Abstract

The traditional procedure followed by winemakers for monitoring grape must fermentation is not automated, has not enough accuracy or has only been tested in discrete must samples. In order to contribute to the automation and improvement of the wine fermentation process, we have designed an AlN-based piezoelectric microresonator, serving as a density sensor and being excited in the 4th-order roof tile-shaped vibration mode. Furthermore, conditioning circuits were designed to convert the one-port impedance of the resonator into a resonant two-port transfer function. This allowed us to design a Phase Locked Loop-based oscillator circuit, implemented with a commercial lock-in amplifier with an oscillation frequency determined by the vibrating mode. We were capable of measuring the fermentation kinetics by both tracking the resonance frequency and by determining the quality factor measurements of the microresonator. Moreover, the resonator was calibrated with an artificial model solution of grape must and then applied for the monitoring of real grape must fermentation. Our results demonstrate the high potential of MEMS resonators to detect the decrease in sugar and the increase in ethanol concentrations during the grape must fermentation with a resolution of 100 μg/ml and a sensitivity of 0.16 Hz/μg/ml as upper limits.

Details

Title
Piezoelectric MEMS resonators for monitoring grape must fermentation
Author
Toledo, J 1 ; Jiménez-Márquez, F 1 ; Úbeda, J 2 ; Ruiz-Díez, V 1 ; Pfusterschmied, G 3 ; Schmid, U 3 ; Sánchez-Rojas, J L 1 

 Microsystems, Actuators and Sensors Group, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Ciudad Real, Spain 
 Tecnología de los Alimentos, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Ciudad Real, Spain 
 Institute of Sensor and Actuator Systems, TU Wien, Vienna, Austria 
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Oct 2016
Publisher
IOP Publishing
ISSN
17426588
e-ISSN
17426596
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2575249722
Copyright
© 2016. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.