Morgado P., del Olmo H., Lorenzo-Yustos H., Echavarri Otero J., Munoz-Guijosa J., Muñoz-García J. and Muñoz Sanz J. (2009).
MODELLING AND TRIALS OF PYROELECTRIC SENSORS FOR IMPROVING ITS APPLICATION FOR BIODEVICES.
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Biomedical Electronics and Devices, pages 453-457
DOI: 10.5220/0001828304530457
Copyright
c
SciTePress
Infrared Thermography Cameras. Infrared
Thermography is a technique for carrying out
inspections and non-destructive tests which has
multiple applications in the development of
machines and products, equipment and facilities
maintenance, and troubleshooting.
Since all bodies emit (according to their
temperature) infrared radiation, which increases in
intensity as the temperature rises, variations in this
intensity can be detected by using infrared sensors.
Thermal cameras can detect radiation in the
infrared range of the electromagnetic spectrum
(usually between a 900 and 14000 nm wavelength,
instead of operating in the visible range of 450 to
750 nm) and can produce images of this radiation.
These cameras are fitted with a sensor matrix
(called microbolometer) that can be developed using
pyroelectric materials. Depending on the intensity of
the radiation more or less current is sent to the
camera’s control electronics, which with the aid of
specific software enables temperature maps to be
obtained.
Some of the fundamental advantages of the
technique are its speed and ease of use, easy to
interpret temperature map-based results and the fact
that it is a non-destructive technique that does not
damage the systems under study (Schindel, 2007,
Maldague, 2001).
Apart from these applications, its use as a
support tool for developing medical devices,
especially those based on the use of thermal
materials has also been proposed (Paumier, 2007).
Biometric Systems. Pyroelectric materials can also
be used as part of complex biometric systems for
real-time recognition of people inside a building or
room with security purposes, or in the medical field
for evaluating the progress of injuries that limit the
mobility of patients (Fang, 2007).
Aided Surgery. These materials have also been
proposed and tested for measuring blood
temperature during surgeries, such as coronary stent
placements, with the purpose of relating temperature
profile with the blood velocity field and using this
comparison as a method of controlling the surgical
procedure (Mochi, 2004).
Flow Sensors. Dymedix Co. has developed nasal
flow sensors using PVDF, that besides being
piezoelectric has also pyroelectric properties and can
be used as temperature sensor. This products allow
an active management of pathologies such as sleep
apnea or sudden death in children. Such devices are
placed adjacent to the nostrils and patient breath
induces charges to the sensor, with a typical and
recognisable pattern. When breathing ceases, the
pattern changes and the microcontroller detects such
problem and activates an alarm to alert both the
patient and his or her relatives.
X-Ray Intensity Sensors. Based on corporal
heating due to absorption of X-Ray (during
radiological explorations) pyroelectric sensors can
be used, so as to make an estimation of the dosage
received and in order to avoid risk situations. The
phenomenon has been proved “in vivo” during
mammography scans with positive results according
to precision and sensitivity (De Paula, 2005).
3 PVDF PYROELECTRIC
POLYMER SENSORS
Polyvinylidene fluoride or PVDF -(CH
2
-CF
2
)-
n
and
its co-polymers such as poly(vinilydenefluoride-
trifluoroethylene) or P(VDF-TrFE), are the polymers
of this kind with the largest number of industrial
applications. They posses partial crystalinity with an
inactive amorphous phase and an elastic modulus
close to between 1 and 10 GPa.
The ferroelectric structure makes this polymer both
piezoelectric and pyroelectric, which increases its
applications, not only as temperature and pressure
sensor, but also as actuator. Its use as actuators is
limited by the need to apply high electric fields
(around 20 V/μm for a 3% deformation), but their
use as pressure sensors is taking the place of
traditionally used piezoelectric ceramic materials.
Regarding pyroelectricity its important value of
pyroelectric coefficient, together with its greater
resistance and sensitivity is displacing the use of
pyroelectric ceramics.
Figure 1: Metallized PVDF sheets. Piezotech S.A..
To make the sensors, we took PVDF 40 μm
thick sheets from Piezotech S.A. with Au-Pt coated
electrodes. These sheets were cut, joined to the
connecting wires and suitably encapsulated into
flexible polyurethane layers to protect them.
BIODEVICES 2009 - International Conference on Biomedical Electronics and Devices
454
The sensors obtained and the main properties of
the PVDF used, along with some alternatives of the
same materials’ family, are shown below.
Figure 2: PVDF pyroelectric polymer sensor for fluidic
applications with polyurethane protecting layer.
Table 1: Pyroelectric polymers’ main properties.
d
33
pC/N
d
31
pC/N
d
32
pC/N
ε
F/m
p3
μC/m
2
·º
C
Uni-ax.
PVDF
-20 18 3 1,1·1
-10
25
Bi-ax.
PVDF
-24 7 7 1,1·1
-10
25
P(VDF
-TrFE)
-24 7 7 0,9·1
-10
25
The sensors’ behaviour due to combined
piezoelectric and pyroelectric properties can be
studied in first approximation using the following
equations.
