The present invention relates to an electromechanical amplifier and an electromechanical amplifying method capable of maintaining the linearity of the amplification.
Micro- and nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS and NEMS, respectively) allow for the detection of chemical or biological compounds at extremely low detection thresholds, e.g. on the order of the attogram, when they are used as resonators. When an oscillating micro- or nanosystem interacts with a chemical or biological compound, the mechanical characteristics of the resonator may vary: measurement of a variation in the amplitude of the oscillator or of the variation in a frequency of a mode of the oscillator can make it possible to detect the compound or compounds.
Resonators of the MEMS and NEMS types have a higher aspect ratio than that of macroscopic resonators. An increase in the aspect ratio of a mechanical resonator favours the appearance of non-linear phenomena during the oscillation of the resonator (Postma, H. C., Kozinsky, I., Husain, A., & Roukes, M. L. (2005). Dynamic range of nanotube- and nanowire-based electromechanical systems. Applied Physics Letters, 86(22), 223105). Thus, for a wide range of amplitudes, a resonator at the micrometre or nanometre scale displays so-called “Duffing” behaviour, i.e. behaviour described by the following equation:
where x is the amplitude of the measured signal, ω0 is the pulse resonance, Δω is the dissipation related to the resonator's movement, FL is the force transduced to the resonator, m is the mass of the resonator, and γ is the non-linear coefficient, known as the “Duffing coefficient”. A person skilled in the art will find the known equation for a harmonic oscillator having a resonance that follows a Lorentzian curve, when the coefficient γ=0.
The non-linearity in an oscillator's behaviour leads to problems in implementing a detection function: an electromechanical transducer is typically a MEMS or NEMS oscillator able to operate in the linear regime. Otherwise, a mechanical bistability or hysteresis during an oscillation may compromise the transmission of a stimulus that is to be detected. Indeed, if the oscillation amplitude is not too large, a Duffing-type non-linearity (which obeys the Duffing equation) deforms the resonance and gives rise to a form of resonance known as Duffing-type resonance. If the oscillation amplitude is very large, the system enters a bistable regime which, in most applications, drastically compromises the transmission of a stimulus that is to be detected.
One solution to avoid non-linearities in the oscillations of the resonator may consist in exciting the resonator with forces that are weak enough to stay within the linear regime. In practice, the amplitude of the oscillations measured during resonance is often too weak to discriminate a signal from the measurement noise or to measure variations quantitatively.
Another solution consists in exciting a resonator with forces that can induce an amplitude large enough to be detected, but thereby also inducing non-linear behaviour, which must be corrected. A grid coupled to the resonator by electrical polarisation is used to compensate the non-linearities in the dynamics of the resonator (Kacem, N., Hentz, S., Pinto, D., Reig, B., & Nguyen, V. (2009). Non-linear dynamics of nanomechanical beam resonators: improving the performance of NEMS-based sensors. Nanotechnology, 20(27), 275501). When implementing this solution, numerical simulations that are costly in terms of calculations and time are necessary to find the appropriate experimental parameters for compensating non-linearities. In addition, the implementation of one or more grids must be tolerated by the resonator's mode of operation.
The present invention aims to overcome the aforementioned disadvantages of the prior art and, in particular, it aims to actuate the resonator in a given range of frequencies, close to its resonance frequency, proportionally to an excitation force, in the widest possible amplitude range and particularly in an amplitude range in which the resonator typically oscillates according to the so-called Duffing equation detailed above, while preserving its linearity, so that its mechanical resonance in this frequency range follows a Lorentzian curve and so that the detected signal is proportional to the injected signal.
