The invention relates to electroacoustic transducers with reduced disturbance due to second-order non-linear effects.
Electroacoustic transducers may be used in RF filters. Arranged together and interconnected, they can form bandpass filters which, due to their small size, are well suited for portable communication devices, for example, in front-end circuits.
Electroacoustic transducers generally comprise metal structures arranged on a piezoelectric material, for example, a monocrystalline substrate, with comb-shaped intermeshing electrode structures with busbars and electrode fingers. Due to the piezoelectric effect, such structures convert between electrical and acoustic waves, wherein half of the acoustic wavelength λ/2 is essentially determined by the spacing of the centers of adjacent electrode fingers of different polarity. The electroacoustically active region of such a transducer, the acoustic trace, comprises the adjacent electrode fingers of opposite polarization.
Stub fingers have previously been used to reduce interfering transverse effects.
For example, from the article “Generation mechanisms of second-order non-linearity in surface acoustic wave devices” (K. Hashimoto, R. Kodaira, T. Omori, 2014 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium Proceedings, p. 791), it is known that a nonlinear second-order disturbance may occur at the second harmonic frequency by generating a dielectric displacement D in the transverse direction.
For example, from the article “Effective suppression method for 2nd nonlinear signals of SAW devices” (R. Nakagawa, H. Kyoya, H. Shimizu, T. Kihara, 2014 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium Proceedings; p. 782), it is known that such disturbances can be reduced by separating the acoustic trace.
The problem with this improvement in the electrical properties lies in the deterioration of the acoustic properties caused by the separation.
There is therefore a desire for transducers to have not only good electrical properties, in particular reduced second-order nonlinearities, but also good acoustic properties.
The transducer according to claim 1 is proposed for this purpose. Dependent claims specify advantageous embodiments.
The electroacoustic transducer comprises a piezoelectric material, two busbars arranged side by side and aligned parallel on the piezoelectric material, and electrode fingers disposed between the busbars for exciting acoustic waves. The electrode fingers are each connected to one of the two busbars. The transducer further comprises an isolation region which is arranged between the electrode fingers and the respective other, opposite busbar and galvanically separates the electrode fingers from this opposite busbar. Furthermore, the transducer has a dielectric material for reducing the electric field strength in the isolation region.
The area between the ends of the stub fingers and the ends of the opposite electrode fingers is referred to as a “gap.”
Nonlinear disturbances arise due to the tensor of the permittivity having a non-zero component εyyy. This results in the component Ey of the electric field causing a component of the dielectric displacement Dy applied in the y direction:
D
y
(2)1/2ϵyyy(Ey(1))2 (3)
This component of the dielectric displacement is proportional to the square of the component of the electric field, and a variation in time of the electric field therefore causes a variation in time of the dielectric displacement with twice the frequency.
Compared with the known transducer structures of
A typical ratio of stub finger length and width of the gap DG is about 4/5:1/5. By appropriate quintupling of the distance of the oppositely charged electrode structures, a reduction of the resulting second-order disturbances by the factor 52=25 can thus be achieved.
Replacing the stub fingers by an isolation region with dielectric material has the disadvantage that the processing steps to manufacture the transducer require additional effort. Compared with the trivial solution of dispensing with the stub fingers, the acoustic properties of the transducer are improved.
The piezoelectric material may be a piezoelectric substrate.
An advantage of a transducer in which the region that is defined by the designation “gap,” in conventional transducers is filled by the dielectric material is the reduction of the transverse electric field strength in the substrate and the associated nonlinearity and reduction of the excitation of acoustic waves in the gap. The dielectric material on the substrate extracts field strength from the substrate. However, the parasitic total capacitance may be increased as a result. The decisive factor is the change in the substrate.
It is possible and advantageous for the dielectric material to reduce the electric field strength E in the transverse direction in the piezoelectric material, for example, in a monocrystalline substrate, during operation of the transducer.
The transverse direction is orthogonal to the propagation direction of the acoustic waves, the longitudinal direction, and parallel to the surface of the piezoelectric material. The electrode fingers point essentially in the transverse direction.
It is therefore also possible and advantageous for the dielectric material to reduce the dielectric displacement D in the transverse direction in the substrate during operation of the transducer.
The dielectric material may comprise multiple layers. The layers may comprise different materials, have different lateral dimensions, and/or have different thicknesses.
The dielectric material may be structured as a stub finger in the isolation region.
It is alternatively possible for the dielectric material to be structured as a finger that connects the electrode fingers to the respectively opposite busbar, but is galvanically isolated from the latter.
Alternatively, the dielectric material may also be structured in two continuous strips along the two busbars and be arranged on the piezoelectric material and on the electrode fingers.
The dielectric material may have fingers whose density, width, and height are chosen such that the reflection of these dielectric fingers resembles, or is identical to, the reflection of the other electrode fingers. The better the acoustic impedance of the dielectric material is matched to the acoustic impedance of the other electrode fingers, the better, that is to say, the less disturbed, the acoustic waves can propagate.
The dielectric material may have fingers that overlap electrode fingers of the opposing busbar in an overlap region and the dielectric material may be arranged on the electrode fingers in the overlap region.
The dielectric material may also have fingers that overlap electrode fingers of the opposing busbar in an overlap region and the electrode fingers may be arranged on the dielectric material in the overlap region.
