While accelerometers are the current leaders in commercially successful MEMS technology, other inertial devices such as rate gyroscopes are poised for a similar success. In addition to high-volume markets for automotive crash sensors, there are niche markets for high-resolution seismic sensing and high-g sensors. This article presents an overview of the designs and operating principles of some MEMS inertial devices. Accelerometers Among the specifications to consider when choosing an accelerometer are bandwidth, noise floor, cross-axis sensitivity, drift, linearity, dynamic range, shock survivability, and power consumption. Resonant frequency is also important because the sensor's upper useful frequency range is usually some fraction of its resonant frequency, which also determines its sensitivity and displacement per g of acceleration:
where:
In general, the displacement of a sensing element is an essential part of the sensing process, and dgis part of the open-loop gain of the sensor, so there tends to be a strong inverse relationship between sensitivity and bandwidth for any class of sensors. Noise. There are many contributors to noise in an accelerometer—the sensor itself, the readout electronics, mechanical damping, and all electrical resistances. MEMS sensors are so small that the Johnson noise of the devices' mechanical resistance must be considered, while it is usually ignored in larger sensors. Just as Brownian motion agitates bacteria and dust motes, it can be a large force on a tiny MEMS component. The Brownian force is [2,3]:
which causes Brownian motion of the proof mass, xB:
where:
Solving for the acceleration that generates the same motion, xB, and substituting:
gives the Brownian equivalent acceleration noise in g/ Hz:
From Equation 4 we see that a large mass and a high Q (low damping) help achieve a low noise floor. To achieve a large mass in a micromachined sensor typically requires a wafer-thick proof mass carved out of the sensor chip. For absolute minimum noise, the damping constant must be reduced by suspending the proof mass in a vacuum from purely elastic springs. Feedback prevents the sensor from ringing at its resonant frequency. Examples. Analog Devices manufactures a family of surface micromachined accelerometers with polysilicon as the structural and
proof mass elements. The 2-micron-thick polysilicon layer is deposited on a sacrificial layer of SiO2 that is removed in a final release step with hydrofluoric acid. One advantage of this technique is that it can be combined with a CMOS or BiMOS process, allowing the entire system (electronics plus sensor) to be inexpensively integrated on one chip. The ADXL202E (see Figure 1), a low-cost, low-power (2 μA per axis), 2-axis accelerometer with a range of ±2 g, can measure both dynamic (vibration) and static acceleration (gravity). The outputs are duty cycle modulated signals, with duty cycles proportional to the acceleration in each of the two sensitive axes. The surface micromachining process developed at U.C. Berkeley in the early 1980s was at the time restricted to about two microns of structural polysilicon. In response to the stress and stress gradients that limited the size and flatness of these MEMS structures, alternative fabrication techniques were developed that yielded higher precision devices. They included thick polysilicon processes (epi-poly [4] and thick silane based deposition), the dissolved wafer process, and processes based on SOI (silicon-on-insulator) wafers.
The dissolved wafer process [5]begins with a heavily boron-doped etch-stop layer on a silicon wafer. The desired features (e.g., combs, springs) are etched into the etch-stop layer and then it is anodically bonded to a glass wafer with metal surface electrodes. Finally, the bulk of the wafer is dissolved away, leaving just the boron-doped structures (see Figure 2). High-g Accelerometers. There is a niche market for accelerometers that read out very high g's for crash tests, impacts, and missile and artillery shell launches. Charles Stark Draper Laboratory has produced an accelerometer reading out 100,000 g's. Similar devices will almost certainly be commercialized in time. Angular Accelerometers.MEMS angular accelerometers are used primarily to compensate for angular shock and vibration in disk read/write head assemblies. These devices, while similar to linear accelerometers in terms of design, fabrication, and readout, are designed with zero pendulosity (i.e., the center of gravity is located at the centroid of the support springs), and are compliant to rotational motion yet stiff with respect to linear motion. Delphi and ST Microelectronics, manufacturers of angular accelerometers, use capacizive MEMS sensors and custom CMOS ASICs. Some of the specifications for two angular accelerometers are given in Figure 3.
Geophones. Geophones can be thought of as accelerometers with very high sensitivity and no DC output requirement. With no drift or bias stability specifications, geophone design can be optimized to give the lowest noise floor. Applications include seismic sensing, machinery vibration and failure prediction, tracking and identification of vehicles or personnel, and underwater pressure gradient sensing. Conventional geophones incorporate permanent magnets and fine wire coils to measure velocity above their fundamental resonance [6]. This is in contrast to capacitive accelerometers, which measure acceleration below their fundamental resonance.
