The present disclosure relates to an acoustic wave filter, and more particularly, to a technique to improve steepness of attenuation characteristics in a ladder filter which includes a plurality of surface acoustic wave (SAW) resonators.
As a band pass filter, a ladder acoustic wave filter (hereinafter also referred to as a “ladder filter”) including a plurality of acoustic wave resonators cascaded as disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2011-114826 has been known.
In a ladder filter, a resonant frequency of each series arm resonator and an anti-resonant frequency of each parallel arm resonator are set near a center frequency of a desired pass band, an anti-resonant frequency of the series arm resonator is located at an attenuation pole near an upper-limit frequency on a high-frequency side, and a resonant frequency of the parallel arm resonator is located at an attenuation pole near a lower-limit frequency at a low-frequency side, thus forming the pass band.
A ladder filter as disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2011-114826 may be used in electronic equipment, such as a cellular phone or a smartphone.
To provide large capacitance and high-speed communication in the above-described electronic equipment, the fifth generation mobile communication system (5G) is under development. With the development, there is a need for further widening of a band width of a band pass filter. For band width widening, it is important to ensure steepness of attenuation characteristics between a pass band and an attenuation range.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention provide ladder acoustic wave filters each with improved steepness of attenuation characteristics at a pass band end portion.
An acoustic wave filter according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention includes an input terminal, an output terminal, a series arm circuit, and a parallel arm circuit. The series arm circuit includes a first series arm resonator and a second series arm resonator connected in series between the input terminal and the output terminal. The parallel arm circuit includes at least one parallel arm resonator connected between the series arm circuit and a ground potential. Each of the first series arm resonator and the second series arm resonator is a SAW resonator including a piezoelectric substrate and a comb-shaped (an interdigital transducer (IDT)) electrode on the piezoelectric substrate. Each series arm resonator has a characteristic that a fractional band width increases with a decrease in a thickness of the piezoelectric substrate which is normalized with a wavelength of a signal passing through the series arm resonator. An anti-resonant frequency of the first series arm resonator is lower than an anti-resonant frequency of the second series arm resonator. A wavelength of a signal passing through the first series arm resonator is shorter than a wavelength of a signal passing through the second series arm resonator.
An acoustic wave filter according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention includes an input terminal, an output terminal, a series arm circuit, and a parallel arm circuit. The series arm circuit includes a plurality of series arm resonators connected in series between the input terminal and the output terminal. The parallel arm circuit includes at least one parallel arm resonator connected between the series arm circuit and a ground potential. Each of the plurality of series arm resonators is a SAW resonator including a piezoelectric substrate and an IDT electrode on the piezoelectric substrate. Each of the plurality of series arm resonators has a characteristic that a fractional band width increases with a decrease in a thickness of the piezoelectric substrate which is normalized with a wavelength of a signal passing through the series arm resonator. A wavelength of a signal passing through one of the plurality of series arm resonators with a lowest anti-resonant frequency is shorter than wavelengths of signals passing through remaining series arm resonators of the plurality of series arm resonators.
An acoustic wave filter according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention includes an input terminal, an output terminal, a series arm circuit, and a parallel arm circuit. The series arm circuit includes a first series arm resonator and a second series arm resonator connected in series between the input terminal and the output terminal. The parallel arm circuit includes at least one parallel arm resonator connected between the series arm circuit and a ground potential. Each of the first series arm resonator and the second series arm resonator is a SAW resonator including a piezoelectric substrate and a comb-shaped electrode on the piezoelectric substrate. For each series arm resonator, a thickness of the piezoelectric substrate is less than or equal to about 0.7λ, where λ is a wavelength of a signal passing through the series arm resonator. An anti-resonant frequency of the first series arm resonator is lower than an anti-resonant frequency of the second series arm resonator. A wavelength of a signal passing through the first series arm resonator is shorter than a wavelength of a signal passing through the second series arm resonator.
According to preferred embodiments of the present invention, acoustic wave filters each include two series arm resonators (a first series arm resonator and a second series arm resonator) with different anti-resonant frequencies, and a wavelength of a high-frequency signal passing through the first series arm resonator with a lower anti-resonant frequency is set lower than a wavelength of a high-frequency signal passing through the second series arm resonator. This configuration enables improvement of steepness of an attenuation characteristic on a high-frequency side in a pass band of the filter.
