The present invention relates to a method for adjusting the electrical resistance of a resistor run, that runs in meandering windings between two layers, to a specified value.
Layer composites having an embedded resistor run are used in various applications, such as in temperature sensors, for instance, for measuring the exhaust gas temperature in internal combustion engines, as referred to in German patent document no. 37 33 192 C1, or in heating devices for increasing the accuracy of measurement of lambda probes for the measurement of the oxygen concentration in the exhaust gas of an internal combustion engine, as are referred to in, for instance, German patent document no. 198 38 466 A1 or 199 41 051 A1. In such temperature sensors it is necessary that the highest resistance PTC resistor of the resistor run, which is embedded between ceramic foils made of aluminum oxide or a solid electrolyte such as zirconium oxide, should lie, conditioned by manufacturing, in an extremely small tolerance range, so as always to ensure, when it is in mass production, as accurate a temperature measurement as possible. In the case of heating devices for lambda probes, a sufficient measurement accuracy requires regulating the heating device so as to keep the operating temperature of the lambda probe constant. For this too, it is necessary that the lowest resistance resistor of the resistor run should move, conditioned by manufacturing, in a tight tolerance range, in order to avoid overcontrolling or undercontrolling the heating device.
Therefore, in both cases, a subsequent adjustment of the resistance value of the resistor run, that is, an adjustment, trimming or calibrating after the production of the layer composite, having an enclosed resistor run, is required, by suitable measures.
In one method for adjusting the resistance of a resistor run, embedded in a layer composite of a measuring sensor, to a specified value (German patent document no. 198 51 955 A1), in one of the layers coating the resistor run, a cutout is left free, through which the treatment of the resistor run for the adjustment of its internal resistance is undertaken. In the vicinity of the cutout, the resistor run has branchings and/or closed areas, so-called burn-up segments, and the adjustment is made by cutting open the branchings and/or closed areas, e.g. using a laser, whereby the resistance of the resistor run is increased. This is continued until the desired specified value is achieved. The resistance is continually measured using a circuit configuration connected to the resistor run. In heating devices in which the electrical resistor run is surrounded additionally by an insulation before it is covered by the layers of the layer composite, either the cutout is brought all the way through the insulation down to the plane of the resistor run, or the insulation is arranged in such a way that the laser is able to penetrate the insulation.
In both cases, after the laser adjustment, the cutout is closed by a filler substance, in order to protect the resistor run from mechanical ar chemical influences. A glass ceramic may be used as the filler substance, and after the filling, it is glazed by the thermal effect of the laser.
The exemplary method according to the present invention may have the advantage that, for cutting open the burn-up segments for the purpose of adjusting or trimming the resistor run, no opening is necessary in one of the layers covering the resistor run. This enables one to do without the additional process step to close the opening, and avoids all the disadvantages in connection with the closing when the measuring sensor is installed in the exhaust gas of internal combustion engines, as a result of chemical or thermal degradation of the closing material; for, as a result of increasing electrical conductivity of the closing material, chemical degradation may lead to parasitic leakage currents, and thus to a flattening of the characteristics curve of the sensor element, and thermal degradation may lead to the failure of the sensor element by the breakup of the closing material. The cutting open of the burn-up segment takes place by energy-controlled current pulses, which have the effect of electrical vaporization of the burn-up segments made of the same material as the resistor run, so that for a suitable gradation of the resistances of the meandering windings or loops, e.g. a binary gradation, the resistance value of the resistor run may be increased at each occurrence of an additional burn-up segment.
In this context, because of the energy control, the burning up of the resistor run itself is reliably excluded.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, circuit traces are run directly to the connecting points of the burn-up segments to the meandering windings, and for the occurrence of a selected burn-up segment, the current pulse is injected into the two circuit traces leading to the selected burn-up segment. It is of advantage if the circuit traces are situated between the two connecting circuit traces leading to the resistor run and, same as the connecting circuit traces, are brought into the so-called cold region of the sensor element which is not exposed to the measured gas or exhaust gas. By contactings of the circuit traces in this area, the current pulses are able to be applied to the selected burn-up segments. Because of the high resistance insulation of the circuit traces for conducting the current pulses, the influencing of the low-resistance resistor run, that is to be adjusted, by parasitic leakage currents remains low even at high temperatures, so that the circuit traces have no effect that negatively influences the characteristics curve of the sensor element. For this reason, the selection of the material for the circuit traces may be optimized with regard to high specific conductivity, a low temperature coefficient and the high current loadability connected therewith, low costs and adaptation to the sintering temperature and the sintering atmosphere of the sensor element.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, constant current pulses are used as current pulses, whose pulse duration is controlled. Thereby one may set the energy required for cutting open a burn-up segment in an highly accurate manner, so that the meandering winding connected in parallel to the burn-up segment is not damaged, let alone burned open.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the pulse duration is controlled in that the voltage falling off at the selected burn-up segment is monitored and, upon the detection of a more than proportional voltage increase, the pulse current is shut off.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the burn-up segment is in the shape of a waist, whereby it is achieved that the greatest power transformation of the arc pulse takes place exactly at the thinnest location of the burn-up segment, and at that point it makes the material fuse. Since the meandering winding connected in parallel to the burn-up segment is more highly resistive, and, because of being embedded on both sides in an electrical insulation it has better heat coupling, the meandering resistor is not partially fused open by the energy-rich current pulse during the burning up of the burn-up segment.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the molten open material of the burn-up segment is accommodated in a cavity formed in one of the two layers that cover the resistor runs. During the production of the sensor, the cavity is produced by printing over the burn-up segments using carbon-containing silk-screen printing paste, which completely oxidizes during sintering and goes over into the gas phase.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, one of the burn-up segments is connected to one of two connecting circuit traces that are brought to the end of the resistor run. To burn open a selected burn-up segment, the selected burn-up segment is heated and the current pulse is injected into the connecting circuit traces of the resistor run. Because of the local heating up of the selected burn-up segment from the outside, which may be done using a laser pulse at about 200° C., the specific resistance of the burn-up segment is increased, for instance, by a factor of two. At the heated point, at the narrowest place of the burn-up segment, additional energy is applied by the current pulse flowing in one part of the resistor run and in the burn-up segment, and this further increases the local heating, whereby additional heating is put in place that leads to the fusion of the selected burn-up segment. The fusing open of other burn-up segments by the current pulse is prevented by the absent local heating. This embodiment of the method has the advantage that one may do without applying additional circuit traces to the individual burn-up segments, which lowers manufacturing costs.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, at least one first burn-up segment is connected to one of two connecting circuit traces that are routed to the two ends of the resistor run, and at least one last burn-up segment is connected to an additional circuit trace that is routed out. To cut open a selected burn-up segment, it is heated and the current pulse is injected between the connecting circuit trace and the routed-out additional circuit trace. Providing an additional circuit trace to conduct the pulse from the burn-up segment to the outside has the advantage that the voltage required for keeping up the constant current pulse is clearly lower.
