Various applications may include a sealed chamber formed in a semiconductor structure. In one particular application, a chip-scale atomic clock may include a selected vapor at a low pressure in a sealed chamber. Injecting radio frequency (RF) signals into, or extracting RF signals, from a hermetically sealed chamber is a challenge.
In some embodiments, an apparatus includes a substrate containing a cavity and a dielectric structure covering at least a portion of the cavity. The cavity is hermetically sealed. The apparatus also may include a launch structure formed on the dielectric structure and outside the hermetically sealed cavity. The launch structure is configured to cause radio frequency (RF) energy flowing in a first direction to enter the hermetically sealed cavity through the dielectric structure in a direction orthogonal to the first direction. Various types of launch structures are described herein.
In another embodiment, an apparatus includes a substrate containing a cavity. The apparatus also may include a dielectric structure covering at least a portion of the cavity. The cavity is hermetically sealed. A launch structure may be formed on the dielectric structure and outside the hermetically sealed cavity. The launch structure is configured to cause radio frequency (RF) energy flowing in a first direction to enter the hermetically sealed cavity through the dielectric structure in a direction orthogonal to the first direction. The apparatus also may include a transceiver electrically coupled to the launch structure and configured to inject a transmit signal into the cavity through the launch structure, generate an error signal based on the transmit signal and a receive signal from the launch structure, and dynamically adjust a frequency of the transmit signal based on the error signal.
In this description, the term “couple” or “couples” means either an indirect or direct wired or wireless connection. Thus, if a first device couples to a second device, that connection may be through a direct connection or through an indirect connection via other devices and connections. Also, in this description, the recitation “based on” means “based at least in part on.” Therefore, if X is based on Y, then X may be a function of Y and any number of other factors.
In an embodiment, an apparatus includes a substrate containing a cavity and a dielectric structure covering at least a portion of the cavity. The cavity is hermetically sealed. A launch structure is formed on the dielectric structure and outside the hermetically sealed cavity. The launch structure is configured to cause radio frequency (RF) energy flowing in a first direction to enter the hermetically sealed cavity through the dielectric structure in a direction orthogonal to the first direction. The described embodiments are directed to various launch structures for the hermetically sealed cavity.
In one application, the hermetically sealed cavity and launch structure forms at least part of a chip-scale atomic clock. The cavity may contain a plurality of dipolar molecules (e.g., water molecules) at a relatively low pressure. For some embodiments, the pressure may be approximately 0.1 mbarr for water molecules. If argon molecules were used, the pressure may be several atmospheres. The hermetically sealed cavity may contain selected dipolar molecules at a pressure chosen to optimize the amplitude of a signal absorption peak of the molecules detected at an output of the cavity. An electromagnetic signal may be injected through an aperture into the cavity. Through closed-loop control, the frequency of the signal is dynamically adjusted to match the frequency corresponding to the absorption peak of the molecules in the cavity. The frequency produced by quantum rotation of the selected dipolar molecules may be unaffected by circuit aging and may not vary with temperature or other environmental factors.
As shown in
An electronic bandgap structure (EBG) 130 (
A waveguide 150 (
As noted above, the cavity 112 may contain dipolar molecules (e.g., water). At a precise frequency (e.g., 183.31 GHz for water molecules), the dipolar molecules absorb the energy. The launch structure may include a pair of structures such as that shown in
A dielectric structure 220 (e.g., glass or other non-conductive material) is bonded to the metal layer 215, and an EBG 230 is formed on the surface of the dielectric structure 220 opposite the metal layer 215. As explained above, the EBG structure 230 attenuates electromagnetic wave coupling along the outer surface 211 (
The launch structure in this example includes an input formed as a coplanar waveguide comprising a pair of ground contacts 255 and 257 (
Although in some embodiments, the cavity may be rectangular in cross section, in the example of
The cavity in this example is in the opposite orientation as shown in
The vias 460 may include metal (e.g., copper, aluminum). In some embodiments, each via is fully filled with metal. In other embodiments, each via may be partially filled with metal. Each via is generally circular in cross section. The diameter D6 (
The clock generator 790 of
The sealed cavity 808 includes a conductive interior cavity surface, as well as first and second non-conductive apertures 815 and 817 (e.g., the dielectric structures described above) formed in the interior cavity surface for providing an electromagnetic field entrance and an electromagnetic field exit, respectively. In one example, the apertures 815, 817 magnetically couple into the TE10 mode of the cavity 808. In other examples, the apertures 815, 817 excite higher order modes. A first conductive coupling structure 820 and a second conductive coupling structure 825 are formed on an outer surface of the vapor cell 805 proximate the first and second non-conductive apertures 815, 817. The first and second conductive coupling structures 820, 825 may be any of the launch structures described above and may comprise a conductive strip formed on a surface of one of the substrates forming the cell 805. Each coupling structure 820, 825 may overlie and cross over the corresponding non-conductive aperture 815, 817 for providing an electromagnetic interface to couple a magnetic field into (based on the transmit signal TX from the transceiver output 833) the cavity 808 or from the cavity to the transceiver RX input 838. The proximate location of the first and second conductive coupling structures 820, 825 and the corresponding non-conductive apertures 815, 817 advantageously provides electromagnetically transmissive paths through a substrate, which can be any electromagnetically transmissive material.
