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Lead-Free Sodium Potassium Niobate-Based Multilayer Structures for Ultrasound Transducer Applications.

Danjela KuscerBrigita KmetSilvo DrnovšekJulien BustilloFranck Levassort
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Thick films with nominal composition (K 0 . 5 Na 0 . 5 ) 0 . 99 Sr 0 . 005 NbO 3 (KNNSr) on porous ceramics with identical nominal composition were investigated as potential candidates for environmentally benign ultrasonic transducers composed entirely of inorganic materials. In this paper, the processing of the multilayer structure, namely, the thick film by screen printing and the porous ceramic by sacrificial template method, is related to their phase composition, microstructure, electromechanical, and acoustic properties to understand the performance of the devices. The ceramic with a homogeneous distribution of 8 μm pores had a sufficiently high attenuation coefficient of 0.5 dB/mm/MHz and served as an effective backing. The KNNSr thick films sintered at 1100 °C exhibited a homogeneous microstructure and a relative density of 97%, contributing to a large dielectric permittivity and elastic constant and yielding a thickness coupling factor k t of ~30%. The electroacoustic response of the multilayer structure in water provides a centre frequency of 15 MHz and a very large fractional bandwidth (BW) of 127% at -6 dB. The multilayer structure is a candidate for imaging applications operating above 15 MHz, especially by realising focused-beam structure through lenses to further increase the sensitivity in the focal zone.
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