One purpose of the invention making it possible to achieve this aim is an electromechanical amplifying method comprising at least:
a first transducing step consisting in transducing an electrical signal to a mechanical resonator having a mechanical resonance mode with an angular frequency ω0, said electrical signal actuating non-linear oscillations of the resonator;
a second transducing step consisting in transducing the non-linear oscillations of the resonator into a transduced electrical signal; and
a filtering step consisting in filtering said transduced electrical signal to obtain an output signal;
the method is characterised in that:
the signal transduced to the resonator is obtained by adding a first input signal of a first amplitude and of a first angular frequency ωs and a second pump signal of a second amplitude greater than the first amplitude and of a second angular frequency ωp that is different from the first angular frequency, the first and second angular frequencies being close to the angular frequency ω0 of the mechanical resonator and the second pump signal being chosen from a range of angular frequencies ωp and amplitudes in which the resonator is actuated in a non-linear regime; and in that
the output signal is amplified, the amplitude of the oscillations measured after the filtering varying linearly with the first input signal of angular frequency ωs, and the resonant mode obtained is that of a linear resonance.
an electromechanical amplification device, which includes at least one mechanical resonator having a mechanical resonance mode of angular frequency ω0 and which also comprises:
Advantageously, the mechanical resonator is chosen at least between a microsystem and a nanosystem and the bandwidth of the filter is chosen such that the signal at the output of the filter has an amplitude that is linearly dependent on the input signal.
Advantageously, the bandwidth of the filter of the electromechanical amplifier is centered on an angular frequency substantially close to ωs.
Advantageously, the non-linear oscillation regime of the electromechanical amplifier is a Duffing regime.
Advantageously, at least two elements chosen among the adder, the filter, the first mechanical transducer and the second electromechanical transducer are monolithically integrated.
Advantageously, the electromechanical amplifier includes an electrical generator of the pump signal.
Advantageously, the electromechanical amplifier comprises a magnetic field generator generating a homogeneous magnetic field substantially perpendicular to the major axis of the mechanical resonator and in which at least one transducer chosen between the first transducer and the second transducer is adapted to transduce energy by means of the work done by Laplace forces or Lorentz forces.
Advantageously, the electromechanical amplifier comprises at least one transducer chosen between the first transducer and the second transducer adapted to transduce energy by means of an effect chosen among at least one piezoelectric and piezoresistive effect.
Another purpose of the invention is a method for actuating a mechanical resonator having at least one mechanical resonance mode of angular frequency ω0, the method comprising at least the steps consisting in:
Advantageously, the difference δs defined by ωs−ωp in the method is at least fifty times smaller than ω0, the difference δp defined by ωp−ω0 is at least fifty times smaller than ω0 and ωp is different from ωs.
Another purpose of the invention is a method for amplifying a first input signal of angular frequency ωs close to and different from ω0 by a mechanical resonator having at least one mechanical resonance mode of angular frequency ω0, the method including at least the steps consisting in:
Advantageously, the non-linear regime of the second step of the method is a Duffing regime.
Advantageously, a number of amplitudes of the oscillation are measured in the third step of the method and the shape of the curve of these amplitudes of oscillation as a function of the angular frequencies of the second range is Lorentzian.
Advantageously, the difference δs defined by ωs−ωp is at least fifty times smaller than ω0, the difference δp defined by ωp−ω0 is at least fifty times smaller than ω0 and ωp is different from ωs.
Advantageously, in the method, the output amplitude of the mechanical transducer is measured substantially at the angular frequency ωp+δs.
Advantageously, the method is implemented by an electromechanical amplifier.
Advantageously, the transduction of the signal resulting from the first step of the method to the mechanical resonator is adapted to induce oscillations of the mechanical resonator according to a non-linear differential equation.
Advantageously, the transduction of the signal resulting from the first step of the method to the mechanical resonator is adapted to induce oscillations of the mechanical resonator according to a non-linear differential equation in which the Duffing coefficient is non-zero.
Advantageously, the angular frequency ωp of the pump signal is strictly greater than the angular frequency ω0.
Advantageously, the angular frequency ωs of the input signal is strictly greater than the angular frequency ωp of the pump signal.
