Modelling of the response of acoustic piezoelectric resonators in biosensor applications-Part 1: The general theoretical analysis
Journal article, 2015

Acoustic piezoelectric resonators are widely used as precise analytical chemistry tools for the realtime monitoring of a negligibly small amount of surface-attached mass of biological components, in particular, in environmental biosensor measurements. The surface acoustic wave (SAW)-based sensors and the quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) compared in our work belong to the leading group due to their considerable advantages. These piezoelectric resonators are considered now as high-resolution analytical tools allowing researchers to discriminate between components due to the selective polymer coating on the resonator surface. The gravimetrical measurements performed with the SAW-based or QCM sensors provide the experimental data with high precision for the detection of surface mass for the thin adsorbed layer rigidly attached to the oscillator surface. The new challenge is the analysis of soft and biological materials, where the viscous losses of energy can essentially influence measured characteristics. Modelling is the important part of the analysis allowing researchers to quantify the results of the experiments. The present work provides a general theory of SH-SAW devices probing soft and biological materials. The results are compared with QCM-D operated in liquid media.

Author

Marina Voinova

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Electronics Material and Systems

Nacionalnij Tehnicnij Universytet Kharkivskij Polytehnicnij Institut

Journal of Sensors and Sensor Systems

2194-8771 (ISSN) 2194-878X (eISSN)

Vol. 4 1 137-142

Subject Categories

Analytical Chemistry

Textile, Rubber and Polymeric Materials

Other Physics Topics

DOI

10.5194/jsss-4-137-2015

More information

Latest update

2/11/2021