Piezoelectric
Effect
What is the Piezoelectric Effect?
This basics-of-design-type of article traces the beginnings of
piezoelectricity, and how different materials have advanced its effect on
today's electronics.
Electronic
Design
Piezoelectricity was
discovered by two French scientists’ brothers, Jacques and Pierre Curie, in
1880.
They found out about
piezoelectricity after first realizing that pressure applied to quartz or even
some certain crystals creates an electrical charge in that certain material.
They later referred to that strange and scientific phenomenon as the piezoelectric effect.
The Curie brothers soon
discovered the inverse piezoelectric effect.
It was after they verified
that when an electric field was enforced onto crystal leads, it led to the
malformation or disorder to the crystal lead — now called the inverse
piezoelectric effect.
The term piezoelectricity
comes from the Greek word piezo meaning to squeeze or press.
Interestingly, electric
in Greek means amber. Amber also happened to be a source of electrical charge.
Many electronic devices today
use piezoelectricity.
For example, when you use
some type of voice-recognition software, or even Siri on your smartphone, the
microphone that you’re speaking into is probably using piezoelectricity.
That piezo crystal turns the
sound energy in your voice, and changes it into electrical signals for your
computer or your phone to interpret. That all becomes possible with
piezoelectricity.
The creation of various
more-advanced technologies can be traced to discovery of piezoelectricity.
For example, the powerful
sonar “sonobuoy” small sensitive microphones, and the ceramic audio tone
transducer, were made possible by piezoelectricity.
Today we’re seeing the
development of ever-more piezoelectric materials and devices.
Direct Piezoelectric Effect
As stated, compressing a
piezoelectric material produces electricity (piezoelectricity). Figure 1
explains the concept.
1. The piezoelectric effect occurs through compression
of a piezoelectric material.
Piezoceramic material — non-conductive
piezoelectric ceramic or crystal — is placed between the two metal plates.
For piezoelectricity to be
generated, it needs that material to be compressed or squeezed. Mechanical
stress applied to piezoelectric ceramic material generates electricity.
As shown in Fig. 1, there’s a
voltage potential across the material. The two metal plates sandwich the piezo
crystal.
The metal plates collect the
charges, which creates/produces voltage (lightning bolt symbol), i.e.,
piezoelectricity.
In this way, the
piezoelectric effect acts like a miniature battery, because it produces
electricity. This is the direct piezoelectric effect.
Devices that use the direct piezoelectric effect include microphones, pressure sensors, hydrophones, and many other sensing types of devices.
Inverse Piezoelectric Effect
The piezoelectric effect can
be reversed, which is referred to as the inverse piezoelectric effect.
This is created by applying
electrical voltage to make a piezoelectric crystal shrink or expand (Fig. 2).
The inverse piezoelectric
effect converts electrical energy to mechanical energy.
2. Reversal of the piezoelectric effect, called the
inverse piezoelectric effect, is when voltage is applied to shrink or expand a
piezoelectric crystal.
Using the inverse
piezoelectric effect can help develop devices that generate and produce
acoustic sound waves.
Examples of piezoelectric
acoustic devices are speakers (commonly found in handheld devices) or buzzers.
The advantage of having such
speakers is that they are very thin, which makes them useful in a range of
phones.
Even medical ultrasound and
sonar transducers use reverse piezoelectric effect. Non-acoustic inverse
piezoelectric devices include motors and actuators.
Piezoelectric Materials
Piezoelectric materials are
materials that can produce electricity due to mechanical stress, such as
compression. These materials can also deform when voltage (electricity) is
applied.
All piezoelectric materials
are non-conductive in order for the piezoelectric effect to occur and work.
They can be separated into two groups: crystals and ceramics.
Some examples of
piezoelectric materials are PZT (also known as lead zirconate titanate), barium
titanate, and lithium niobate.
These man-made materials have
a more pronounced effect (better material to use) than quartz and other natural
piezoelectric materials.
Compare PZT to quartz. PZT
can produce more voltage for the same amount of applied mechanical stress.
Conversely, applying voltage
to PZT instead of quartz provides more movement. Quartz, a well-known
piezoelectric material, is also the first known piezoelectric material.
