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Negative-stiffness
vibration isolators provide a significant improvement over air tables in
vibration-sensitive environments
Although air tables have
been around for the better part of a half-century, their usefulness as
an efficient method for vibration isolation is now being seriously
challenged by the more compact and effective Negative-Stiffness
vibration isolators
by Jim McMahon
For almost forty years
pneumatic vibration isolators have been the mainstay for stabilizing
industrial and academia’s most critical micro-engineering
instrumentation. But, just as technology has been steadily migrating
from micro to nano, so has the need for more precise vibration isolation
in microelectronics fabrication, industrial laser/optical systems and
biological research. These so called “passive system” air tables are now
being seriously challenged by the newer Negative-Stiffness vibration
isolators. Negative-Stiffness isolation is rapidly gaining popularity in
industrial and laboratory environments, and to no small degree because
of its ability to effectively isolate vibration in diverse and
challenging environments.
An isolator is used to solve
a problem, and how bad the problem is determines the solution you need.
Since the 1960’s air tables have been used for isolation. Basically cans
of air, they are still the most popular isolators used. But, air tables
with resonant frequencies at 2 to 2-1/2 Hz can typically only handle
vibrations down to about 8 to 10 Hz, not quite low enough for optimum
performance with modern nano-equipment. Also, greater isolation
efficiencies are needed in the frequency ranges air isolators can
handle.
For purposes of clarity in
scanning probe microscopes and interferometers, air tables are an
inefficient isolation solution. The air systems have been adequate up
until a few years ago when better isolation was required.
Because of its very high
isolation efficiencies, Negative-Stiffness vibration isolation systems
enable vibration-sensitive instruments such as scanning probe
microscopes, micro-hardness testers, profilers and scanning electron
microscopes to operate in harsh conditions and severe vibration
environments that would not be practical with top-performance air tables
and other pneumatic isolation systems.
How Negative-Stiffness
Vibration Isolation Works
Negative-Stiffness isolators employ a unique - and completely mechanical
- concept in low-frequency vibration isolation. Vertical-motion
isolation is provided by a stiff spring that supports a weight load,
combined with a Negative-Stiffness mechanism. The net vertical stiffness
is made very low without affecting the static load-supporting capability
of the spring. Beam-columns connected in series with the vertical-motion
isolator provide horizontal-motion isolation. The horizontal stiffness
of the beam-columns is reduced by the "beam-column" effect. (A
beam-column behaves as a spring combined with a Negative-Stiffness
mechanism.) The result is a compact passive isolator capable of very low
vertical and horizontal natural frequencies and very high internal
structural frequencies. The isolators (adjusted to 1/2 Hz) achieve 93%
isolation efficiency at 2 Hz; 99% at 5 Hz; and 99.7% at 10 Hz.
Negative-Stiffness
versus Air Isolation
Following are ten key points which demonstrate the benefits of
Negative-Stiffness isolators compared to air isolation systems:
#1: Low Hertz Perturbations
An air table will amplify vibrations in a typical range of 2 to 7Hz,
this is because of the natural frequencies where air tables resonate.
All isolators will amplify at their resonant frequency, and then they
will start isolating. So, with an air table, any vibration in that range
could not only fail to be mitigated, it could be amplified. The low
cycle perturbations would just come straight through to the instrument.
Negative-Stiffness isolators
resonate at 0.5Hz. At this frequency there is almost no energy present.
It would be very unusual to find a significant vibration at 0.5Hz.
#2: Image Clarity
Negative-Stiffness vibration isolation can reduce vibration noise levels
in Atomic Force Microscopes, for example, by a factor of 2 to 3 when
compared with top-performance air tables. This is particularly
significant for noise levels in the sub-Angstrom range. This results in
clearer images and features not discernable with pneumatic isolation
systems.
#3: Severe Vibration Environments
As nano-equipment use becomes more prevalent, lab sites are being set up
in much more severe vibration-prone environments, such as upper floors
of buildings and clean rooms. Such severe vibration locations are too
extreme for pneumatic isolators to effectively do their job.
But Negative-Stiffness
isolators perform well in such environments, producing much better
images and data than can be obtained with even the best high-performance
air tables.
#4: Harsh Environments - Vacuums, High/Low Temperature Extremes,
Radiation
Air tables are not particularly compatible when it comes to operating in
vacuums, extreme high and low temperatures, and radiation. Yet these
harsh operating environments are often necessary when conducting
research and testing, such as with cryogenic chambers in semiconductor
research.
All metal Negative-Stiffness
systems can be configured which are compatible with high vacuums and
other adverse environments, such as extreme high and low temperatures,
and radiation. With vacuums, for example, Negative-Stiffness isolators
can be used right inside the vacuum chambers. This offers other
advantages such as much lower payload weights, more compact systems, and
eliminates problems associated with vacuum chamber feed-through.
#5: Compressed Air
Air tables require a constant supply of compressed air. This requires
either a dedicated compressed air line to be plumbed in to your lab, a
tank of pressurized gas or a small compressor.
Even if you are lucky enough
to have a dedicated compressed air line your table’s location is still
limited by the length of air line you have. Large tanks of compressed
gas have to be mounted very securely to minimize their danger. Changing
the tanks can be quite difficult and inconvenient as well. Compressors
are sources of both mechanical and acoustic noise and are very poor
choices from a vibration standpoint.