Advantageously, the method includes a step consisting in filtering the signal of the output amplitude with a bandpass filter having a high quality factor, the bandwidth of which is centered on an angular frequency close to ω0 and preferentially centered on an angular frequency of substantially ωp+δs.
The following description presents several example embodiments of the device of the invention: these examples do not limit the scope of the invention. These example embodiments have both the essential characteristics of the invention and additional characteristics associated with the embodiments considered. For the sake of clarity, the same elements bear the same references in the various figures.
The invention will be better understood and other advantages, details and characteristics thereof will emerge during the explanatory description that follows, given by way of example with reference to the annexed drawings wherein:
The amplifier also includes a filter 4, able to filter electrical signals with a high quality factor. In one embodiment of the invention, a bandpass filter is used. The bandwidth of filter 4 is centered on a frequency close to ω0. In one embodiment of the invention, the bandpass filter allows for selective transmission of signals in a range of angular frequencies centered on ωs without transmitting the signals in a range of angular frequencies centered on ω0 and/or ωp. In some embodiments of the invention, the quality factor of the filter is preferentially greater than or equal to ω0/(ωp−ωs). In one embodiment of the invention, the bandpass filter used is a synchronous detection. The bandwidth of filter 4 is chosen such that the signal at the output of filter 4 has an amplitude that is linearly dependent on input signal 2. This characteristic is explained later in the description.
The amplifier also includes a first electromechanical transduction system (7) connected electrically to the output of adder 5 and mechanically to mechanical resonator 1. It also includes a second transduction system (8) connected mechanically to resonator 1 and to filter 4. The first and second transduction systems are typically implemented in MEMS or NEMS. In the embodiments, they can be implemented by piezoelectric, piezoresistive, capacitive and/or magnetomotive systems.
Panel A of
In a preferred embodiment of the invention multiple elements chosen from among resonator 1, filter 4, the first transducer, the second transducer or the adder are monolithic or integrated, i.e. manufactured from the same substrate, e.g. a silicon substrate.
In one embodiment of the invention, the resonator is placed in a very low-temperature cooled enclosure. A first enclosure can be filled with liquid nitrogen. A second enclosure, positioned inside the first enclosure, can contain liquid helium and condition the temperature of the resonator to 4.2 Kelvin.
A vacuum can also be created inside of a cell containing resonator 1. A partial vacuum can be created by means of a pump to achieve a pressure of 10−4 mbar. By cooling the cell as described above, the gas remaining in the cell can be adsorbed to the walls, allowing for a higher vacuum (by cryopumping): the pressure of the enclosure can be 10−6 mbar.
In one embodiment of the invention, the electromechanical amplifier includes an electric generator adapted to generate a pump signal 3. The generator used in one embodiment of the invention is the Tektronix AFG 3252 and can achieve a frequency of 240 MHz.
In one embodiment of the invention, the amplifier includes a homogeneous magnetic field generator. This generator can be a coil, surrounding one of the enclosures described above. The coil can be implemented by coiling one or more wires of a superconducting niobium-titanium alloy and makes it possible to subject resonator 1 to a magnetic field that can typically reach a magnetic flux density of 1 tesla. By electrically connecting the electrical signal at the output of adder 5 to the resonator, Laplace forces are induced on the beam or gate elements, according to an implementation described in Cleland, A. N., & Roukes, M. L. (1999), External control of dissipation in a nanometer-scale radiofrequency mechanical resonator, Sensors and Actuators A: Physical, 72(3), 256-261. The first transducer is adapted to transduce electromagnetic energy into mechanical energy by means of Laplace or Lorentz forces. In other embodiments of the invention, piezoelectric, capacitive, electrostatic and/or thermoelectric transducers can be used.
The excitation of an ideal resonator at its resonance frequency causes oscillations at a given amplitude. For strong amplitudes, these oscillations exercise constraints on the material of the resonator. When the excitation amplitude increases, the resonance peak varies in frequency and modifies the form of the curve describing the amplitude as a function of frequency, from a Lorentzian curve in the linear regime to a so-called Duffing curve for higher amplitudes. This property exists for all modes of a resonator, each mode having a (non-linear) Duffing coefficient γn, n being the order of the mode.
