1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a device for controlling the frequency of resonance of an oscillating micro-electromechanical system.
2. Description of the Related Art
Various types of oscillating micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) are known, which include a micro-electromechanical structure and a reading and driving circuit associated thereto. The micro-electromechanical structure comprises a fixed body or stator and a movable body constrained to the stator by elastic connection elements, in accordance with a mass-spring-damper model. In particular, the connection elements are configured so as to enable small oscillations of the movable body about a position of equilibrium selectively with respect to pre-determined degrees of freedom. The oscillating motion of the movable body with respect to the stator is characterized by a natural frequency of resonance that depends both upon the elastic constant of the connection elements and upon the mass of the movable body itself.
Furthermore, the movable body and the stator are capacitively coupled by means of a plurality of respective comb-fingered electrodes. The relative position of the movable body with respect to the stator determines the total coupling capacitance between the electrodes. Consequently, the total coupling capacitance between the electrodes can be measured by the reading and driving circuit to arrive at the relative position of the movable body with respect to the stator and hence to the force acting on the movable body itself. Vice versa, the reading and driving circuit can apply a controlled electrostatic force between the stator and the movable body by appropriately biasing the electrodes.
Application of a constant electrostatic force determines a non-zero mean displacement of the movable body with respect to the position of equilibrium and has the same effect of a (fictitious) elastic constant that is added to the elastic constant of the connection elements between the movable body and the stator. In practice, also the natural frequency of resonance of the mass-spring-damper system can be modified.
This possibility is very important in the fabrication of micro-electromechanical devices such as MEMS resonators or gyroscopes, in which the value of the natural frequency of resonance has a decisive role. In fact, since said value can be calibrated on the finished device instead of during its fabrication, the processes of fabrication are extremely less critical and hence simpler.
The reading and driving circuits include, among other things, a differential amplifier, which detects capacitive variations at the electrodes of the stator and supply a feedback quantity, typically a voltage. The feedback voltage generates an electrostatic force between the stator and the movable body.
A limit of the current reading and driving circuits lies in the fact that the dynamics available for calibration of the frequency of resonance is rather limited. In particular, the electrodes of the stator remain permanently coupled to the inputs of the differential amplifier, which must, however, be biased at a value of common-mode voltage (normally, the common-mode voltage is central with respect to the available maximum and minimum supply voltages). The voltages on the inputs of the differential amplifier must not depart significantly from the common-mode voltage in order to prevent saturation of the differential amplifier. Consequently, also the voltages that can be supplied to the electrodes of the stator to modify the elastic constant and the natural frequency of resonance of the MEMS can exploit only a limited part of the maximum available dynamics. In other words, the frequency of resonance of the MEMS can be calibrated only within of a small range of values.
The aim of the present invention is to provide a device for controlling the frequency of resonance of an oscillating micro-electromechanical system which will be free from the drawbacks described above.
According to the present invention, a device for controlling the frequency of resonance of an oscillating micro-electromechanical system is provided, as defined in claim 1.
For a better understanding of the invention, there is now described an embodiment, purely by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the attached drawings, wherein:
a and 4b are simplified circuit diagrams of the device for controlling the frequency of resonance incorporated in the system of
In the ensuing description, reference will be made to the use of the invention in an electromechanical resonator. This must not, however, be considered as in any way limiting the sphere of application in so far as the invention can advantageously be applied also to oscillating micro-electromechanical systems of a different type, such as for example MEMS gyroscopes, and in any case to all micro-electromechanical structures of which it is necessary to control the natural frequency of oscillation.
The reading and driving circuit 3 includes a differential stage 5 and a feedback stage 6. The feedback stage 6, in itself known, is for example based upon a variable-gain amplifier (VGA), typically a voltage-controlled one, and sets conditions of oscillation as regards magnitude and phase on the feedback loop 4 according to the Barkhausen criterion. In particular, the condition of oscillation is guaranteed by a square-wave feedback signal SFB of controlled amplitude and phase. The micro-electromechanical resonator 1 is connected to a control unit 7, which supplies a calibration signal SCAL for calibration of the frequency of resonance of the micro-electromechanical resonator 1.
As shown in detail in
The stator 10 and the movable body 11 are capacitively coupled. In greater detail (
The movable body 11 can oscillate about the equilibrium position Y0 with a motion characterized by the natural frequency of resonance ωR given by:
ωR=√{square root over (KM/M)} (1)
where KM is the (mechanical) elastic constant associated to the springs 12, and M is the mass of the movable body 11.
