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Fabry-Perot Pressure Sensors Based on Polycrystalline Diamond Membranes.

Sara PettinatoDaniele BarettinVadim S SedovVictor RalchenkoStefano Salvatori
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Pressure sensors based on diamond membranes were designed and tested for gas pressure measurement up to 6.8 MPa. The diamond film (2" diameter, 6 μm thickness)-grown by microwave plasma chemical vapor deposition on a silicon substrate-was a starting material to produce an array of membranes with different diameters in the 130-400 μm range, in order to optimize the sensor performance. Each 5 mm × 5 mm sensing element was obtained by subsequent silicon slicing. The fixed film thickness, full-scale pressure range, and sensor sensitivity were established by a proper design of the diameter of diamond membrane which represents the sensing element for differential pressure measurement. The pressure-induced deflection of the membrane was optically measured using a Fabry-Pérot interferometer formed by a single mode optical fiber front surface and the deflecting diamond film surface. The optical response of the system was numerically simulated using geometry and the elastic properties of the diamond diaphragm, and was compared with the experiments. Depending on the diamond membrane's diameter, the fabricated sensors displayed a good modulation depth of response over different full-scale ranges, from 3 to 300 bar. In view of the excellent mechanical, thermal, and chemical properties of diamond, such pressure sensors could be useful for performance in a harsh environment.
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