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High temperature, high power piezoelectric composite transducers

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posted on 2024-11-15, 11:06 authored by Hyeong Jae Lee, Shujun ZhangShujun Zhang, Yoseph Bar-Cohen, Stewart Sherrit
Piezoelectric composites are a class of functional materials consisting of piezoelectric active materials and non-piezoelectric passive polymers, mechanically attached together to form different connectivities. These composites have several advantages compared to conventional piezoelectric ceramics and polymers, including improved electromechanical properties, mechanical flexibility and the ability to tailor properties by using several different connectivity patterns. These advantages have led to the improvement of overall transducer performance, such as transducer sensitivity and bandwidth, resulting in rapid implementation of piezoelectric composites in medical imaging ultrasounds and other acoustic transducers. Recently, new piezoelectric composite transducers have been developed with optimized composite components that have improved thermal stability and mechanical quality factors, making them promising candidates for high temperature, high power transducer applications, such as therapeutic ultrasound, high power ultrasonic wirebonding, high temperature non-destructive testing, and downhole energy harvesting. This paper will present recent developments of piezoelectric composite technology for high temperature and high power applications. The concerns and limitations of using piezoelectric composites will also be discussed, and the expected future research directions will be outlined. 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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Citation

Lee, H., Zhang, S., Bar-Cohen, Y. & Sherrit, S. (2014). High temperature, high power piezoelectric composite transducers. Sensors, 14 (8), 14526-14552.

Journal title

Sensors (Switzerland)

Volume

14

Issue

8

Pagination

14526-14552

Language

English

RIS ID

126038

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