The invention relates to a micromechanical resonator.
Semiconductor technology is being used to an ever-increasing extent in automotive engineering. Miniaturization not only allows improvement of closed-loop and open-loop control of engine-specific functions, it also opens the way for new safety systems, such as parking aids, pre-crash and side-crash functions, and distance measurement. Sensors—that have been miniaturized, if possible—must be provided in the motor vehicle for all processes based on closed-loop and open-loop control technology.
Contactless sensors are frequently used that emit a measuring beam having a certain frequency that reflects on the object to be measured and is detected once more and evaluated by means of a receiver unit. In semiconductor technology, the use of “dielectric resonators” is known to stabilize the frequency of microwave oscillators or in a combination of a plurality of dielectric resonators in microwave filters up to a frequency of approximately 40 GHz. The microwave oscillators are constructed using hybrid technology, according to which a “dielectric resonator pill” is mounted on a conductor substrate in a suitable location. The resonator pill is secured via coupling leads to the surrounding microstrip line circuits of the conductor substrate. Merely installing the resonator pill on the conductor substrate in an exact position is technically complex and, therefore, expensive, and it can result in a small yield rate. After installation, it is also necessary to adjust the dielectric resonators using a punch located spacially above them in order to obtain the closely toleranced setpoint resonance frequency. Due to the fact that the geometry becomes increasingly smaller as the frequency increases—and due to the problems that then occur during adjustment—dielectric resonator oscillators cannot be fabricated according to the current state of the art for frequencies above 40 GHz.
In contrast, the resonator according to the invention offers the advantage that precise dielectric resonator oscillators can also be obtained for frequencies above 40 GHz. The micromechanical high-frequency resonator according to the invention is composed successively of
Instead of the dielectric resonator pill, which must be installed on the carrier substrate and adjusted precisely, the present resonator is therefore already an integral part of a semiconductor component.
The production method according to the invention provides that cylindrical structural elements (cylinders) are etched (trench etching process) in a base (second) layer of p−-doped silicon (SOI wafer) separated from a first layer of silicon via an insulating layer, which said cylindrical structural elements are then completely metallized. The positioning of the resonator on the semiconductor component, in particular to a microstrip line circuit, is ensured by the high accuracy of photolithographic methods. The very high precision involved in trench etching of the resonator cylinder ensures a closely toleranced setpoint resonance frequency, so that frequency tuning is no longer required.
A preferred embodiment of the resonator provides that the metal layer on the cylindrical base layer is formed by an aluminum layer. Said aluminum layer can be deposited in simple fashion using process engineering. It is further preferred if the metal layer is provided with another metal layer, in particular a nickel layer. This allows the resonator or an oscillator circuit (chip) comprising the resonator to be soldered in a housing or the like in simple fashion.
It has proven further advantageous to fabricate micromechanical high-frequency resonators with a radius of 600 to 1000 μm, in particular 750 to 850 μm, and with a resonator height of 550 to 900 μm, in particular 700 to 750 μm, using a photolithographic method. Cylinders metallized in this fashion can be excited specifically in the TM010 mode, and they cover resonance frequencies in the high GHz range. The metallization prevents the high-frequency field from escaping from the resonator.
The invention is explained in greater detail hereinbelow in an exemplary embodiment with reference to associated drawings.
In a schematic cross-section,
The insulating layer 14 of silicon dioxide serves as etching stop in the trench etching of micromechanical structures in the base layer 12. Known methods that will not be explained in greater detail here can be used for this purpose. The trench etching process exposes a membrane composed of the precise 50 μm-thick layer 16 and the 300 nm-thick insulating layer 14 that stretches across an open space 19. Masking steps carried out during trench etching result in a cylinder 18 being formed in the layer 12 in the open space 19 (
The cylindrical structure 18 that results is coated by vapor-depositing or sputtering with an aluminum layer 20 that is approximately 1 μm thick (
If necessary, a further metal layer, in particular a nickel layer 22, can be applied, which can serve as solder base for the eventual soldering of a chip comprising the resonator into a housing or the like.
A region of the layer 16 above the cylinder 18 is vapor-deposited with a coupling disk 24 that extends over the cylinder resonator lying under it (
a and 5b show a course of the electrical lines of force (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 56 257 | Nov 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE02/03003 | 8/16/2002 | WO | 00 | 5/15/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/041215 | 5/15/2003 | WO | A |
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