If two modes are excited at sufficiently high amplitudes, similar behaviour is observed. The constraint generated by the amplitude of oscillation of a mode affects the mechanical properties of the entire resonator. The other mode is then affected and vice versa.
In
Equation 1 can be solved in the following form, in the case where a single excitation force is applied:
with
and γ the Duffing coefficient. We use the notation γ=γn when a single mode n is involved.
The coupling between modes is derived theoretically from beam theory (Lulla, K. J., Cousins, R. B., Venkatesan, A., Patton, M. J., Armour, A. D., Mellor, C. J., & Owers-Bradley, J. R. (2012), Non-linear modal coupling in a high-stress doubly-clamped nanomechanical resonator, New Journal of Physics, 14(11), 113040) by the inventors. From this, the following dispersive coupling can be deduced between the two modes:
ωn=ω0,n+βnxn2+βn,mxm2 (3)
where ωn is the pulse resonance of mode n during a resonance having a Duffing curve, ω0,n is the pulse resonance of mode n in the absence of coupling and comprising the Duffing term βnxn2, where
and xn is the amplitude of mode n. The coupling with mode m is linked to the quadratic term βn,mxm2 (where xm is the amplitude of mode m). The non-linear coefficient βn,m is given by:
where Ψn′ is the spatial derivative of the deformation of the resonator for mode n.
The origin of the coupling is visible in the term γ x3 of equation 1 and neither of the two modes necessarily has to be in a non-linear regime.
Equation 3 makes no assumptions about the pair (n, m) and, theoretically, n can be equal to m. Therefore, a mode can theoretically be coupled with itself, which defines the technique known as self-coupling. Precisely this technique is used in all embodiments of the invention. This effect is different from the effects described previously: With self-coupling, at least two harmonic excitation signals excite a single mode n, whereas formula 1, for example, describes an effect in which one harmonic excitation signal excites a mode n.
In all embodiments of the invention, two signals are used: input signal 2 and pump signal 3, adapted to excite the same mode after addition and electromechanical transduction, at close but different angular frequencies. Equation 1 allows us to write:
{umlaut over (x)}+Δω{dot over (x)}+ω0x+γx3=fL,p cos(ωpt)+fL,s cos(ωst÷δϕ) (5)
where fL,p and fL,s are, respectively, the input signal strength, corresponding to the transduction of the component of input signal 2, and the pump strength, corresponding to the transduction of the component of pump signal 3 (normalised to the mass of the mode), bringing resonator 1 respectively to angular frequencies ωs and ωp, with ωs being different from ωp and with δϕ being the phase difference between the two signals. The electrical signal coming from adder 5 is transduced into a mechanical signal, of which fL,s and fL,p are two components. Adder 5 can be implemented by a combination of resistances and capacitances and/or of an operational amplifier, which can be monolithically integrated into a chip. For clarity of notation, we can define the following:
ωp=ω0+δp (6)
ωs=ωp+δs (7)
where δs and δp are the scanning parameters relative to ω0. By construction, δp and δs are different than 0.
A general solution x0 of equation 5 can be written in the following form:
By replacing
in equation 5, we obtain:
where X0 is a slow variable (X0<<ω0X0), the assumption of a high quality factor is valid (Δω<<ω0) and where we are working in a range of frequencies close to the resonance frequency
At the first order, we can solve equation 9 with the following form of X0:
X0=ap+aseiδ
where ap, as and ai are the complex amplitudes of the different components of the movement, characteristic of the mechanical resonance of the mode, corresponding respectively to the frequencies ωp, ωp+δs and ωp−δs, where ap is the principal term principally governed by fL,p (the pump strength, resonating at ω0+δp,max), as principally governed by fL,s (the input signal strength, resonating at ωp+δs,max) and ai, the image of as symmetrically to ap (the complementary signal, resonating at ωp+δi,max).
