This application is a 35 U.S.C. §371 national phase application of PCT/CN2013/071090, filed on Jan. 29, 2013, which claims a priority to a Chinese Patent Application No. CN 20120065925.5, filed on Mar. 14, 2012, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to magnetoresistive magnetic field gradient sensors, in particular the use of magnetic tunnel junction magnetoresistive sensor elements to form a magnetoresistive magnetic field gradient sensor.
Magnetic field sensors are commonly used in modern systems to measure the magnetic field, current, position, direction, and many other physical parameters. In the prior art, there are many different types of sensors for measuring magnetic field, and these commonly use the Hall Effect, an anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR), or giant magnetoresistance (GMR) elements.
Hall Effect sensors generally have low sensitivity, and thus often use a flux concentrator to increase the sensitivity. Flux concentrators increase the size and weight of the sensor, and can decrease the linearity of the sensor. Moreover, Hall elements generally have high power consumption. Although AMR elements have much higher sensitivity than Hall elements, they suffer from narrow linear range, and they need to be reset using a set/reset coil. The reset operation, resulting increases the complexity of the manufacturing process; the coil increases the size of the sensor; and, the power consumption also increased by the reset operation. Multilayer GMR sensor elements have higher sensitivity than AMR, but their linear range is low, and unless they are biased by a permanent magnet, the response curve of the can only provide a unipolar measurement of the magnetic field gradient, a bipolar magnetic field gradient cannot be measured.
Magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) elements in recent years have been gaining acceptance as magnetoresistive sensors in industrial applications. They are multilayer devices that utilize of the tunnel magnetoresistance effect (TMR) for measuring the magnetic field, and these elements posses a larger rate of resistance change than AMR or GMR elements. Compared to the Hall Effect sensors, MTJ elements have superior temperature stability, higher sensitivity, lower power consumption, better linearity, and no need for flux concentrators; with respect to AMR sensors they have improved temperature stability, higher sensitivity, wider linear range, and no need for a set/reset coil structure; Compared to GMR sensors they have better temperature stability, higher sensitivity, lower power consumption, and wider linear range.
Although MTJ elements have high sensitivity, when used to detect weak field gradients the MTJ element can be disturbed by strong magnetic fields, and the high sensitivity MTJ elements are not easily amenable to low-cost mass production. The sensor yield depends on the offset value output from MTJ magnetoresistive element constituting the magnetoresistive bridge, because MTJ elements are often difficult to match on the different arms of the bridge. The manufacturing process for fully single-chip MTJ sensor bridges is very complicated.
In order to solve these problems, the present invention utilizes MTJ elements as the sensing elements in a magnetoresistive magnetic field gradiometer, which results in the advantages of high sensitivity, wide linear range, low power consumption, small volume, and good temperature performance.
To achieve the above object, the present invention discloses a magnetoresistive magnetic field gradient sensor comprising a magnetoresistive bridge, wherein the magnetoresistive bridge comprises a multiplicity of magnetoresistive arms that include one or more magnetoresistive element, wherein each magnetoresistive element within the magnetoresistive bridge has a magnetic pinning layer with a magnetic moment aligned in the same direction, a permanent magnet, wherein the permanent magnet is positioned adjacent to each of the magnetoresistive arms and generates a bias magnetic field to zero the offset of the transfer curve of the magnetoresistive element, a substrate on which the magnetoresistive bridge and the permanent magnets are deposited, a wire bond pad used to electrically interconnect magnetoresistive magnetic field gradiometer sensor to ASIC chip or to a terminal of a package lead frame by bond wires.
Preferably, the magnetoresistive element is a MTJ element.
Preferably, the magnetoresistive elements have shape anisotropy.
Preferably, the magnetoresistive elements are prepared using the same process on the same substrate and have the same shape and same resistance value.
Preferably, the magnetoresistive bridge is a half-bridge.
Preferably, magnetoresistive bridge is a full-bridge, wherein the magnetoresistive arms have the same sensing direction, the arms opposite to each other in the circuit diagram are in the same spatial location on the substrate and the arms adjacent to each other in the circuit diagram are in different spatial locations on the substrate, such that the magnetoresistive bridge detects a gradient magnetic field.