There are also piezoelectric and ferroelectric accelerometers. Micromachined sensors can offer size and weight advantages over conventional sensors, as well as a digital output which is easily transmitted noise free. One MEMS geophone that has been commercialized by Applied MEMS Inc.
(see Figures 4 and 5) incorporates a three-wafer stack in which the
center wafer forms the proof mass. Referring again to Equation 4, the
largest mass available in most MEMS devices is the wafer itself, and a
vacuum package reduces Brownian noise to a negligible level. The device
is read out using a custom CMOS mixed-signal ASIC with a
To achieve the maximum sensitivity, the spring constants (and
resonant frequency) are reduced so that the maximum acceleration is 0.2
g's over a frequency range of 3–200 Hz. Minimum resolvable acceleration
is 30 ng/ Gyroscopes
Many types of MEMS gyroscopes have appeared in the literature, with most falling into the categories of tuning-fork gyros, oscillating wheels, Foucault pendulums, and wine glass resonators. Conventional (non-MEMS) spinning wheel gyros are common, but levitation and rotation of a MEMS device with no springs has not yet been commercialized. Tuning Fork Gyroscopes. Tuning fork gyros contain a pair of masses that are driven to oscillate with equal amplitude but in opposite directions. When rotated, the Coriolis force creates an orthogonal vibration that can be sensed by a variety of mechanisms. The Draper Lab gyro [7-9] shown in Figure 6 uses comb-type structures to drive the tuning fork into resonance.
Rotation causes the proof masses to vibrate out of plane, and this motion is sensed capacitively with a custom CMOS ASIC. The technology has been licensed to Rockwell, Boeing, Honeywell, and others. The resonant modes of a MEMS inertial sensor are extremely important. In a gyro, there is typically a vibration mode that is driven and a second mode for output sensing. In some cases, the input and output modes are degenerate or nearly so. If the I/O modes are chosen such that they are separated by ~10%, the open-loop sensitivity will be increased due to the resonance effect. It is also critical that no other resonant modes be close to the I/O resonant frequencies. Samsung Corp. has put a large effort into inertial sensors for automotive and consumer electronics applications. Gyroscopic stabilization of camcorders has been shown to improve picture quality, and gyroscopes are enhancing vehicular safety in multiple ways [10]. With gyros costing as little as $10.00 per sensed axis, they should soon claim a sizeable market share. Vibrating-Wheel Gyroscopes. Many reports of vibrating-wheel gyros also have been published [4]. In this type of gyro, the wheel is driven to vibrate about its axis of symmetry, and rotation about either in-plane axis results in the wheel's tilting, a change that can be detected with capacitive electrodes under the wheel (see Figure 7).
It is possible to sense two axes of rotation with a single vibrating wheel. A surface micromachined polysilicon vibratingwheel gyro (see Figure 8) has been designed at the U.C. Berkeley Sensors and Actuators Center.
Wine Glass Resonator Gyroscopes. A third type of gyro is the
wine glass resonator. Fabricated from fused silica, this device is also
known as a hemispherical resonant gyro. Researchers at the University
of Michigan have fabricated resonant-ring gyros in planar form [11]. In a wine glass gyro, the resonant ring is driven to resonance and the positions of the nodal points
indicate the rotation angle. The input and output modes are nominally degenerate, but due to imperfect machining some tuning is required. The output signal is monitored and nulled, yielding a rate gyro. Silicon Sensing Systems, a joint venture between Sumitomo and British Aerospace, has brought to market an electromagnetically driven and sensed MEMS gyro (see Figures 9 and 10). A permanent magnet sits above the MEMS device. Current passing through the conducting legs creates a force that resonates the ring. This Coriolis-induced ring motion is detected by induced voltages as the legs cut the magnetic field. Analog Devices has been working on MEMS gyros for many years, and has patented [12,13] several concepts based on modified tuning forks.
The company has recently introduced the ADXRS family of integrated angular rate-sensing gyros, in which the mass is tethered to a polysilicon frame that allows it to resonate in only one direction. Capacitive silicon sensing elements interdigitated with stationary silicon beams attached to the substrate measure the Coriolis-induced displacement of the resonating mass and its frame (see Figure 11).
Foucault Pendulum Gyroscopes. These devices are based on a vibrating rod that is typically oriented out of the plane of the chip [14,15]. They are therefore challenging to build with planar fabrication tools, but recent advances in MEMS technology allow very high aspect ratio MEMS that make it possible to fabricate the pendulum without hand assembly of the rod. Summary References 2. T.B. Gabrielson. May 1993. "Mechanical-thermal noise in micromachined acoustic and vibration sensors," IEEE Trans, Electron. Devices, Vol. 40:903-909.
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