Sensors (Mar 2015)

Highly Sensitive Measurement of Liquid Density in Air Using Suspended Microcapillary Resonators

  • Oscar Malvar,
  • Daniel Ramos,
  • Carmen Martínez,
  • Priscila Kosaka,
  • Javier Tamayo,
  • Montserrat Calleja

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s150407650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
pp. 7650 – 7657

Abstract

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We report the use of commercially available glass microcapillaries as micromechanical resonators for real-time monitoring of the mass density of a liquid that flows through the capillary. The vibration of a suspended region of the microcapillary is optically detected by measuring the forward scattering of a laser beam. The resonance frequency of the liquid filled microcapillary is measured for liquid binary mixtures of ethanol in water, glycerol in water and Triton in ethanol. The method achieves a detection limit in an air environment of 50 µg/mL that is only five times higher than that obtained with state-of-the-art suspended microchannel resonators encapsulated in vacuum. The method opens the door to novel advances for miniaturized total analysis systems based on microcapillaries with the add-on of mechanical transduction for sensing the rheological properties of the analyzed fluids without the need for vacuum encapsulation of the resonators.

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