(Press-News.org) Extreme environments in several critical industries – aerospace, energy, transportation and defense – require sensors to measure and monitor numerous factors under harsh conditions to ensure human safety and integrity of mechanical systems.
In the petrochemical industry, for example, pipeline pressures must be monitored at climates ranging from hot desert heat to near arctic cold. Various nuclear reactors operate at a range of 300-1000 degrees Celsius, while deep geothermal wells hold temperatures up to 600 degrees Celsius.
Now a team of University of Houston researchers has developed a new sensor that was proven to work in temperatures as high as 900 degrees Celsius or 1,650 degrees Fahrenheit, which is the temperature mafic volcanic lava, the hottest type of lava on Earth, erupts.
“Highly sensitive, reliable and durable sensors that can tolerate such extreme environments are necessary for the efficiency, maintenance and integrity of these applications,” said Jae-Hyun Ryou, associate professor of mechanical engineering at UH and corresponding author of a study published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials.
The article, which was featured on the cover of the journal, is titled "Piezoelectric Sensors Operating at Very High Temperatures and in Extreme Environments Made of Flexible Ultrawide-Bandgap Single-Crystalline AlN Thin Films.”
Making It Work
The UH research team previously developed III-N piezoelectric pressure sensor using single-crystalline Gallium Nitride, or GaN thin films for harsh-environment applications. However, the sensitivity of the sensor decreases at temperatures higher than 350 degrees Celsius, which is higher than those of conventional transducers made of lead zirconate titanate (PZT), but only marginally.
The team believed the decrease in sensitivity was due to the bandgap – the minimum energy required to excite an electron and supply electrical conductivity – not being wide enough. To test the hypothesis, they developed a sensor with aluminum nitride or AlN.
“The hypothesis was proven by the sensor operating at about 1000 degrees Celsius, which is the highest operation temperature among the piezoelectric sensors,” said Nam-In Kim, first author of the article and a post-doctoral student working with the Ryou group.
While both AlN and GaN have unique and excellent properties that are suitable for use in sensors for extreme environments, the researchers were excited to find that AlN offered a wider bandgap and an even higher temperature range. However, the team had to deal with technical challenges involving the synthesis and fabrication of the high-quality, flexible thin film AlN.
“I have always been interested in making devices using different materials, and I love to characterize various materials. Working in the Ryou group, especially on piezoelectric devices and III-N materials, I was able to use the knowledge I learned in my studies,” said Kim, who earned his Ph.D. in materials science and engineering from UH in 2022. His award-winning dissertation was on flexible piezoelectric sensors for personal health care and extreme environments.
“It was very interesting to see the process leading to the actual results and we solved the technical challenges during the development and demonstration of the sensor,” he added.
What’s Next?
Now that the researchers have successfully demonstrated the potential of the high-temperature piezoelectric sensors with AlN, they will test it further in real-world harsh conditions.
“Our plan is to use the sensor in several harsh scenarios. For example, in nuclear plants for neutron exposure and hydrogen storage to test under high pressure,” Ryou said. “AlN sensors can operate in neutron-exposed atmospheres and at very high-pressure ranges thanks to its stable material properties.”
The flexibility of the sensor offers additional advantages that will make it useful for future applications in the form of wearable sensors in personal health care monitoring products and for use in precise-sensing soft robotics.
The researchers look forward to their sensor being commercially viable at some point in the future. “It's hard to put a specific date on when that might be, but I think it's our job as engineers to make it happen as soon as possible,” Kim said.
END
UH researchers develop sensors that operate at high temperatures and in extreme environments
Sensitive, reliable and durable sensors created for multiple industries
2023-05-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Artificial intelligence catalyzes gene activation research and uncovers rare DNA sequences
2023-05-19
Artificial intelligence has exploded across our news feeds, with ChatGPT and related AI technologies becoming the focus of broad public scrutiny. Beyond popular chatbots, biologists are finding ways to leverage AI to probe the core functions of our genes.
Previously, University of California San Diego researchers who investigate DNA sequences that switch genes on used artificial intelligence to identify an enigmatic puzzle piece tied to gene activation, a fundamental process involved in growth, ...
Promoting lower-calorie options on delivery apps could help users select healthier options, randomized trials find
2023-05-19
Simple initiatives to help people select lower-calorie options when ordering takeaways in delivery apps could help tackle the obesity epidemic, suggest three randomised trials being presented at this year’s European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Dublin, Ireland (17-20 May).
The research, which involved using a simulated food delivery app, found that interventions which positioned lower-calorie foods and restaurants more prominently, pre-selected smaller portions by default, and displayed calorie labels, all significantly reduced the ...
Individuals who feel safe where they live lose more weight, Dutch study finds
2023-05-19
Feeling safe where you live may be key to weight loss, the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Dublin, Ireland (17-20 May) will hear.
Preliminary Dutch research has shown that the feeling of safety in one's neighbourhood is linked to greater weight loss when taking part in lifestyle interventions.
The term “neighbourhood safety” covered four dimensions: not feeling afraid of crime or harassment while walking through the neighbourhood, feeling safe while walking or cycling due to heavy traffic, adequate street lighting during ...
New analysis shows improved body composition with tirzepatide is consistent across adult age groups with overweight or obesity
2023-05-19
A new analysis of SURMOUNT-1, the first Phase 3 study of tirzepatide in adults for chronic weight management shows that tirzepatide improves body composition across a range of adult age groups. The analysis is presented by Dr Louis Aronne, Comprehensive Weight Control Center, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, USA, and colleagues.
The efficacy and safety of tirzepatide, a glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) ...