When the movable body 11 has a displacement ΔY with respect to the equilibrium position Y0 and, moreover, the first and second fixed electrodes 13a, 13b are biased with a same shift voltage Vs with respect to the movable electrodes 14, each movable electrode 14 is subjected to two opposite electrostatic forces FE1, FE2 along the axis Y (see
In Equations (2), YG is the distance between each movable electrode 14 and the first and second fixed electrodes 13a, 13b adjacent thereto, when the movable body 11 is in the equilibrium position Y0, and CNOM is the capacitance of the capacitors 15a, 15b, once again with the movable body 11 in the equilibrium position Y0. The resultant electrostatic force FER applied to each movable electrode 14 is:
and, on the hypothesis of small displacements (YG<<ΔY):
Equation (4) shows a direct proportionality between the resultant electrostatic force FER and the displacement ΔY. The effect of the resultant electrostatic force FER is equivalent to that of a fictitious elastic force with negative elastic constant. It is hence possible to introduce an electrostatic elastic constant KE given by:
As may be noted from Equation (5), the electrostatic elastic constant KE is correlated to the shift voltage VS. Consequently, when the fixed electrodes 13a, 13b are biased at the shift voltage VS with respect to the movable electrodes 14, the motion of the movable body is characterized by an equivalent elastic constant KEQ and by a translated frequency of resonance ωRS given by:
KEQ=KM+KE (6)
ωRS=√{square root over (KEQ/M)} (7)
In
The differential stage 5 comprises a fully differential switched-capacitor charge amplifier, hereinafter referred to more simply as differential amplifier 21, and further includes DC decoupling capacitors 23, feedback capacitors 25, a common-mode voltage source 26, and a shift voltage source 27, here schematically represented as supply lines.
The differential amplifier 21 has two inputs 28 and two outputs 30 and is in charge-amplifier configuration.
Through respective first switches 31 actuated by the reset signal SRES, the inputs 28 of the differential amplifier 21 are selectively connectable to the common-mode voltage source 26, which supplies a common-mode voltage VCM. Preferably, the common-mode voltage VCM is the average between a maximum supply voltage VDD and a minimum supply voltage VSS supplied to the differential amplifier 21 by respective supply lines 32, 33.
The inputs of the differential amplifier 21 are moreover connected to first terminals of respective DC decoupling capacitors 23, which have second terminals connected to the first stator terminal 17a and to the second stator terminal 17b, respectively. The DC decoupling capacitors 23 are sized so as to obtain DC decoupling between the inputs 28 of the differential amplifier 21 and the stator terminals 17a, 17b of the microstructure 2. Electrical signals with non-zero frequency, in particular with a frequency around the natural frequency of resonance (OR, can instead be transmitted through the DC decoupling capacitors 23.
Through respective second switches 35 actuated by the reset signal SRES, the second terminals of the DC decoupling capacitors 23, and consequently also the first and second stator terminals 17a, 17b of the microstructure 2, are selectively connectable to the shift voltage source 27, which supplies an adjustable shift voltage VS independent of the common-mode voltage VCM. As illustrated in
With reference once again to
Across the outputs 30 of the differential amplifier 21, there is an output voltage VO correlated to the displacement of the movable body 11 of the microstructure 2 with respect to the stator 10.
Operation of the device for controlling the frequency of resonance of the electromechanical resonator 1 envisages two steps which are cyclically repeated.
In a reset step (
In a subsequent read step (
In the reading step, the differential amplifier 21 reads charge packets ΔQ provided or absorbed by the stator terminals 17a, 17b and due partly to the capacitive unbalancing between the capacitances of the first and second equivalent capacitors 19a, 19b and partly to the reading and driving signal SSENSE applied to the common terminal 18. The charge packets ΔQ are converted by the differential amplifier 5, which generates the output voltage VO, oscillating at the translated frequency of resonance ωRS. The DC decoupling capacitors 23 can be sized in such a way that their effect on the output voltage VO is negligible.
As emerges from the above description, the invention advantageously enables substantial exploitation of the entire dynamics made available by the minimum and maximum supply voltages of the micro-electromechanical resonator for calibrating the frequency of resonance. In particular, the constraint set by the connection between the inputs of the differential amplifier and the stator terminals of the microstructure is removed, it being thus possible for said inputs of the differential amplifier and said stator terminals of the microstructure to receive independent shift voltages. Also the frequency of resonance can hence be calibrated within a very wide range of values. Furthermore, the DC decoupling capacitors 23 enable a reduction in the output electronic noise and in the offset.
Finally, it is clear that modifications and variations may be made to the device described herein, without thereby departing from the scope of the present invention, as defined in the annexed claims.
In particular, the invention can be exploited with micro-electromechanical devices other than resonators, such as for example gyroscopes. The microstructure could, for example, be of a rotational type or with a number of translational and/or rotational degrees of freedom. Each movable electrode can be coupled to an individual fixed electrode, instead of being set between two fixed electrodes. The shift voltage can be supplied to the common terminal instead of being supplied to the stator terminals.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05425185.5 | Mar 2005 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation of International Application No. PCT/EP2006/061118, filed Mar. 28, 2006, and claims priority from European Patent Application No. 05425185, filed Mar. 31, 2005, which applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2006/061118 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 11864424 | Sep 2007 | US |