The temperature sensor or temperature measuring probe sketched in
During the production of the sensor element, the geometry of resistor run 12 is developed in such a way that the measured cold resistance is less than a required specified value of the electrical resistance. At this point, in an adjustment process, the electrical resistance of resistor run 19 is increased in such a way that it is equivalent to the specified value within extremely tight tolerance boundaries.
Resistor run 19 is shown enlarged in
The burning up of burn-up segment 18 for the adjustment, trimming or calibration of resistor run 12 is performed by energy-controlled current pulses which are directed through selected burn-up segments 18. The current pulses are constant current pulses, whose pulse duration is controlled.
In order to be able to guide the current pulses to the burn-up segments, during production, circuit traces are put at the connecting points of meandering winding 121 and burn-up segments 18 that extend into the cold region of the sensor element and may be contacted there. In the exemplary embodiment of resistor run 12 shown enlarged in
The electrical resistance of resistor run 12 of the sensor element thus prepared, finished and sintered, is adjusted to the higher specified value in an adjustment or trimming process, subsequent to the production process, as follows:
The resistance value of cold resistor run 12 is measured and, in the light of the resistance difference to the specified value, those burn-up segments 18 are established that should be disconnected in order to attain the required resistance value. Since the gradated resistance values of the meandering windings 121 in the layout of meander-shaped resistor run 12 are known, the required burn-up segments 18 may be determined without any trouble. Determined burn-up segments 18 are burned open one after another by applying a constant current pulse. To do this, an adjustment electronic system 22 is provided which, as is not shown any further here, has a constant current source, a switching thyristor and control electronics for switching the switching thyristor on and off. To generate the constant current pulse for burning open selected burn-up segment 18, the two circuit traces 19 leading to the selected burn-up segment 18 are contacted through cutout 20 and connected to adjusting electronics 22. When the switching thyristor is activated, the constant current source is connected to burn-up segment 18. As soon as burn-up segment 18 is fused open, the switching thyristor brings about an immediate separation of the constant current source from circuit traces 19. The current curve and the voltage curve at burn-up segment 18 during the closing of the switching thyristor and after the reopening of the switching thyristor is shown in
The adjusting procedure described may be carried out at a known room temperature and also at a known high temperature, or in a fluid medium, since the entire range of resistor run 12 is hermetically sealed. In order to achieve a higher thermal shock resistance as well as lower current densities, in the case of highly resistant burn-up segments 18, it is advantageous to perform the adjustment of resistor run 12 at higher temperatures, by self-heating or outside heating.
If one wishes to avoid using cutout 20 in cover layer 11, for the contacting of circuit traces 19, which is closed using insulating, gas-permeable material so as to prevent deposits on contacting surfaces 21 (e.g. electrically conductive soot) that influence the characteristics curve of the sensor element, then, as sketched in
One modification of the adjusting method described allows for the necessity of bringing one circuit trace 19 to each burn-up segment 18 to be omitted. Of the burn-up segments 18 that are applied to resistor run 12 during the production of the sensor element and that bridge the corresponding meandering windings 121, the two first burn-up segments 18, which are connected in parallel to the left and the right of the meander of each meandering winding 121 (
Since, in the case of a high resistance of resistor run 12, for maintaining the constant current pulses, a rather high adjusting voltage has to be raised by adjustment electronics 22, one or two additional circuit traces 24, 25 are routed to burn-up segments 18, as shown in
Basically, only one additional circuit trace 24 is sufficient if burn-up segments 18 are situated in such a way that the last of all burn-up segments 18 is connected to the only additional circuit trace 24. The two additional circuit traces 24, 25 are of advantage in the symmetrical layout of resistor run 12 shown in
The adjustment methods described are not limited to the adjustment, described in exemplary fashion, of the measuring resistance of a temperature measurement sensor. It may just as well be drawn upon for the adjustment of the electrical resistance heater of a probe for determining the concentration of a gas component in a gas to be measured, e.g. the oxygen or nitrogen oxide concentration in the exhaust gas of internal combustion engines, in which a meander-shaped resistor run is arranged to have low resistance. In addition, the method may also be used in the case of multilayer hybrid circuits, since here, too, adjustment resistors are situated between the layers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 60 852.0 | Dec 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/03800 | 11/17/2003 | WO | 2/7/2006 |