PZT is created and produced
(under high temperatures) with two chemical elements — lead and zirconium — and
combined with a chemical compound called titanate.
PZT’s chemical formula is
(Pb[Zr(x)Ti(1-x)]O3).
It is commonly used to produce
ultrasounds transducers, ceramic capacitors, and other sensors and actuators.
It also evinces a special
range of different properties. In 1952, PZT was manufactured by Tokyo Institute
of Technology.
Barium titanate is a
ferroelectric ceramic material with piezoelectric properties.
For that reason, barium
titanate has been used as a piezoelectric material longer than most others. Its
chemical formula is BaTiO3.
Barium titanate was
discovered in 1941 during World War II.
Lithium niobate is a compound
that combines oxygen, lithium, and niobium. Its chemical formula is LiNbO3.
Also a ferroelectric ceramic
material it’s just like barium titanate in that it has piezoelectric
properties, too.
Piezoelectric Devices
Sonar
Sonar, which arrived in the
1900s, was invented by Lewis Nixon. He initially developed sonar to help detect
icebergs. Interest in sonar rose during World War I, though, to help locate
submarines underwater.
Of course, sonar has many
purposes and uses today, from locating fish to underwater navigation and so on.
3. With piezoelectric sonar, a transmitter using the
inverse piezoelectric effect sends out a sound wave to search for objects
ahead.
In Figure 3, sonar is sending
out, via transmitter, a sound wave (signal) to search for objects ahead.
The transmitter uses inverse
piezoelectric effect, which is when the transmitter will use voltage to help it
send out a sound wave.
Once the sound wave hits an
object, it will bounce back. The sound wave that bounces back will be detected
by the receiver.
The receiver, unlike the
transmitter, uses the direct piezoelectric effect. The receiver piezoelectric
device gets compressed by the returning sound wave.
It sends the signal (voltage)
to the signal-processing electronics, which will take that bounced-back sound
wave and begin processing it.
It will determine the
object’s distance by calculating the timing signals from the transmitter and
the receiver.
Piezoelectric Actuators
Figure 4 shows the operation
of a piezoelectric actuator.
The base stays still and acts
like the metal plate that sandwiches the middle piezoelectric material.
Then voltage is applied to
the material, which expands and contracts from the applied voltage’s electric
field.
The piezo crystal moves very
little, whether forward or backward. Once the piezo material or crystal moves,
it slowly pushes and pulls the actuator.
4. In a piezoelectric actuator, voltage is applied to
the piezoelectric material, causing expansion and contraction.
The piezoelectric actuator
has many uses and applications.
For example, knitting
machinery and braille machines use these actuators, since they have such a
small amount of moving parts and a very simple design.
They can even be found in
video cameras and cellular phones, because they are proven most proficient as
an auto-focusing mechanism.
Piezoelectric Speakers and Buzzers
Piezoelectric speakers and
buzzers use the inverse piezoelectric effect to generate and produce sound.
When voltage is applied to
speakers and buzzers, it creates sound waves (Fig. 2, again).
An audio voltage signal
applied to the piezoelectric ceramic of speakers or buzzers will cause the
material to vibrate the air.
That vibration produces sound
waves, which come out of the speaker.
Piezoelectric speakers are
commonly used in alarm clocks or other small mechanical devices to generate
simple, high-quality audio sounds.
That’s because they are
limited to a small amount of frequency response.
Piezo Drivers
Piezo drivers can convert low
battery voltage into high voltage to power piezoelectric devices.
Piezo drivers are very
important, because they help engineers produce more voltage to create larger
sine waves.
5. A piezo driver converts low battery voltage to
higher voltage, which is used to power an amplifier that drives the device. An
oscillator inputs small sine waves that the amplifier turns into larger sine
waves.
Figure 5 is a block diagram
that illustrates piezo-driver operation. Piezo drivers will take low battery
voltage and use a booster to convert it to higher voltage.
The higher voltage is then
used to power the amplifier. The oscillator will input small sine waves, which
the amplifier will change into larger voltage sine waves.
The amplifier drives the piezo device.
The table below lists of several different companies that sell and produce various kinds of piezo drivers.
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