Abstract

Acoustic devices have been widely used as smart chemical and biochemical sensors since they are sensitive to mechanical, chemical, optical or electrical perturbations on their surfaces; making them a reliable option for noninvasive detection of changes in physical properties of liquid samples for real-time applications. Here we present a longitudinal acoustic wave device for study of compressional properties of liquids in microfluidic systems, with the particularity of pulse-echo mode of operation. We have studied at a microscale the interaction between longitudinal acoustic waves and the compressional properties of liquid samples, interrogating the fluids with short pulses of ultrasound at GHz, finding a direct relationship between the magnitude of the bulk modulus or the specific acoustic impedance of liquids and the amplitude of the output voltage produced by acoustic echoes received by the aluminum nitride transducer. Analytical expressions and FEM simulations support the detection mechanism, while applications such as classification of liquids and detection of concentration change in solutions experimentally demonstrate the method. This contribution overcomes current restrictions of film acoustic resonators such as fragility of operation in liquid environments, high manufacturing cost or limitations regarding narrow microchannels; offering an alternative to applications that demand ultra-low consumption, miniaturization, versatility (it offers multi-frequency operation in 1 – 10 GHz range) and ease of readout (peak voltage).

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