Preferably, the magnitude of the magnetization and direction of the of the permanent magnet are adjusted in order to control the output performance of the magnetoresistive magnetic field gradiometer.
Preferably, the magnitude of the magnetization and direction of the of the permanent magnet are adjusted in order to control the output performance of the magnetoresistive magnetic field gradiometer.
Adopting the above described features, the present invention will have good external DC magnetic field insensitivity, high gradient sensitivity, wide linear operating range, low power dissipation, small size, and good thermal performance.
The bottom electrode layer 9 and the top electrode layer 6 are in direct electrical contact respectively with the free layer 5 and antiferromagnetic layer 2. The electrode layers are generally composed of non-magnetic conductive materials capable of carrying current to the ohmmeter 34. Ohm meter 34 applies a known current (voltage) through the entire tunnel junction, and a voltage (or current) is measured. Typically, the tunnel barrier layer 4 provides most of the resistance of the device, on the order of about 1000 ohms and the resistance of all other conductors is about 10 ohms. The bottom electrode layer 9 is deposited on top of the insulating layer 10, which is in turn deposited on substrate 11, and insulating layer 10 is thicker than electrode layer 9, and they are composed of different materials. The substrate material is typically silicon, quartz, heat-resistant glass, GaAs, AlTiC or any other material capable of being provided as a smooth wafer. Because of the ease of processing integrated circuits (although such magnetic sensors may not always need circuitry) silicon is usually the best choice.
As shown in
Herein, HS is the saturation field. HS is defined as the intersection between the linear region and the positive and negative saturation values, where the position is asymmetric due to H0.
As shown in
A bridge circuit is often used to change the output resistance to a voltage than can be easily amplified. It can reduce the sensor noise, improve common mode rejection, reduce temperature drift and improve other deficiencies. The above mentioned MTJ arm 20 can be made into a bridge circuit.
As shown in
The magnetic field emanating from the edge 35 of the permanent magnets 22 is considered to arise from magnetic charges that form as a result of boundary conditions as shown schematically in
ρs=Mr sin(θsns−θmag (2)
Additionally, the magnetic field resulting from the distribution of magnetic charges can be defined as:
When θmag=θref=π/2, the magnetic field at MTJ element 1 only depends on remanent moment MR as described by the following equation:
Equation 4 is a function of the width W 39 and gap G 38 shown in
Along the direction perpendicular to the sensitive direction 23 of the MTJ element, permanent magnets 22 produce a bias field for the magnetoresistive element
Hoff=Hmag cos(θsns) (5)
Parallel to the sensitive direction 23 of the MTJ element, the magnetic field of the permanent magnet 22 is
Hoff=Hmag sin(θsms) (6)
As can be seen from above, by adjusting the thickness of the permanent magnet, the angles of the permanent magnet θmag 37 and θsns 44, it is possible to change Hoff, in order to compensate the MTJ element against the Neel coupling field H0, thereby modifying the output characteristics and improving performance. On the other hand, it is also possible to adjust Hcross, to change the saturation field of the MTJ element, thereby adjusting the sensitivity.
By setting the permanent magnets 22 at an angle θsns 44 with respect to the sensing axis 23, it is possible to simultaneously produce Hcross 27 and Hoff 26 fields, in order to set the MTJ element saturation field, at the same time cancel the Neel coupling, to center the response curve of the MTJ element around zero field; this method will optimize the symmetry of the output response of the bridge, reduce effective Neel coupling and set desired sensitivity. In addition, setting the remanent magnetization Mr at angle θmag 37 with respect to the sensing axis 23 after preparation of the gradiometer chip, permits fine tuning of the device to optimize symmetry, allowing further improvement in manufacturing yield.
MTJ element 1 is generally patterned into a shape in order to provide shape anisotropy Hk. The common shapes are long ellipse, long rectangle, rhomboid, etc. With regard to this, the MTJ element 1 will have a saturation field HS given by:
HS=Hk+Hcross, (7)
A single MTJ element magnetoresistive response curve 1 as herein described has a sensitivity of:
By changing the shape of the permanent magnets and the MTJ elements the response curve of the MTJ element can be modified.
The fields HCM and HdM are the common mode and differential mode output field values.
