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The Quartz Crystal Microbalance and its Applications

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Title: The Quartz Crystal Microbalance and its Applications


1
The Quartz Crystal Microbalance and its
Applications
  • By Monica Melo
  • March 25, 2004

2
What is a Quartz Crystal Microbalance?
  • A quartz crystal microbalance is a sensor i.e.. a
    class of analytical devices that are capable of
    monitoring specific chemical species continuously
    and reversibly
  • A device that is based on the piezoelectric
    characteristics of the quartz crystal
  • The piezoelectric effect forms the basis for the
    quartz crystal microbalance

3
The Piezoelectric Effect
  • The appearance of an electric potential across
    certain faces of a crystal when it is subjected
    to mechanical pressure
  • The effect has a converse i.e. when an electric
    field is applied on certain faces of the crystal,
    the crystal undergoes mechanical distortion
  • The effect is explained by the displacement of
    ions in crystals that have a nonsymmetrical unit
    cell

4
The Piezoelectric Effect
  • The compression causes a displacement of the ions
    of the unit cell, causing an electric
    polarization of the unit cell
  • These effects are accumulative and an electric
    potential difference appears across certain faces
    of the crystal
  • When an external electric field is applied to the
    crystal, the ions of each unit cell is displaced
    by electrostatic forces
  • The result is the mechanical deformation of the
    whole crystal

5
The Crystal Structure of Quartz
  • Quartz is crystalline silica (SiO2) at
    temperatures below 870C

Figure 2 The ?-quartz crystal lattice structure
Figure 1 The Natural Form of Quartz
6
The Quartz Crystal Resonator
  • A quartz crystal resonator is a precisely cut
    slab from a natural or synthetic single crystal
    of quartz
  • A resonator can have many modes of resonance, or
    standing wave patterns at the resonant
    frequencies
  • The quartz crystal resonator must be cut at a
    specific crystallographic orientation and have
    the proper shape
  • This allows for selection of a specific mode of
    resonance and for suppression of all unwanted
    modes

7
The Quartz Crystal Resonator
  • Commonly, quartz crystal resonators are cut in
    one of two types AT-cut or BT-cut
  • The angle is measured relative to the z-axis of
    rotation and the thickness is in the y-direction
    in a rectangular, square or disc shape

Figure 3 The Ideal Cuts of the Quartz Crystal
8
The Quartz Crystal Resonator
  • These cuts are ideal because
  • They oscillate in the thickness shear mode most
    sensitive to the addition or removal of mass
  • (perfect for microweighing!)
  • They are insensitive to temperature change near
    room temperature
  • (at the conditions of an analytical laboratory!)

9
The Operation of a Quartz Crystal Microbalance
  • Electrodes are affixed to either side of the
    quartz resonator and connected to a voltage
    source
  • The quartz crystal is made to vibrate at the
    frequency of the exciting voltage

10
Mass Determination
  • The crystal in most quartz crystal microbalances
    in an essential part of an oscillator circuit
  • The material to be weighed is deposited onto the
    quartz crystal plate (resonator) as a thin film
  • A quartz crystal microbalance does not actually
    measure the mass
  • It measures the areal density or mass thickness
    of the deposited material

11
Mass Determination Sources of Error
  • The mass is calculated from a frequency change on
    the quartz due to the deposited material
  • A complicated formula is used and the display
    shows only the mass of the deposited material
  • Errors occur because of the instruments
    inability to distinguish between a frequency
    change due to the deposited mass or other
    disturbances such as stress changes or temperature

12
Applications
  • Microweighing
  • Detection of toxic gases such as sulfur dioxide,
    ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, carbon monoxide, and
    aromatic hydrocarbons
  • Detection of biomolecules by antigen/antibody
    attachment to quartz resonators

13
References
  1. Bottom, Virgil E. Introduction to Quartz Crystal
    Unit Design. Van Nostrand Reinhold Company. New
    York. 1982.
  2. Harris, Daniel C. Quantitative Chemical
    Analysis. 5th Edition. W.H.Freeman and Company.
    New York. 1999.
  3. Heising, Raymond A. Quartz Crystals for
    Electrical Circuits Their Design and
    Manufacture. D.Van Nostrand Company, Inc. New
    York. 1946.
  4. Ikeda, Takuro. Fundamentals of Piezoelectricity.
    Oxford University Press. Oxford. 1990.
  5. Miessler, Gary L. D.A. Tarr. Inorganic
    Chemistry. 2nd Edition. Prentice-Hall, Inc. New
    Jersey. 1999.
  6. Skoog, Douglas A., F.J. Holler T.A. Nieman.
    Principles of Instrumental Analysis. 5th Edition.
    Saunders College Publishing. Philadelphia,
    1998.
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