Externet Posted May 14, 2016 Posted May 14, 2016 Hi all. A piezoelectric disc sensing soundwaves in its surrounding air needs to be protected from corrosive gases in order to avoid deterioration. What type of coating/encapsulation would conduct sound with the least attenuation ? Fluid as grease, soft as silicone, medium as vinyl, hard as epoxy ? With no air gap between the coating and the sensing element ? Thick or thin layer ? Flexible or rigid material ? Rough or smooth surface ? Other considerations ?
mongoloidz Posted May 16, 2016 Posted May 16, 2016 Maybe quartz/graphene nanocoating? just going for broke there.
Enthalpy Posted May 18, 2016 Posted May 18, 2016 Those piezo disks rely on flexural modes, don't they? Then any adhering coating should show low losses, which would eliminate the liquids - they are bad as a chemical barrier anyway. I vote for the plastic bag not touching the piezo element. If the protection must be on the disk, then of a thin, hermetic and elastic material. Metals seem ruled out, alas, as the disks need electrodes, but a ceramic coating like SiO2 or Si3N4 offers an excellent protection. Its deposition needs a high temperature, fine for the piezo ceramics, but which restricts the electrode metals - small worry since the metals that protect against corrosion are the refractory ones. You usual semiconductor process engineer can tell that quickly.
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