The transceiver circuit 800 in certain implementations is implemented on or in an integrated circuit (not shown), to which the vapor cell 805 is electrically coupled for transmission of the TX signal via the output 833 and for receipt of the RX signal via the input 838. The transceiver 800 is operable when powered for providing an alternating electrical output signal TX to the first conductive coupling structure 820 for coupling an electromagnetic field to the interior of the cavity 808, as well as for receiving the alternating electrical input signal RX from the second conductive coupling structure 825 representing the electromagnetic field received from the cavity 808. The transceiver circuit 800 is operable for selectively adjusting the frequency of the electrical output signal TX in order to reduce the electrical input signal RX by interrogation to operate the clock generator 790 at a frequency which substantially maximizes the molecular absorption through rotational motor state transitions, and for providing a reference clock signal REF_CLK at the frequency of the TX output signal.
In certain examples, the transceiver 800 includes a signal generator 802 with an output 833 electrically coupled with the first conductive coupling structure 820 for providing the alternating electrical output signal TX, and for providing the reference clock signal REF_CLK at the corresponding transmit output frequency. The transceiver 800 also includes a lock-in amplifier circuit 806 with an input 838 coupled from the second conductive coupling structure 825 for receiving the RX signal. The lock-in amplifier operates to provide an error signal ERR representing a difference between the RX signal and the electrical output signal TX. In one example, the lock-in amplifier 806 provides the error signal ERR as an in-phase output, and the error signal ERR is used as an input by a loop filter 804 to provide a control output signal (CO) to the signal generator 802 for selectively adjusting the TX output signal frequency to maintain this frequency at a peak absorption frequency of the dipolar molecular gas inside the sealed interior of the cavity 808. In some examples, the RF power of the TX and RX loop is controlled so as to avoid or mitigate stark shift affects.
The electromagnetic coupling via the non-conductive apertures 815, 817 (
In one embodiment, the signal generator 802 initially sweeps the transmission output frequency through a band known to include the quantum frequency of the cell 505 (e.g., transitioning upward from an initial frequency below the suspected quantum frequency, or initially transitioning downward from an initial frequency above the suspected quantum frequency, or other suitable sweeping technique or approach). The transceiver 800 monitors the received energy via the input 838 coupled with (e.g., electrically connected to) the second conductive coupling structure 825 in order to identify the transmission frequency associated with peak absorption by the gas in the cell cavity 808 (e.g., minimal reception at the receiver). Once the quantum absorption frequency is identified, the loop filter 804 moves the source signal generator transmission frequency close to that absorption frequency (e.g., 183.31 GHz), and modulates the signal at a very low frequency to regulate operation around the null or minima in the transmission efficiency representing the ratio of the received energy to the transmitted energy. The loop filter 804 provides negative feedback in a closed loop operation to maintain the signal generator 802 operating at a TX frequency corresponding to the quantum frequency of the cavity dipolar molecule gas.
In steady state operation, the lock-in amplifier 806 and the loop filter 804 maintain the transmitter frequency at the peak absorption frequency of the cell gas. In one non-limiting example, the loop filter 804 provides proportional-integral-derivative (PID) control using a derivative of the frequency error as a control factor for lock-in detection and closed loop regulation. At the bottom of the null in a transmission coefficient curve, the derivative is zero and the loop filter 804 provides the derivative back as a direct current (DC) control output signal CO to the signal generator 802. This closed loop operates to keep the signal generator transmission output frequency at the peak absorption frequency of the cell gas using lock-in differentiation based on the RX signal received from the cell 808. The REF_CLK signal from the signal generator 802 is the TX signal clock and can be provided to other circuitry such as frequency dividers and other control circuits requiring use of a clock.
Modifications are possible in the described embodiments, and other embodiments are possible, within the scope of the claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/681,541 filed Aug. 21, 2017 (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,498,001 on Dec. 3, 2019), the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 16700476 | US |