Multilayer Ionic Transducers

A transducer consisting of multiple layers of ionic polymer material is developed for applications in sensing, actuation, and control. The transducer consists of two to four individual layers each approximately 200 microns thick. The transducers are connected in parallel to minimize the electric fie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Akle, Barbar Jawad
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31733
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04162003-225849/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-317332020-09-26T05:37:16Z Multilayer Ionic Transducers Akle, Barbar Jawad Mechanical Engineering Leo, Donald J. Saunders, William R. Inman, Daniel J. Micro Air Vehicle Transducer Sensor-Actuator Ionic polymers Multilayer A transducer consisting of multiple layers of ionic polymer material is developed for applications in sensing, actuation, and control. The transducer consists of two to four individual layers each approximately 200 microns thick. The transducers are connected in parallel to minimize the electric field requirements for actuation. The tradeoff in deflection and force can be controlled by controlling the mechanical constraint at the interface. Packaging the transducer in an outer coating produces a hard constraint between layers and reduces the deflection with a force that increases linearly with the number of layers. This configuration also increases the bandwidth of the transducer. Removing the outer packaging produces an actuator that maintains the deflection of a single layer but has an increased force output. This is obtained by allowing the layers to slide relative to one another during bending. A Finite Element Analysis (FEA) method capable of modeling the structure of the multilayer transducers is developped. It is used to model the interfacial friction in multilayer transducers. Experiments on transducers with one to three layers are performed and the results are compared to Newbury's equivalent circuit model, which was modified to accommodate the multilayer polymers. The modification was performed on four different boundary conditions, two electrical the series and the parallel connection, and two mechanical the zero interfacial friction and the zero slip on the interface. Results demonstrate that the largest obstacle to obtaining good performance is water transport between the individual layers. Water crossover produces a near short circuit electrical condition and produces feedthrough between actuation layers and sensing layers. Electrical feedthrough due to water crossover eliminates the ability to produce a transducer that has combined sensing and actuation properties. Eliminating water crossover through good insulation enables the development of a small (5 mm x 30 mm) transducer that has sensing and actuation bandwidth on the order of 100 Hz. Due to the mechanical similarities of ionic transducers to biological muscles and their large flapping displacement capabilities we are studying the possibility of their use in flapping Micro Air Vehicle (MAV) application, as engines, controllers and sensors. The FEA modeling technique capable is used to design two ionic polymers actuated flapping wings. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:33:29Z 2014-03-14T20:33:29Z 2003-04-15 2003-04-16 2004-04-23 2003-04-23 Thesis etd-04162003-225849 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31733 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04162003-225849/ Incomplete_Thesis.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Micro Air Vehicle
Transducer
Sensor-Actuator
Ionic polymers
Multilayer
spellingShingle Micro Air Vehicle
Transducer
Sensor-Actuator
Ionic polymers
Multilayer
Akle, Barbar Jawad
Multilayer Ionic Transducers
description A transducer consisting of multiple layers of ionic polymer material is developed for applications in sensing, actuation, and control. The transducer consists of two to four individual layers each approximately 200 microns thick. The transducers are connected in parallel to minimize the electric field requirements for actuation. The tradeoff in deflection and force can be controlled by controlling the mechanical constraint at the interface. Packaging the transducer in an outer coating produces a hard constraint between layers and reduces the deflection with a force that increases linearly with the number of layers. This configuration also increases the bandwidth of the transducer. Removing the outer packaging produces an actuator that maintains the deflection of a single layer but has an increased force output. This is obtained by allowing the layers to slide relative to one another during bending. A Finite Element Analysis (FEA) method capable of modeling the structure of the multilayer transducers is developped. It is used to model the interfacial friction in multilayer transducers. Experiments on transducers with one to three layers are performed and the results are compared to Newbury's equivalent circuit model, which was modified to accommodate the multilayer polymers. The modification was performed on four different boundary conditions, two electrical the series and the parallel connection, and two mechanical the zero interfacial friction and the zero slip on the interface. Results demonstrate that the largest obstacle to obtaining good performance is water transport between the individual layers. Water crossover produces a near short circuit electrical condition and produces feedthrough between actuation layers and sensing layers. Electrical feedthrough due to water crossover eliminates the ability to produce a transducer that has combined sensing and actuation properties. Eliminating water crossover through good insulation enables the development of a small (5 mm x 30 mm) transducer that has sensing and actuation bandwidth on the order of 100 Hz. Due to the mechanical similarities of ionic transducers to biological muscles and their large flapping displacement capabilities we are studying the possibility of their use in flapping Micro Air Vehicle (MAV) application, as engines, controllers and sensors. The FEA modeling technique capable is used to design two ionic polymers actuated flapping wings. === Master of Science
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
Akle, Barbar Jawad
author Akle, Barbar Jawad
author_sort Akle, Barbar Jawad
title Multilayer Ionic Transducers
title_short Multilayer Ionic Transducers
title_full Multilayer Ionic Transducers
title_fullStr Multilayer Ionic Transducers
title_full_unstemmed Multilayer Ionic Transducers
title_sort multilayer ionic transducers
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31733
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04162003-225849/
work_keys_str_mv AT aklebarbarjawad multilayerionictransducers
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