By isolating each of the variables and expressing them as functions of ap, we finally obtain:
We now observe that equation 14 is similar to equation 2 with δp=ωp−ω0 being the scanning parameter for the component ap. The resonance to the angular frequency ωp is a Duffing resonance. Note that equation 14 is non-linear with respect to ap, while equation 15 is linear with respect to as, and that equation 16 is linear with respect to ai. According to one embodiment of the invention, we can actuate resonator 1 by adding input signal 2 and pump signal 3, for example by means of adder 5, and transduce the resulting electrical signal to resonator 1 in the form of a mechanical signal, including the components fL,s and fL,p. At least one of the amplitudes of the signals at the input of adder 5 (input signal 2 and/or pump signal 3) has an amplitude sufficient to actuate resonator 1 in a non-linear regime and, in particular, in a Duffing regime, at least in a first range of angular frequencies close to ω0. Typically, it is pump signal 3 that has this amplitude. In all embodiments of the invention, the amplitude of the oscillations of the resonator is linear in a second range of angular frequencies close to ωp, in a range including the resonance of the signal as and/or ai. In particular, the curve of the amplitude of the oscillations as a function of the second range of angular frequencies can be Lorentzian.
Preferentially, the difference δs defined by ωs−ωp is at least fifty times smaller than ω0, the difference δp defined by ωp−ω0 is at least fifty times smaller than ω0 and ωp is different from ωs.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the amplitude of the oscillation of resonator 1 is measured in a second range of frequencies close to ωp, for example in a range including the resonance of the signal as.
The normal of the different components ap, as and ai is illustrated in
In the case where the forces fL,s and fL,p illustrated in
where:
which allows us to obtain:
Equation 19 is equivalent to equation 15 for A0≈0. The pump amplitude ap can be controlled in embodiments of the invention via two parameters: the reduced force fL,p and the angular frequency of excitation ωp (or in reduced units δp). For an excitation force related to the given pump signal 3, the amplitude ap can be maximised by approaching δp as close as possible to the maximum amplitude of the Duffing resonance, by always choosing the maximum amplitude branch during a bistable resonance of resonator 1.
Two characteristics emerge from equation 19. First, to find the resonance frequency of as, we must set the real part of the denominator of equation 19 to zero. The scanning parameter for as being δs, this condition is valid for:
where |A0|2 is developed according to equation 18. By solving the third-order polynomial in δs, we find a single valid solution corresponding to δs,max.
Second, the prefactor of equation 17 implies that the amplitude of |as| is modified by |ap|. The coupling effect between the excitations caused by input signal 2 and pump signal 3 is not only a shifting of the frequency but also an amplification. We can write the associated gain factor G by comparing the amplitude of |as| in resonance with and without the additional component fL,p (case of an input signal 2 alone, called “standard”, in the numerator of equation 21, and case of an input signal 2 added to a pump signal 3, called “pumped”, in the denominator of equation 21):
In this embodiment, self-coupling is used to amplify input signal 2 by a pump signal 3 of a larger amplitude: this is the definition of the self-pumping technique. The output signal of resonator 1 is an input signal 2, amplified and of a substantially different resonance frequency, shifted and with no non-linearity.
Preferentially, for the amplification, we choose δs>0 if γ (i.e. γn in this case) is strictly greater than 0. Indeed, we are no longer in the self-pumping regime in the case where δs=0 (ωs=ωp). In this case, the resonator is actuated at frequency ωs with a strength equal to fL,s+fL,p. This particular case of excitation can cause a transition of ap changing from high amplitudes to low amplitudes. The probability of such a relaxation event increases as we approach the reduced bifurcation angular frequency δp,max of ap and causes a practical limitation on the maximum gain that can be achieved by this method, if all other parameters are kept constant. This limitation on the gain can be compensated by an increase in the amplitude of pump signal 3, for example.
where ϕp is defined by ap*=ap eiϕ
The inventors have discovered that under these conditions, the non-linear dependency of the variables as a function of other variables is reduced or even goes to zero experimentally, in particular with regard to the non-linear dependencies of as.
