Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/89281
Title: Coupled finite element-finite volume multi-physics analysis of MEMS electrothermal actuators
Authors: Sciberras, Thomas
Demicoli, Marija
Grech, Ivan
Mallia, Bertram
Mollicone, Pierluigi
Sammut, Nicholas
Keywords: Microelectromechanical systems
Physics
Fluid-structure interaction
Heat -- Convection
Finite element method
Finite volume method
Numerical analysis
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Sciberras, T., Demicoli, M., Grech, I., Mallia, B., Mollicone, P., & Sammut, N. (2022). Coupled finite element-finite volume multi-physics analysis of MEMS electrothermal actuators. Micromachines, 13(1), 8.
Abstract: Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) are the instruments of choice for high-precision manipulation and sensing processes at the microscale. They are, therefore, a subject of interest in many leading industrial and academic research sectors owing to their superior potential in applications requiring extreme precision, as well as in their use as a scalable device. Certain applications tend to require a MEMS device to function with low operational temperatures, as well as within fully immersed conditions in various media and with different flow parameters. This study made use of a V-shaped electrothermal actuator to demonstrate a novel, state-of-the-art numerical methodology with a two-way coupled analysis. This methodology included the effects of fluid–structure interaction between the MEMS device and its surrounding fluid and may be used by MEMS design engineers and analysts at the design stages of their devices for a more robust product. Throughout this study, a thermal–electric finite element model was strongly coupled to a finite volume model to incorporate the spatially varying cooling effects of the surrounding fluid (still air) onto the V-shaped electrothermal device during steady-state operation. The methodology was compared to already established and accepted analysis methods for MEMS electrothermal actuators in still air. The maximum device temperatures for input voltages ranging from 0 V to 10 V were assessed. During the postprocessing routine of the two-way electrothermal actuator coupled analysis, a spatially-varying heat transfer coefficient was evident, the magnitude of which was orders of magnitude larger than what is typically applied to macro-objects operating in similar environmental conditions. The latter phenomenon was correlated with similar findings in the literature.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/89281
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacEngMME
Scholarly Works - InsSE



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