Fabrication of Sensitive MEMS-based Magnetometer for Biomagnetic Applications

ORAL

Abstract

The electrocardiogram (ECG) is the standard method of heart disease detection but is inconveniently sized and susceptible to conductive tissue noise and signal attenuation by filtering. Additionally, the superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) systems operate in vacuum, are expensive and large, and are rivaled by atomic magnetometers (AMs), which are compact and sensitive but limited by spin relaxation. Here we report the development and fabrication of a MEMS-based, 100pT/cm sensitive, inexpensive magnetometer device, which may overcome the mentioned limitations. The device measures gradient fields by detecting magnetic force exerted on a commercial MEMS capacitive accelerometer through the coupled micro-sized, permanent magnet. Present limitations of this device are fabrication throughput and magnet characterization. Here we discuss characterization by a vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM) and obstacles in a custom micro-gluing technique.

*This work was jointly supported by CELL-MET, an NSF Engineering Research Center, under award number 1647837 and by the Center for Engineering Mechanobiology (CEMB), an NSF Science and Technology Center, under grant agreement CMMI: 15-48571

Presenters

  • Zainab Batool

    • Department of Physics, Bryn Mawr College

Authors

  • Zainab Batool

    • Department of Physics, Bryn Mawr College
  • Ralitsa Mihaylova

    • Department of Physics, Bryn Mawr College
  • Andy Clark

    • Bryn Mawr College
    • Department of Physics, Bryn Mawr College
    • physics, university of byrn mawr
  • Josh Javor

    • Boston University
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Boston University
  • Xuemei Cheng

    • Bryn Mawr College
    • Department of Physics, Bryn Mawr College
    • physics, university of byrn mawr
  • David John Bishop

    • Boston University
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Boston University