Ideally, R1=R2, SR1=SR2, MTJ elements R1 and R2 are consistently the same, biased with half-bridge bias voltage Vbias, then for a common mode magnetic field HCM, the half-bridge output voltage is VOUT30:
Setting Vbias==1V results in a common mode sensitivity of SCM=dV1/dHCM=0
The output does not change with HCM, it is only sensitive to the external magnetic field gradient, and this makes it insensitive to external magnetic field interference.
For the differential mode HdM, we can write:
Ideally, SR1=SR2, R1=R2 such that:
So it can be observed that the gradiometer output change in response to a differential mode field HdM changes, when biased Vbias=1V, the sensitivity is
As can be seen from the above equation, the half-bridge gradiometer in differential mode only responds to a gradient magnetic field, and outputs a signal proportional to it, but also has good magnetic field anti-interference capability. The measurement results of a typical half-bridge gradiometer are shown in
Small differences in R1 and R2, make small differences in sensitivities SR1 and SR2, and this causes a response to a common mode magnetic field HCM. Still, the common mode sensitivity is much smaller than the differential mode sensitivity, and the sensitivity to the undesired common mode response can be quantified as a common mode rejection ratio CMRR:
With good process capability, CMRR is better than 40 dB.
Ideally, the output VOUT only responds to the differential mode magnetic field HdM. For the differential mode, the response can be written:
Under ideal conditions, R1=R2=R3=R4, SR1=SR2=SR3=SR4=SR, such that:
Wherein, R is the resistance value of the MTJ elements 20, and SR is the sensitivity of the magnetoresistive elements. It can be shown that the full and half bridge magnetic field gradiometers have the same insensitivity to common mode magnetic fields, but the full-bride has twice the sensitivity of the half-bridge magnetic field gradiometer. The typical output response of a full-bridge magnetic field gradiometer is shown in
The above mentioned half and full-bridge gradiometers can be prepared on single substrate using the same process steps. For this reason they can be called single-chip magnetoresistive magnetic field gradiometers. They are compatible with various different packaging techniques and can also be made multi-chip. For example, the magnetoresistive elements can be prepared on the same substrate using the same process steps, but then diced into separate chips that are electrically connected, resulting in full or half-bridge gradiometer devices. Whether single or multi-chip packaging is used, the external bond pads of the bridges may or may not be connected to an ASIC both of which would be placed on a lead frame, electrically connected to the output pins of the lead frame, and then encapsulated to form the packaged device.
The above description describes several different specific implementations of the invention, obviously, many more variations can be implemented without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. Those skilled in the art can make many variations without departing from the intent or technical scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2012 1 0065925 | Mar 2012 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/CN2013/071090 | 1/29/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/135117 | 9/19/2013 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7390584 | Daughton | Jun 2008 | B2 |
20040046549 | Van Ostrand | Mar 2004 | A1 |
20040212360 | Sato | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20060291106 | Shoji | Dec 2006 | A1 |
20080012558 | Rossler | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080272771 | Guo et al. | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20080274270 | Wakui | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20090015252 | Raberg | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20090051353 | Takeya | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20100253330 | Sasaki | Oct 2010 | A1 |
20130334634 | Deak et al. | Dec 2013 | A1 |
20130335073 | Deak et al. | Dec 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
102226835 | Oct 2011 | CN |
102298124 | Dec 2011 | CN |
202119391 | Jan 2012 | CN |
102565727 | Jul 2012 | CN |
102590768 | Jul 2012 | CN |
202794487 | Mar 2013 | CN |
2007003498 | Jan 2007 | JP |
2008277834 | Nov 2008 | JP |
2009527758 | Jul 2009 | JP |
2011101026 | May 2011 | JP |
WO-2013135117 | Sep 2013 | WO |
Entry |
---|
“International Application Serial No. PCT/CN2013/071090, International Search Report on Patentability dated Sep. 16, 2014”, (w/ English Translation), 16 pgs. |
“International Application Serial No. PCT/CN2013/071090, International Search Report mailed Apr. 25, 2013”, (w/ English Translation), 7 pgs. |
“International Application Serial No. PCT/CN2013/071090, Written Opinion mailed Apr. 25, 2013”, (w/ English Translation), 14 pgs. |
“European Application No. 13761465.7, Extended European Search Report dated Dec. 22, 2015”, (Dec. 22, 2015), 10 pgs. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150130455 A1 | May 2015 | US |