Whole body cryostimulation may be a useful extra treatment for obesity
2023-05-19
Whole body cryostimulation is a useful “add-on” treatment for obesity, research being presented at the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Dublin, Ireland (17-20 May) suggests.
Levels of cholesterol and other blood fats improved twice as much in individuals living with obesity who were exposed to extreme cold for a short period of time, compared with individuals given a sham treatment.
Those who had whole body cryostimulation (WBC) also experienced a greater reduction in waist circumference and in blood sugar levels.
Dr Jacopo Fontana, of the Istituto Auxologico ...
Boys need ‘lessons in bromance’ to tackle mental health crisis in schools
2023-05-19
Teenage boys are twice as likely as girls to die by suicide, and, when boys become men, they are three times more likely than women to die by suicide.
After years on the frontline of teaching and observing, first-hand, a decline in teenage mental health, a teacher has warned that we need to deal better with male anger, friendships, and attitudes towards sex in order to combat the male suicide crisis.
Official statistics for England, Scotland, and Wales show that in 2020, 264 people aged 10–19 died by suicide – 72% of these were boys. In England, suicide is the single biggest killer of men under ...
A ribosomal traffic jam that breaks the heart
2023-05-19
Fukuoka, Japan—A team of researchers have discovered that a mutation in a ribosomal protein found specifically in heart and skeletal muscle leads to impaired cardiac contractility in mice.
The mutation was found to delay the rate of translating mRNA, leading to ribosomes colliding and causing protein folding abnormalities. The abnormal proteins would then be targeted and degraded by the cell's quality control system. Moreover, while the deficiency in the ribosomal protein, known as RPL3L, altered translation dynamics for the entire tissue, ...
Illinois Tech project receives $1.6 million contract to develop system for authorship attribution and anonymization
2023-05-18
CHICAGO—May 18, 2023—Researchers at Illinois Institute of Technology have secured a $1.6 million contract to develop a groundbreaking system for authentic authorship attribution and anonymization. Using natural language processing and machine learning, the program, known as AUTHOR, promises to create “stylistic fingerprints” for reliable identification, while also providing robust solutions for anonymization. With broad applications including counterintelligence, combating misinformation, and even investigating the origins of ancient religious texts, the project marks a significant leap in computational analysis.
The project—a collaboration ...
Wayne State University receives grant to address health care and costs in state prisons
2023-05-18
DETROIT – Wayne State University faculty member Rodlescia Sneed, Ph.D. has been awarded a five-year Career Development grant from the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health. Sneed joined the Institute of Gerontology at WSU in 2022 as an assistant professor jointly appointed with the Department of Psychology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The nearly $600,000 award, Maximizing the Scalability of the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) Among Older Adults in State Correctional Settings, is aimed to deepen her training ...
Catching foodborne illness early
2023-05-18
Produce such as lettuce and spinach is routinely tested for foodborne pathogenic bacteria like salmonella, listeria monocytogenes and pathogenic types of E. coli in an effort to protect consumers from getting sick.
Rapid testing of foods may occur, but it still takes time to figure out who is sick and from where the contaminated product originated. That’s far too late for the many Americans who already ate the produce. The current solution, often a multi-state recall, then becomes damage control.
University of Delaware researchers want to spot these bacteria before anyone ever falls ill. As detailed in an article published ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New design tackles heat challenges in high-power fiber lasers
Rapid fabrication of self-propelled, steerable magnetic microcatheters for precision medicine
Poor kidney health linked to higher levels of Alzheimer’s biomarkers in blood
A metamaterial that bridges air and water
Evaluating building materials for climate impact and noise suppression
Scores of dinosaurs walked and swam along a Bolivian shoreline
Captive bottlenose dolphins vary vocalizations during enrichment activities
Adults who want children favor older-looking partners (but not for their money), study suggests
Authoritative parenting styles are associated with better mental health and self-esteem among adolescents, while authoritarian parenting styles are associated with depression and lower self-esteem and
A rose by any other name? Not necessarily—how words sound aesthetically correlates with their memorability, study finds
The odds of iron deficiency in adolescent girls are almost 14 times higher among those who experience heavy menstruation and follow a meat-restricted diet, compared to girls with normal menstruation w
Sperm tails and male infertility: Critical protein revealed by ultrastructure microscope
Bumblebees launch a three-stage defensive response when their nest is disturbed
Experimental drug repairs DNA damage caused by disease
Study shows common childhood virus can drive bladder cancer development
New test distinguishes vaccine-induced false positives from active HIV infection
Becoming human in southern Africa: What ancient hunter-gatherer genomes reveal
The transformation of adult heart transplantation in the United States and Western Europe
American Physical Society launches APS Open Science to expand global participation in trusted physics research
Family dogs boost adolescent mental health through the microbiome
Prehab can improve recovery after surgery, but barriers remain
Ten-thousand-year-old genomes from southern Africa change picture of human evolution
NeuMap: a pioneering map of neutrophils that redefines their role in health, infection, and inflammation
KATRIN tightens the net around the elusive sterile neutrino
Antipsychotic medication use by older adults
Statewide analysis quantifies life-saving potential of stop the bleed
Complex life developed earlier than previously thought, new study reveals
Semaglutide and early-stage metabolic abnormalities in individuals with schizophrenia spectrum disorders
Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School receive National Rare Disease Center of Excellence recognition
The Mohn Prize for 2026 awarded to Canadian John Smol
[Press-News.org] UH researchers develop sensors that operate at high temperatures and in extreme environmentsSensitive, reliable and durable sensors created for multiple industries