If you can get your nano-environment
mechanically isolated without having to deal with compressed air to run
your vibration isolator, then you will be better off. The nice thing
about Negative-Stiffness isolators is they do not require compressed
air. They operate purely in a mechanical mode. One less thing you have
to worry about when you are setting up your lab and working in it.
#6: Location Selection for Vibration-Sensitive Equipment
Let’s face it, air tables are big, bulky structures, they take up a lot
of lab space. The high-performance air tables are even bigger. This can
become a limiting factor when laying out the equipment in your lab.
Negative-Stiffness isolators
are available in high-performance bench top configurations, considerably
more compact than air tables and easy to move around. They are also
available as workstations, tables and floor platforms where these
configurations are required.
#7: Load Adjustment
Low-frequency passive vibration isolators are somewhat sensitive to
small changes in weight loads, as well as to large displacements.
Pneumatic systems utilize leveling valves to mitigate the problem.
Negative-Stiffness isolators
provide a very simple manual adjustment to accommodate variations in
weight loads. For applications where manual load adjustment is not
practical they provide an auto-adjust system that maintains the isolator
in a precise vertical equilibrium position.
#8: Scanning Probe Microscopes
Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPMs) have vibration isolation requirements
that are unparalleled in the metrology world. The vertical axis is the
most sensitive for most SPMs. They can also be quite sensitive to
vibrations in the horizontal axes. In order to achieve the lowest
possible noise floor, on the order of an Angstrom, isolation is always
used.
Bench top air systems
provide limited isolation vertically and very little isolation
horizontally. Negative-Stiffness isolators provide increased isolation
performance for SPMs over air tables, while offering better ease-of-use
and no facility requirements.
Negative-Stiffness isolators
have the flexibility of custom tailoring resonant frequencies vertically
and horizontally.
#9: Laser/Optical Equipment
Laser and optical systems, whether used in an academic lab or in an
industrial environment, are very susceptible to vibrations from the
environment. These instruments almost always need vibration isolation.
Traditionally, large air tables have been the isolators preferred for
optical systems, but Negative-Stiffness isolators are becoming a popular
choice. Negative-Stiffness isolators provide 10 to100 times the
performance of air tables, depending on the vibration frequency.
Laser based interferometers
are extremely sensitive devices that are capable of resolving nanometer
scale motions and features. They often have very long mechanical paths
which makes them even more sensitive to vibrations. The sophisticated
modern ellipsometry techniques that allow this high performance rely on
low noise to be able to detect fringe movement. Properly isolating an
interferometer will allow it to provide the highest possible resolution.
Optical profilers have
similar sensitivity to vibrations. Optical component systems are often
quite complex. The long optical paths can lead to angular magnification
of vibrations. Optical air tables can make the problems worse since they
have a resonant frequency that often matches that of floor vibrations.
Negative-Stiffness 0.5Hz isolators provide isolation in these
environments when air tables simply cannot.
#10: Maintenance and Expense
Because Negative-Stiffness isolators utilize simple elastic structures
and viscoelastic materials that deform, their isolation performance does
not degrade with micromotions typical of laboratory floors and
fabrication rooms, as do conventional pneumatic isolators.
Cost-wise,
Negative-Stiffness isolators are comparably priced to air isolators or
lower priced for many applications.
The Need for a Better
Vibration Isolation Solution
The need for vibration isolation will continue to increase in importance
as the precision of research and test applications embraces smaller and
smaller magnitudes of scale.
As industrial researchers
and universities continue to broaden their nano-tech work, necessitating
more sensitive equipment and expanded lab facilities,
vibration-handicapped environments will become more prevalent, and a
better vibration isolation solution will be required than what has been
available for the past almost half-century with air tables. It appears
Negative-Stiffness vibration isolation will fill that void.
Dr. David L. Platus is the
inventor of negative-stiffness mechanism vibration isolation systems,
and President and Founder of
Minus K Technology, Inc.
He earned a B.S. and a Ph.D. in Engineering from UCLA, and a diploma
from the Oak Ridge School of (Nuclear) Reactor Technology. Prior to
founding Minus K Technology he worked in the nuclear, aerospace and
defense industries conducting and directing analysis and design projects
in structural-mechanical systems. He became an independent consultant in
1988. Dr. Platus holds over 20 patents related to shock and vibration
isolation.
Minus K Technology, Inc. was
founded in 1993 to develop, manufacture and market state-of-the-art
vibration isolation products based on the company’s patented
negative-stiffness-mechanism technology. Minus K products, sold under
the trade name Nano-KŪ, are used in a broad spectrum of applications
including nanotechnology, biological sciences, semiconductors, materials
research, zero-g simulation of spacecraft, and high-end audio. The
company is an OEM supplier to leading manufactures of scanning probe
microscopes, micro-hardness testers and other vibration-sensitive
instruments and equipment. Minus K customers include private companies
and more than 150 leading universities and government laboratories in 25
countries.
For more information
please contact Brian Crowley, Minus K Technology, Inc.; 420 South Hindry
Ave., Unit E; Inglewood, CA 90301; Phone: 310-348-9656; Fax:
310-348-9638; email: sales@minusk.com;
www.minusk.com.
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