If the dielectric material is located in the overlap region between the piezoelectric material and the electrode fingers, the piezoelectric coupling between the electrode fingers and the piezoelectric material is reduced, while the acoustic coupling ideally remains unchanged by the presence of the material of the electrode fingers. The propagation of the acoustic waves can thus be improved because the excitation of the acoustic waves at the finger ends is reduced and an excitation profile can thus be obtained that better corresponds to the propagation profile of the acoustic waves.
However, even an overlap in which the dielectric material is arranged on the electrode fingers is advantageous since such an overlap is easier to implement from a manufacturing standpoint than are flush terminations of the corresponding materials at the interface.
The transducer may also include a material layer for temperature compensation. The temperature compensation material layer covers the exposed upper surfaces of the electrode fingers, the exposed upper surfaces of the piezoelectric material, and the exposed upper surfaces of the dielectric material. The acoustic impedance of the material layer for temperature compensation differs from the acoustic impedances of the electrode fingers and the dielectric material.
The piezoelectric material may comprise LiNbO3 (lithium niobate).
The LiNbO3 may have the red-128YX crystal cut.
The material of the electrode fingers may comprise Al (aluminum) as a main component. The dielectric material may be SiO2 (silicon dioxide).
The piezoelectric material may comprise LiTaO3 (lithium tantalate).
The LiTaO3 may have the YX1/42 crystal cut, according to the IEEE definition for crystal cuts.
The material of the electrode fingers may comprise Cu (copper) as a main component. The dielectric material may comprise Ta2O5 (tantalum oxide) or GeO2 (germanium oxide) as a main component.
Other piezoelectric materials, such as quartz, are also possible.
Alternatively, the dielectric material may be the same material as the piezoelectric material that is also used as a carrier substrate beneath the electrode structures.
The latter is possible and can be achieved by the electrode structures and the dielectric material being embedded or arranged in correspondingly formed recesses on the upper surface of the piezoelectric material.
In one embodiment that is improved by good acoustic impedance matching, the height of the electrode fingers is 8% of the acoustic wavelength, A. The width of the electrode fingers is 60% of half the acoustic wavelength, λ/2, corresponding to a metallization ratio r of 60%. The dielectric material has fingers with a height of 14% of the acoustic wavelength, λ. The width of the fingers of the dielectric material is 60% of half the acoustic wavelength, λ/2.
In addition to the reflection, the propagation velocity of the acoustic wave in the region of the dielectric material is advantageously matched to the reflection and the velocity of the wave in the central excitation region in the center between the busbars by the dimensioning of the height, the width, and the acoustic impedance of the dielectric material.
To achieve the matching with respect to the reflection and acoustic velocity adjustment, fingers of the dielectric material may have a width or height that is different from the corresponding width or height of the finger electrodes.
The electrode fingers and the structure of the dielectric material need not necessarily be homogeneous, i.e., constant over the longitudinal propagation direction. Along the propagation direction of the acoustic waves, the finger widths and the finger distances may vary, as in the case of RSPUDT (RSPUDT=Resonant SPUDT [Single Phase Unidirectional Transducer]) filters.
The dielectric material in the isolation region may be structured such that the lower stopband edges of the waveguide formed by the electrode fingers and of the waveguide formed by the structures of the dielectric material match.
To this end, the height of the dielectric material may, for example, be adjusted such that the lower stopband edges of the waveguide formed by the electrode fingers and of the waveguide formed by the structures of the dielectric material match.
Functional principles of the transducer and exemplary embodiments are shown below with reference to schematic figures.
Shown are:
Correspondingly,
It should be noted that the isolation region does not need to be contiguous. Similarly, the dielectric material does not need to consist of a single aggregate. The dielectric material may be distributed among the corresponding locations of the finger ends of the electrode fingers.
The dielectric material may consist of different layers, for example, to obtain good acoustic impedance matching. A combination with methods for the optimization of other parameters can thus be achieved without additional overhead in manufacturing.
Half the acoustic wavelength, λ/2, is determined by the distance between two adjacent excitation centers. One excitation center lies in the center between two electrode fingers of different potential.
For the dielectric material to be able to contribute to forming an acoustic conductor together with the electrode fingers EFI, the acoustic impedances of the dielectric material and the electrode fingers are preferably very similar, and ideally identical, but different from the acoustic impedance of the temperature compensation layer TKL.
However, the dielectric material of a single strip may also be applied over a large area over the corresponding portion of the electrode finger, which simplifies manufacturing. For the sake of clarity, the dielectric material in the region of the electrodes is shown as transparent in
The stopband edge SBK at about 1.98 GHz is characterized by a decreasing real part and by a growing imaginary part.
The curves 11 and 12 thus clearly show that finger structures made of aluminum and silicon dioxide can be dimensioned so that they can be used together in an acoustic trace. Thus, silicon dioxide can be easily used as the dielectric material for reducing the electric field strength to reduce second-order nonlinear disturbances.
The transducer is not limited to the described or shown embodiments. Transducers having other structures for improving waveguide properties or for reducing electrical disturbances are also included in embodiments of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2015 120 654.4 | Nov 2015 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/076542 | 11/3/2016 | WO | 00 |