Mathematical and numerical modelling of piezoelectric sensors

Sebastien Imperiale; Patrick Joly

ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis (2012)

  • Volume: 46, Issue: 4, page 875-909
  • ISSN: 0764-583X

Abstract

top
The present work aims at proposing a rigorous analysis of the mathematical and numerical modelling of ultrasonic piezoelectric sensors. This includes the well-posedness of the final model, the rigorous justification of the underlying approximation and the design and analysis of numerical methods. More precisely, we first justify mathematically the classical quasi-static approximation that reduces the electric unknowns to a scalar electric potential. We next justify the reduction of the computation of this electric potential to the piezoelectric domains only. Particular attention is devoted to the different boundary conditions used to model the emission and reception regimes of the sensor. Finally, an energy preserving finite element/finite difference numerical scheme is developed; its stability is analyzed and numerical results are presented.

How to cite

top

Imperiale, Sebastien, and Joly, Patrick. "Mathematical and numerical modelling of piezoelectric sensors." ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis 46.4 (2012): 875-909. <http://eudml.org/doc/277852>.

@article{Imperiale2012,
abstract = {The present work aims at proposing a rigorous analysis of the mathematical and numerical modelling of ultrasonic piezoelectric sensors. This includes the well-posedness of the final model, the rigorous justification of the underlying approximation and the design and analysis of numerical methods. More precisely, we first justify mathematically the classical quasi-static approximation that reduces the electric unknowns to a scalar electric potential. We next justify the reduction of the computation of this electric potential to the piezoelectric domains only. Particular attention is devoted to the different boundary conditions used to model the emission and reception regimes of the sensor. Finally, an energy preserving finite element/finite difference numerical scheme is developed; its stability is analyzed and numerical results are presented.},
author = {Imperiale, Sebastien, Joly, Patrick},
journal = {ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis},
keywords = {Piezoelectricity; quasi-static approximation; ultrasonic sensors; piezoelectricity; quasi-state approximation; ultrasonic sensor},
language = {eng},
month = {2},
number = {4},
pages = {875-909},
publisher = {EDP Sciences},
title = {Mathematical and numerical modelling of piezoelectric sensors},
url = {http://eudml.org/doc/277852},
volume = {46},
year = {2012},
}

TY - JOUR
AU - Imperiale, Sebastien
AU - Joly, Patrick
TI - Mathematical and numerical modelling of piezoelectric sensors
JO - ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis
DA - 2012/2//
PB - EDP Sciences
VL - 46
IS - 4
SP - 875
EP - 909
AB - The present work aims at proposing a rigorous analysis of the mathematical and numerical modelling of ultrasonic piezoelectric sensors. This includes the well-posedness of the final model, the rigorous justification of the underlying approximation and the design and analysis of numerical methods. More precisely, we first justify mathematically the classical quasi-static approximation that reduces the electric unknowns to a scalar electric potential. We next justify the reduction of the computation of this electric potential to the piezoelectric domains only. Particular attention is devoted to the different boundary conditions used to model the emission and reception regimes of the sensor. Finally, an energy preserving finite element/finite difference numerical scheme is developed; its stability is analyzed and numerical results are presented.
LA - eng
KW - Piezoelectricity; quasi-static approximation; ultrasonic sensors; piezoelectricity; quasi-state approximation; ultrasonic sensor
UR - http://eudml.org/doc/277852
ER -

References

top
  1. N. Abboud, G. Wojcik and D.K. Vaughan, Finite element modeling for ultrasonic transducers. SPIE Int. Symp. Medical Imaging (1998).  
  2. E. Canon and M. Lenczner, Models of elastic plates with piezoelectric inclusions part i : Models without homogenization. Math. Comput. Model.26 (1997) 79–106.  
  3. P. Challande, Optimizing ultrasonic transducers based on piezoelectric composites using a finite-element method. IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Ferroelectr. Freq. Control37 (2002) 135–140.  
  4. G.C. Cohen, Higher-order numerical methods for transient wave equations. Springer (2002).  
  5. E. Dieulesaint and D. Royer, Elastic waves in solids, free and guided propagation. Springer (2000).  
  6. M. Durufle, P. Grob and P. Joly, Influence of gauss and gauss-lobatto quadrature rules on the accuracy of a quadrilateral finite element method in the time domain. Numer. Methods Partial Differ. Equ.25 (2009) 526–551.  
  7. Y. Gómez-Ullate Ricón and F.M. de Espinosa Freijo, Piezoelectric modelling using a time domain finite element program. J. Eur. Ceram. Soc.27 (2007) 4153–4157.  
  8. T. Ikeda, Fundamentals of piezoelectricity. Oxford science publications (1990).  
  9. N.A. Kampanis, V.A. Dougalis and J.A. Ekaterinaris, Effective computational methods for wave propagation. Chapman and Hall/CRC (2008).  
  10. T. Lahrner, M. Kaltenbacher, B. Kaltenbacher, R. Lerch and E. Leder. Fem-based determination of real and complex elastic, dielectric, and piezoelectric moduli in piezoceramic materials. IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Ferroelectr. Freq. Control55 (2008) 465–475.  
  11. R. Lerch, Simulation of piezoelectric devices by two-and three-dimensional finite elements. IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Ferroelectr. Freq. Control37 (2002) 233–247.  
  12. S. Li, Transient wave propagation in a transversely isotropic piezoelectric half space. Z. Angew. Math. Phys.51 (2000) 236–266.  
  13. D. Mercier and S. Nicaise, Existence, uniqueness, and regularity results for piezoelectric systems. SIAM J. Math. Anal.37 (2005) 651–672.  
  14. J. San Miguel, J. Adamowski and F. Buiochi, Numerical modeling of a circular piezoelectric ultrasonic transducer radiating in water. ABCM Symposium Series in Mechatronics2 (2005) 458–464.  
  15. P. Monk, Finite element methods for maxwell’s equations. Oxford science publications (2003).  
  16. J.C. Nédélec, Acoustic and electromagnetic equations : integral representations for harmonic problems. Springer (2001).  
  17. V. Priimenko and M. Vishnevskii, An initial boundary-value problem for model electromagnetoelasticity system. J. Differ. Equ.235 (2007) 31–55.  
  18. L. Schmerr Jr and S.J. Song, Ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation systems. Springer (2007).  
  19. C. Weber and P. Werner, A local compactness theorem for maxwell’s equations. Math. Methods Appl. Sci.2 (1980) 12–25.  

NotesEmbed ?

top

You must be logged in to post comments.

To embed these notes on your page include the following JavaScript code on your page where you want the notes to appear.

Only the controls for the widget will be shown in your chosen language. Notes will be shown in their authored language.

Tells the widget how many notes to show per page. You can cycle through additional notes using the next and previous controls.

    
                

Note: Best practice suggests putting the JavaScript code just before the closing </body> tag.