Design and characterization of a low thermal drift capacitive humidity sensor by inkjet-printing

  • Almudena Rivadeneyra
  • , José Fernández-Salmerón
  • , Manuel Agudo
  • , Juan A. López-Villanueva
  • , Luis Fermín Capitan-Vallvey
  • , Alberto J. Palma

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

132 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Small, low-cost and flexible humidity sensors were designed, fabricated by using an inkjet-printing process, and fully characterized. Based on the principles of the capacitor and the ability of a polyimide to absorb humidity, the sensor was fabricated by printing silver interdigitated electrodes on a thin polyimide film of 75 μm thickness. After modeling, the total area of the printed sensor was optimized to be 11.65 mm2. A relative humidity sensitivity of 4.5 fF/%RH and a thermal coefficient of -0.4 fF/ C were measured at 100 kHz, whereas the sensitivity and the thermal coefficient were 4.2 fF/%RH and -0.21 fF/ C, respectively, at 1 MHz. This latter result implies that it could not be necessary to include thermal compensation to use this sensor depending on the required accuracy and the chosen frequency. This work shows a reliable, fast, simple and low-cost manufacturing process to make small humidity sensors with low thermal drift and high temporal stability. These sensors could be easily integrated into inkjet-printed RFID tags for monitoring of environmental humidity in diverse applications.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)123-131
Número de páginas9
PublicaciónSensors and Actuators, B: Chemical
Volumen195
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 1 may. 2014
Publicado de forma externa

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