Imaging and Sensing of Thin Layer Using High-Frequency Ultrasonic Transducers
US-2024036005-A1 · Feb 1, 2024 · US
US10139270B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10139270-B2 |
| Application number | US-201113808138-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 7, 2011 |
| Priority date | Jul 7, 2010 |
| Publication date | Nov 27, 2018 |
| Grant date | Nov 27, 2018 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
An asymmetric sensor having asymmetric electrodes and/or being asymmetrically anchored provides enhanced sensitivity. In example embodiments, part of the electrode on a sensor is etched or removed resulting in enhanced mass-change sensitive resonant modes. In another example embodiment, a sensor is anchored asymmetrically, also resulting in enhanced mass-change sensitive resonant modes. By asymmetrically anchoring a piezoelectric portion of a sensor, resonant bending modes of the sensor can be measured electrically without external instrumentation. Modifying the electrode of a piezoelectric cantilever enables expression of mass-change sensitive resonant modes that normally do not lend themselves to electrical measurement.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed: 1. A piezoelectric cantilever sensor having a receptor immobilized thereon to which an analyte binds, said sensor being asymmetrically anchored at one end such that anchoring on one side of the sensor is longer than anchoring on another side of the sensor whereby the cantilever sensor exhibits different resonant bending modes that can be measured electrically without external instrumentation that measures sensor oscillation. 2. The piezoelectric cantilever sensor of claim 1 , wherein the piezoelectric cantilever sensor comprises lead zirconate titanate. 3. The piezoelectric cantilever sensor of claim 1 , wherein the anchoring on one side of the sensor being longer than the anchoring on the another side of the sensor is adapted to cause differential longitudinal deformation of said cantilever sensor so as to induce transverse vibration that causes charge accumulation in said piezoelectric cantilever sensor whereby the different resonant bending modes become electrically measurable. 4. The analyte sensor of claim 1 , wherein the receptor is immobilized at a distal tip of the piezoelectric cantilever sensor at a longitudinal end of said cantilever opposite said one end. 5. A piezoelectric cantilever sensor having a receptor immobilized thereon to which an analyte binds, said sensor being anchored at one end and having asymmetric electrode portions on respective sides of the cantilever sensor such that a first electrode portion on one side of the cantilever sensor has a first area that is larger than a second area of a second electrode portion on another side of the cantilever sensor whereby the cantilever sensor exhibits different resonant bending modes that can be measured electrically without external instrumentation that measures sensor oscillation. 6. The piezoelectric cantilever sensor of claim 5 , wherein the cantilever sensor comprises lead zirconate titanate. 7. The piezoelectric cantilever sensor of claim 5 , wherein the first and second areas of the first and second electrode portions are adapted to cause differential longitudinal deformation of said cantilever sensor so as to induce transverse vibration that causes charge accumulation in said piezoelectric cantilever sensor whereby the different resonant bending modes become electrically measurable. 8. The analyte sensor of claim 5 , wherein the receptor is immobilized at a distal tip of the piezoelectric cantilever sensor at a longitudinal end of said cantilever opposite said one end.
Electricity · mapped topic
using piezoelectric devices · CPC title
Electricity · mapped topic
Sensors · CPC title
Cantilevers · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.