The above and other elements, features, steps, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below with reference to the drawings. The same or corresponding portions in the drawings are denoted by the same reference characters and a description thereof will not be repeated.
The series arm circuit 20 includes series arm resonators S1 to S5 which are connected in series between an input terminal T1 and an output terminal T2. The series arm resonator S3 includes series arm resonators S3-1 and S3-2 which are connected in series.
The parallel arm circuit 30 includes a plurality of parallel arm resonators P1 to P4. The parallel arm resonator P1 is connected between the ground potential and a connection node between the series arm resonator S1 and the series arm resonator S2. The parallel arm resonator P2 is connected between the ground potential and a connection node between the series arm resonator S2 and the series arm resonator S3-1. The parallel arm resonator P3 is connected between the ground potential and a connection node between the series arm resonator S3-2 and the series arm resonator S4. The parallel arm resonator P4 is connected between the ground potential and a connection node between the series arm resonator S4 and the series arm resonator S5.
By adjusting resonant frequencies and anti-resonant frequencies of acoustic wave resonators in a ladder filter as described above, a band pass filter with a desired pass band can be provided.
As shown in the lower portion (
To widen a pass band of a band pass filter, it is generally preferable to widen the spacing (that is, a fractional band width) between a resonant frequency and an anti-resonant frequency of each acoustic wave resonator. Here, a fractional band width is defined as a difference (band width) between a resonant frequency Fr and an anti-resonant frequency Fa with respect to the resonant frequency Fr (fractional band width=(Fa−Fr)/Fr).
Meanwhile, to achieve a high signal to noise ratio between a pass band and an attenuation range outside the pass band, it is necessary to achieve a high attenuation factor in the attenuation range. To this end, it is important to improve steepness of attenuation characteristics near an upper-limit frequency and a lower-limit frequency of a pass band.
In a ladder filter, an upper limit of a pass band is determined by a combination of anti-resonant frequencies of a plurality of series arm resonators, as described above. A fractional band width of one with a lowest anti-resonant frequency of the series arm resonators contributes greatly to steepness of an attenuation characteristic. For this reason, steepness of an attenuation characteristic on an upper-limit side (high-frequency side) of a pass band can be improved by making the fractional band width of the series arm resonator smaller than the fractional band widths of the other series arm resonators.
Thus, in the present preferred embodiment, steepness of an attenuation characteristic on a high-frequency side of a pass band is improved (a broken line LN11 in
Referring to
That is, in the region AR1 in
Referring to
The support substrate 105 is a semiconductor substrate which is made of a material, such as silicon (Si), gallium arsenide (GaAs), gallium nitride (GaN), or silicon carbide (SiC), for example. The piezoelectric substrate 110 is stacked above the support substrate 105 with the reflecting layer 130 interposed therebetween. In the example of the acoustic wave resonator 100 in
The piezoelectric substrate 110 is made of a piezoelectric material, such as lithium tantalate (LiTaO3: LT), lithium niobate (LiNbO3: LN), aluminum nitride, zinc oxide, or piezoelectric zirconate titanate (PZT), for example. The piezoelectric substrate 110 may be made of a single-crystal material of the above-described piezoelectric material or may be made of a piezoelectric laminated material made of LT or LN.
One pair of IDT electrodes 120 are provided on an upper surface of the piezoelectric substrate 110. The IDT electrodes 120 are made using a conductive material, such as a single-component metal made of at least one of aluminum, copper, silver, gold, titanium, tungsten, platinum, chrome, nickel, and molybdenum or an alloy composed mainly thereof, for example. The piezoelectric substrate 110 and the IDT electrodes 120 define a SAW resonator.
A film thickness d1 of the piezoelectric substrate 110 is preferably set to less than or equal to a wavelength λ which is defined by an electrode pitch of the IDT electrode 120. The setting of the film thickness dl of the piezoelectric substrate 110 in this manner allows increase in a coupling coefficient and a Q factor.