Figure 3 a) shows the sensor layout. The charge
displacement (produced when a force of temperature
change is applied to the piezoelectric sensor) can be
represented using the equivalent electric circuit
depicted in Figure 3 b).
a)
b)
Figure 3: a) Piezoelectric Sensor. b) Electrical behaviour
circuit diagram of the piezoelectric sensor.
Force F on the sensor acts as a generator of
intensity powering a C capacity condenser. Ec (1).
C = C(F) = ε · (L
1
·L
2
) / e (1)
Where:
ε.- The dielectric constant of the sensor.
L
1
·L
2
.- The effective area of the sensor.
e.- The thickness of the sensor.
The thickness of the sensor, e, depends on the
initial thickness, e
0
, on the pressure applied, σ = F /
(L
1
·L
2
), and the Young modulus of the material, E,
using the following expression Eq. (2):
e = e
0
· (1 – σ / E) (2)
Current intensity, I, generated by applying force,
F, depends on the transversal piezoelectric
coefficient of sensor d33 according to Eq. (3).
Q = d33 · F Æ I = dQ / dt = d33 · dF / dt (3)
Current intensity, I, generated by applying
temperature chages, ΔT, depends on the pyroelectric
coefficient p
3
and can be expressed as:
Q = p
3
· (L
1
·L
2
) · ΔT Æ
I = dQ / dt = p
3
· (L
1
·L
2
) · dT / dt (4)
The total amount of current intensity can be
obtained as addition of Eq. (3) and (4).
When the sensor is connected to an external
circuit, as is shown in Figure 3 b), it discharges in
accordance with the equivalent R resistance of this
external circuit (i.e. oscilloscope, charge amplifier).
The intensity is given by Eq. (5).
I = d33 · dF / dt = U / R + C · dU / dt (5)
The effect of thermal expansion has to be taken
also into account when the deformations produced
due to important temperature changes become
relevant, as consequence of the thermo-electro-
mechanical coupling in these materials.
Similar equations have been used to model and
simulate the behaviour of this kind of materials as
part of more complex devices. They can be used not
only for design purposes, but also as a way of
estimating adverse effects due to piezo and pyro
effects coupling, in applications that are intended to
use these materials only as pressure sensors or only
as temperature sensors.
In case of willing to obtain positive voltages
when using this sensors for measuring compressive
stresses a polarity change in the connections is
enough, but then temperature increases lead to
decreasing voltages (as happens in our PVDF trials
explained below).
Following chapter shows some characterization
trials of the pyroelectric behaviour of PVDF sensors
and the influence of parameter changes for its
applicability.
5 mm
MODELLING AND TRIALS OF PYROELECTRIC SENSORS FOR IMPROVING ITS APPLICATION FOR
BIODEVICES
455
4 TRIALS WITH PVDF
PYROELECTRIC SENSORS
For proving the pyroelectric response of PVDF
sensors a charge amplifier for signal conditioning
was designed. It has typical impedance for such
conditioning circuits of 10 TΩ and includes a
voltage supply of 3.7 V.
The trial bench includes an additional
Measurement Computing LS1208 data acquisition
card, connected via USB to a personal computer.
The trials were carried out by introducing the
sensor from room temperature (26 ºC) into a water
vase with temperature control.
Several trials were made, changing water
temperature, before introducing the sensor into it, so
as to study the influence of ΔT on the speed
response of the sensor, which can be measured as a
function of the origin slope of the function V(t).
The main results are shown below. Figure 4
represents the trials made using a sensor with just
one polyurethane protecting layer. Figure 5 was
obtained by using a sensor with three protecting
layers and shows a slower response, due to the effect
of thermal isolation produced by the polyurethane.
0,0
0,5
1,0
1,5
2,0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Time (s)
Voltage (V)
25ºC
26ºC
26,5ºC
27,5ºC
29ºC
32,5ºC
34ºC
36ºC
Figure 4: Voltage changes due to introduction of the
PVDF sensors in water at different temperatures. (One
protecting layer).
0,500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Time (s)
Voltage (V)
23ºC
25ºC
26,3ºC
27,3ºC
Figure 5: Voltage changes due to introduction of the
PVDF sensors in water at different temperatures. (Three
protecting layers).
These trials help to show the sensitivity of PVDF
as temperature measuring material, due to its
pyroelectric properties. The fact that temperature
changes can be detected, even using a 4.5 mm thick
polyurethane protecting layer, is important for
increasing the number of applications of such
materials, which can be used not only as surface
sensors, but also for measuring surface temperature
changes from the inside of a biodevice.
5 CONCLUSIONS
The work presented shows an introduction to
pyroelectricity and its main applications in the
development of biodevices, focusing also in the
pyroelectric properties of polyvinylidene fluoride or
PVDF.
Additionally, some results related with sensors’
behaviour modelling, signal conditioning and
characterization trials are presented.
This type of materials can also be applied to
medical devices in combination with other active
materials, especially those based on thermal
activation.
Thus pyroelectric sensors could be used as a way
of monitoring temperature and optimising activation
of the active part of the device.
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