Measuring Flow Using a Tiny Wobbling Tube
Dec. 17, 2012 — One
milligram per hour: fluid flow can be measured with great precision
using a tiny 'wobbling' tube with a diameter of only 40 micrometres.
Thanks to a new technique, the sensor, which makes use of the 'Coriolis
effect', can be made even more compact, e.g. for medical applications.
The
Coriolis mass flow sensor. The tube is the U-shaped tiny line. In the
left lower corner, the electric fingers are visible for measuring the
displacement of the tube and activating movement. (Credit: Image
courtesy of University of Twente)
Scientists at the University of Twente's MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology have published an article on the subject in Applied Physics Letters.
Coriolis meters are often enormous instruments mounted in a pipeline
to measure liquid flow accurately. Reduced to micrometre dimensions the
result is a sensor that can measure extremely slow-moving small
quantities of fluids. The fluid is passed through a tiny rectangular
tube that is made to wobble. The Coriolis effect then causes the tube to
move upwards as well, and this upward displacement is a measure of the
amount of fluid flowing through it.
No magnets
Until now magnets have been used to bring about the wobbling motion.
One of the problems was that the magnets are far bigger than the actual
sensor. In the Applied Physics Letters article researcher
Harmen Droogendijk introduces a new method, known as 'parametric
excitation'. Dozens of 'electric fingers' attached to the tube fit
between identical opposing fingers mounted on supports running parallel
to the tube. The extent to which these opposing sets of fingers slide
between one another can be used to measure the tube's lateral
displacement. But we could also use them to set the tube in motion,
thoughtDroogendijk. He found that there is a limited area of electrical
tension where the tube moves up and down much more than at a lower or
higher tension, though this has to be tuned very precisely. Droogendijk
carried out mathematical modelling, resulting in a new design that no
longer needs magnets.
More research is needed to find out whether the current lower limit
of approximately 1 milligram per hour can be lowered even further.
The research was carried out in the Transducers Science and
Technology group led by Prof. Gijs Krijnen, which is part of the
University of Twente's MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology. It received
financial support from the Dutch national nanotechnology program
NanoNed. More research is needed to find out whether the current lower
limit of approximately 1 milligram per hour can be lowered even further.
Industrial applications
The Coriolis mass flow sensor is being further developed by
Bronkhorst High-Tech in Ruurlo to produce a precision instrument for
such things as monitoring medical IV pumps, analysing medicines using
liquid chromatography, and use in microreactors and the manufacture of
solar cells.
source:sciencedaily.
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