The reflecting layer 130 includes a plurality of low-acoustic-velocity films 131 and a plurality of high-acoustic-velocity films 132. The low-acoustic-velocity films 131 and the high-acoustic-velocity films 132 are alternately arranged in a stacking direction from the piezoelectric substrate 110 toward the support substrate 105.
The low-acoustic-velocity film 131 is made of a material in which an acoustic velocity of a bulk wave which propagates through the low-acoustic-velocity film 131 is lower than an acoustic velocity of a bulk wave which propagates through the piezoelectric substrate 110. In other words, the low-acoustic-velocity film 131 is made of a material having an acoustic impedance lower than that of the piezoelectric substrate 110. The low-acoustic-velocity film 131 is made of a dielectric, such as silicon dioxide, glass, silicon oxynitride, or tantalum oxide, or a compound obtained by adding fluorine, carbon, boron, or the like to silicon dioxide, for example.
The high-acoustic-velocity film 132 is made of a material in which an acoustic velocity of a bulk wave which propagates through the high-acoustic-velocity film 132 is higher than an acoustic velocity of an acoustic wave which propagates through the piezoelectric substrate 110. In other words, the high-acoustic-velocity film 132 is made of a material having an acoustic impedance higher than that of the piezoelectric substrate 110. The high-acoustic-velocity film 132 is made of a material, such as aluminum nitride, silicon nitride, aluminum oxide (alumina), silicon oxynitride, silicon carbide, diamond-like carbon (DLC), or diamond, for example.
With the configuration, in which the low-acoustic-velocity films 131 and the high-acoustic-velocity films 132 are stacked underneath the piezoelectric substrate 110, the high-acoustic-velocity films 132 and the low-acoustic-velocity films 131 define and function as a reflecting layer (mirror layer) which reflects a surface acoustic wave. The reflecting layer 130 is an acoustic Bragg reflector.
That is, a surface acoustic wave which leaks out from the piezoelectric substrate 110 in a direction toward the support substrate 105 is reflected by the high-acoustic-velocity film 132 due to a difference in propagating acoustic velocity and is confined as a standing wave in the low-acoustic-velocity film 131. As described above, since loss of acoustic energy of a surface acoustic wave which is propagated by the piezoelectric substrate 110 is reduced, surface acoustic waves can be efficiently propagated. Note that, although an example where the reflecting layer 130 includes a plurality of low-acoustic-velocity films 131 and a plurality of high-acoustic-velocity films 132 is illustrated in
With the configuration with the reflecting layer 130 as in
Since a velocity v of a high-frequency signal propagating through the piezoelectric substrate 110 is constant or substantially constant, if the wavelength λ of the IDT electrode 120 is decreased, a resonant frequency of the IDT electrode 120 increases due to the relationship v=f·λ. For this reason, in order to cause the resonant frequency to coincide with those in other series arm resonators, the resonant frequency is reduced by, for example, increasing a film thickness of the IDT electrode 120, increasing a thickness of a dielectric film to be stacked on the IDT electrode 120, or increasing a line width (duty) of an electrode finger to increase a weight of the IDT electrode 120.
Effects of an example where an IDT wavelength of a series arm resonator with a lowest anti-resonant frequency is reduced will be described based on the present preferred embodiment with reference to
Referring to
As shown in
As described above, the steepness of an attenuation characteristic on a high-frequency side of a pass band can be improved in a ladder acoustic wave filter by shortening an IDT electrode pitch (a wavelength λ) and lowering a fraction band width in a series arm resonator with a lowest anti-resonant frequency.
Configurations of the series arm circuit 20 and the parallel arm circuit 30 in the acoustic wave filter 10 described above are not limited to those shown in
Although a band pass filter which enables only a predetermined frequency component to pass through has been illustrated as an example in the above description, the features of preferred embodiments of the present invention can also be applied to a trap filter which attenuates only a predetermined frequency component.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it is to be understood that variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention. The scope of the present invention, therefore, is to be determined solely by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2019-120929 | Jun 2019 | JP | national |
This application claims the benefit of priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2019-120929 filed on Jun. 28, 2019 and is a Continuation Application of PCT Application No. PCT/JP2020/019613 filed on May 18, 2020. The entire contents of each application are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2020/019613 | May 2020 | US |
Child | 17562059 | US |