The present invention relates to a micromechanical device having at least one drive frame and at least one vibrator, the vibrator being situated in a region surrounded by the drive frame; the vibrator being coupled mechanically to the drive frame.
German Patent Application No. DE 101 08 198 shows a micromechanical rotational rate sensor, which has a drive frame and a vibrator (Coriolis element) situated in it that is mechanically coupled to it. The drive frame executes a drive vibration in the form of an essentially straight-line translatory motion between two reversal points. The drive vibration is transferred to the vibrator using the mechanical coupling. A Coriolis force is able to act on the vibrator as a result of a rotational motion. The effect of the Coiolis force is transferred to the detection element at a sensing element that is connected to the vibrator.
German Patent No. DE 196 17 666 shows a micromechanical rotational rate sensor that is excited by means for excitation of vibration to flexural vibrations, that is, to vibrations having vibration loops and vibrational nodal points. The means for excitation of vibration are situated at the vibration loops. Detection means are situated at the vibrational nodal points.
The present invention relates to a micromechanical device having at least one drive frame and at least one vibrator, the vibrator being situated in a region surrounded by the drive frame; the vibrator being coupled mechanically to the drive frame. An important aspect of the present invention is that the drive frame is able to be excited to a flexural vibration. Such a micromechanical device is advantageously created to be compact and to permit a certain vibrational frequency of at least one vibrator.
It is advantageous that drive means are provided at the drive frame for the excitation of the flexural vibration. It is particularly advantageous that the drive means are situated outside the region surrounded by the drive frame. It is of advantage that the drive means are designed for the excitation of the natural vibration of the drive frame. The vibrational frequency is thereby determined accurately, and the drive energy required is low. One advantageous design of the present invention provides that the vibrator be rigidly coupled to the drive frame. In that way, the amplitude of the vibrator is advantageously determined. Another advantageous design of the present invention provides that the vibrator be coupled to the drive frame in a springy fashion. In that way, a large vibrational amplitude of the vibrator may be achieved at a small drive amplitude of the drive means and the drive frame. One advantageous design of the present invention provides that a first drive frame be provided having at least one first vibrator, and that a second drive frame be provided having at least one second vibrator, the two drive frames being mechanically coupled. Another advantageous design of the present invention provides that a first drive frame be provided having a first vibrator and having at least one second vibrator. It is also advantageous that the first vibrator and the second vibrator vibrate in different directions. One particularly advantageous embodiment of the present invention provides that the micromechanical device be a rotational rate sensor, the force effect of a Coriolis force on the vibrator being detectable.
The advantages of the present invention may be summarized as follows. As a result of the present invention, the synchronization of all linear vibrators is advantageously made possible by a drive frame surrounding them, which is excited to flexural vibrations. This drive frame may be a common frame for a plurality of vibrators. This may, however, also involve a plurality of frames coupled to one another, which each have one or more vibrators. In the vibration of the frame, two directions of motion are present, for example, which are separately transferred to two vibrators, so that the latter vibrate perpendicularly (or obliquely) or in whatever other different type of direction to one another. One single drive mode is forced on the micromechanical device via the drive frame. This is particularly advantageously possible if the drive frame is excited to a natural vibration via a drive means. The driving of the vibrator at high amplitude is advantageously possible if the vibrator is coupled to the drive frame at the position of a vibration loop.
The coupling between the drive frame and the vibrator may be made to be rigid or springy. In a rigid coupling, the amplitude of the frame is transferred directly and in an unchanged manner to the vibrator. In a springy coupling, the drive mode of the overall system may be designed in such a way that the frame executes only a small amplitude, whereas the inner vibrator(s) carries/carry out an actually desired drive amplitude by resonant overshoot.
On a surrounding drive frame of a rotational rate sensor, the drive combs of a capacitive drive may be mounted outside, far away from the vibrator and the sensing elements. Because the drive frame only has to vibrate at a small amplitude, the electrode fingers of the drive may be formed to be short. Because of that, the absolute levitation force is reduced. The transfer of the remaining levitation force to the vibrator or the vibrators may be weakened by carrying out the mechanical coupling of the vibrator to the drive frame flexibly, using a coupling spring which performs flexibly in the z direction. In a device according to the present invention, such as the rotational rate sensor according to the exemplary embodiment of
A two-channel element for detecting ωx and ωz rotational rates is also possible using the above construction.
As is known from the documents named in the related art, the drive (not shown) may be made capacitive as a comb drive. An often undesired side effect of the comb drive is levitation forces, which act in the z direction on the driven movable element, in this case drive frames 10 and 15. The device according to the present invention makes it possible clearly to diminish these levitation forces and their effect.
Other specific embodiments are conceivable, particularly combinations of the exemplary embodiments shown above.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 049 341.1 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |
10 2007 051 591.1 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/062936 | 9/26/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/7/2010 |