These results illustrate the ability of this embodiment, in the self-pumping regime, to amplify the amplitude of the signal while increasing the linear dynamic range of the system. The increase in this linear dynamic range can be directly applied to detection systems, for example.
The embodiments of linear actuation and/or linear amplification described have the advantage of not resorting to an electromechanical adjustment performed by a capacitive grid that makes it possible to compensate the non-linearities as described in the prior art. These embodiments are compatible with a simultaneous adjustment of the resonance frequency induced by a polarised grid. In particular, in one embodiment of the invention, the frequency of the mode can be adjusted by polarisation of an electrode coupled to resonator 1.
In one embodiment, the difference δs between the first and second angular frequencies, defined by “ωs−ωp”, is at least fifty times smaller than the angular frequency ω0 of the resonator and the difference δp between the second angular frequency and the angular frequency ω0 of the resonator, defined by “ωp−ω0”, is at least fifty times smaller than the angular frequency ω0 of the resonator.
The two input and pump signals are then added (step 806). In a subsequent step (808), the resulting electrical signal is transduced to the mechanical resonator (1), which actuates (809) non-linear oscillations of the resonator.
In one embodiment, the non-linear oscillations of the resonator follow a non-linear Duffing differential equation and the Duffing coefficient is non-zero.
In a subsequent step (810), the method allows for the non-linear oscillations of the resonator to be transduced into an electrical signal, which is filtered (812) to obtain an output signal (6). Advantageously, the amplitude of the oscillations after filtering is measured substantially at the angular frequency “ωp+δs”.
Preferentially, the filtering step is performed with a bandpass filter of which the bandwidth is centered on an angular frequency close to the angular frequency ω0 of the mechanical resonator. In a variant, the bandwidth of the filter is centered on an angular frequency substantially equal to ωp+δs.
The implementation of the method makes it possible to generate an output signal 6, which is amplified, the amplitude of the oscillations measured after the filtering step varying linearly with the first input signal 2 of angular frequency ωs and the resonant mode obtained being that of a linear resonance.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15 63388 | Dec 2015 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/081853 | 12/20/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/114689 | 7/6/2017 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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9383208 | Mohanty | Jul 2016 | B2 |
20140312980 | Villard et al. | Oct 2014 | A1 |
Entry |
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French Search Report for Application No. 1563388, dated Sep. 19, 2016. |
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Cleland et al., “External control of dissipation in a nanometer-scale radiofrequency mechanical resonator,” Sensors and Actutators 72 (1999), pp. 256-261. |
Collin et al., “In-situ comprehensive calibration of a tri-port nano-electro-mechanical device,” Review of Scientific Instruments, 83, 045005, Apr. 30, 2012. |
Defoort et al., “Modal ‘self-coupling’ as a sensitive probe for nanomechanical detection,” Nov. 23, 2015, retrieved from the Internet: URL: https://arvix.org/pdf/1511.07273.pdf. |
Defoort et al., “Scaling laws for the bifurcation escape rate in a nanomechanical resonator,” Physical Review E (Statistical, Nonlinear and Soft Matter Physics, vol. 92, No. 5, Nov. 23, 2015. |
Kacem et al., “Nonlinear dynamics of nanomechanical beam resonators: improving the performance of NEMS-based sensors,” Nanotechnology, Institute of Physics, 2010, 20 (27). |
Lulla et al., “Nonlinear modal coupling in a high-stress doubly-clamped nanomechanical resonator,” New Journal of Physics 14, 2012, Nov. 28, 2012. |
Postman et al., “Dynamic range of nanotube- and nanowire-based electromechanical systems,” Applied Physics Letters, 86, 223105, 2005. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190020308 A1 | Jan 2019 | US |