Paper accelerometers...wot the?

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Daniel JAMES

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Feb 14, 2011, 7:26:56 PM2/14/11
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4 February 2011—Tiny microscale accelerometers revolutionized car air-bag deployment systems in the mid-1990s. Costing a few dollars apiece and just a few millimeters wide, these sensitive microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) devices carved from silicon replaced a bulky, multicomponent deployment system that used to cost more than US $50.
Now researchers at Harvard have fashioned a MEMS force sensor that’s so cheap it could be disposable. It’s made from paper, and each one costs four cents. The team presented the design and experimental results of the device at the IEEE MEMS 2011 conference last week.
The new device emulates the piezoresistive silicon MEMS sensors that are at the heart of many modern accelerometers. Piezoresistance is the change in resistivity when a material is under mechanical stress. Aside from air-bag deployment, MEMS accelerometers are used to monitor vibrations in buildings and bridges, to triggerhard-disk protection in falling laptops, and to sense motion in iPhones and Wii remotes.

something to incorperate into our plastic monitoring technology to drive the cost even lower?




Dr. Daniel James

Queensland Sports Technology Cluster
Centre for Wireless Monitoring and Applications, Griffith University
Centre of Excellence for Applied Sport Science Research, Queensland Academy of Sport
http://sportsbioengineering.com , follow on facebook, twitter,subscribe vial email


"..and if the traveller is fortunate....the destination is two miles father away for every mile he or she travels", G.Leonard
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