Title :
MEMS Electrometer With Femtoampere Resolution for Aerosol Particulate Measurements
Author :
Jaramillo, G. ; Buffa, C. ; Mo Li ; Brechtel, Fred J. ; Langfelder, Giacomo ; Horsley, David A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. & Aerosp. Eng., Univ. of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
Abstract :
Electrostatic charge measurements are at the base of chemical, physical and biological experiments. In this paper, we present an electrometer based on the vibrating capacitance of a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) resonator for the detection of small currents from ionized particles in an aerosol particle detection system. We use a porous sensing-electrode coupled to a MEMS resonating electrometer. Operating at resonance, charge is collected on the MEMS electrometer and modulated at the resonant frequency and its harmonics. Induced voltage is read with a low-leakage very high-input impedance feedback amplifier. Because of the specific readout technique, a switched-reset is used to prevent charge saturation. Sensitivity improvements are achieved by modifying the low noise-readout amplifier by reducing input-referred noise and parasitic capacitance. The electrometer achieves a noise floor <;1 fA produced by 10 nm diameter particles within an airflow of 1.0 L/min. At this flow rate, the minimum detectable current (1 fA) corresponds to a minimum measureable particle density of 400 cm-3. The MEMS electrometer is compared with and calibrated against commercial electrometer and a particle counter, respectively.
Keywords :
aerosols; charge measurement; electrometers; electrostatics; micromechanical resonators; MEMS electrometer; MEMS resonating electrometer; MEMS resonator; aerosol particle detection system; aerosol particulate measurement; electrostatic charge measurement; femtoampere resolution; high input impedance feedback amplifier; input referred noise; ionized particle; microelectromechanical system; parasitic capacitance; porous sensing electrode; readout technique; resonant frequency; size 10 nm; vibrating capacitance; Electrometer; MEMS resonator; aerosols; current measurement; leakage currents;
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2013.2266335