This invention relates to microswitches and, more particularly, to electro-mechanical stripline switches mountable to a circuit board.
Switches have long been used in electrical circuit designs to isolate a portion of an electrical circuit. In its simplest form, a switch operates to allow a signal to pass from an input terminal to an output terminal in a “closed” position and to prevent the signal from passing from the input terminal to the output terminal in an “open” position. Other such switches, such as those having a single pole dual throw (SPDT), switch between contacts for different functions.
Micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) are electro-mechanical devices that generally range in size from a micrometer to a millimeter in a miniature sealed package. In the microwave and mm-wave frequency range, switches are used in instrumentation, communications, radar, fiber optic and many other systems that require high-frequency switching. For example, a switch can be used for pulse modulation, port isolation, transfer switching, high-speed switching, replacement of mechanical parts and other switch applications.
A MEMS device in the form of a microswitch has a movable actuator, sometimes referred to as a movable electrode, that is moved toward a stationary electrical contact by the influence of a gate driver (also referred to as a gate or substrate electrode) positioned on a substrate below the movable actuator. The movable actuator may be a flexible beam that bends under applied forces such as electrostatic attraction, magnetic attraction and repulsion, or thermally induced differential expansion, that closes a gap between a free end of the beam and the stationary contact. If a large enough differential voltage exists between the free end of the beam and the stationary electrical contact, a resulting electrostatic force can cause the beam to self-actuate without any gating signal being provided by a gate driver. In certain current switching applications, this self-actuation can result in catastrophic failure of the switch or downstream systems.
There a number of commercially available high-frequency switches on the market today. Unfortunately, most or all of these switches require trade-offs on performance as they are unable to operate within all desired features simultaneously including obtaining high switch isolation greater than 15 dBm, high power handling above 24 dBm, and low insertion loss of a fraction of a dB from DC to mm-wave frequencies. For example, high-frequency switches employing field-effect transistors (FETs) typically are unable to handle high frequencies in the mm-wave range and/or high power above 24 dBm. In the alternative, FET-based solutions may have high insertion loss. In addition, waveguide-based switches are difficult to integrate and lack the required bandwidth coverage to DC. Furthermore, coupling-based diplexers typically have poor isolation and high insertion loss at the cross-over frequency.
In the field particular to analyzer and scope attenuators, millimeter wave microswitches are desired that are hot-switchable +30 dBm, have a high durability (e.g. rated at 10 million cycles), and are capable of being mountable to a circuit board. However, there is a lack of hot-switchable, small, circuit board mountable switches on the market. Existing millimeter wave switches are large, connectorized assemblies that are not easily gang-assembled to a circuit board. Such existing millimeter switches would be difficult, for instance, to use with a Spectrum Analyzer attenuator with 70 dB of dynamic range where 16 SPDT switches may be required.
Accordingly, the need remains for millimeter wave switches that overcome the drawbacks of the existing art while providing functions useful for today's modern equipment.
A microswitch constructed according to teachings of the invention include first and second electromagnets mounted in spaced-apart orientation to one another on a mounting surface to define a sliding volume between them. The first and second electromagnets each having an electromagnetic field center located a first distance above the mounting surface. A stripline switch element is mounted to a surface substantially between the first and second electromagnets. The stripline switch includes a fixed portion having an aperture defining a sliding boundary between the first and second electromagnets and a sliding portion received within the aperture for lineal movement between first and second activated positions. The sliding portion includes a facing portion directed toward the mounting surface and an opposing surface facing out of the aperture. A permanent magnet is coupled to the opposing surface of the sliding portion and mounted within the sliding volume between the first and second electromagnets. The permanent magnet has a magnetic field center located a second distance above the mounting surface, with the second distance being greater that the first distance so that the permanent magnet is biased toward the mounting surface.
In use, the electromechanical microswitch includes surface electrical contacts formed on the mounting surface and facing surface electrical contacts formed on the facing surface of the stripline switch element sliding portion. The facing surface electrical contacts are configured to effect electrical contact with different portions of the mounting surface electrical contacts depending upon whether the stripline switch element is in either the first or second activated position.
The invention also includes a method for switching between first and second circuit paths using a micromechanical switch. The method comprises magnetically clamping a sliding waveguide circuit to a fixed waveguide circuit to make a stripline waveguide having a first circuit path when the sliding waveguide circuit is in a first activated position with respect to the fixed waveguide circuit, and a second circuit path when the sliding waveguide circuit is in a second activated position. Two magnetic paths are applied to the sliding waveguide circuit, whereby the reluctance of the magnetic paths are changed to move the sliding waveguide circuit between the first and second activated positions.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention that proceeds with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The stripline switch includes a fixed portion 25 between the first and second electromagnets 12, 14 and a sliding portion 28 positioned in contact with the fixed portion 25. A window 24 is affixed to the fixed portion 25 of the switch 22 and includes a sliding boundary aperture 26 formed therethrough. The aperture opening 26 length is sized larger than the length of the sliding portion 28 of the stripline switch element 22 so that the sliding portion moves along a sliding axis between activated positions between the first and second electromagnets. The aperture opening 26 width is sized to be substantially similar to the width of the sliding portion so that movement of the sliding portion 28 is confined between activated positions only along the sliding axis. When received within the sliding boundary aperture 26 of window 24, the sliding portion 28 of stripline switch element moves left-right between the first and second electromagnets 12, 14 between activated positions as described below. The sliding portion 28 thus moves in relation to the fixed portion 25 of the stripline switch element 22 and along the sliding axis within a sliding boundary created within the sliding boundary aperture 26. This results in lineal movement 30 [see
The sliding portion 28 includes a facing portion 32 [see
The facing surface 32—that is, the surface facing downward within aperture 26 and against the fixed switch portion 25—includes facing surface electrical contacts 54a, 54b configured to effect electrical contact with different portions of the mounting surface electrical contacts, e.g. either signal trace 46a or 46b, depending upon whether the sliding portion 28 of the stripline switch element 22 is in the first or second activated position. Signal traces 54a, 54b are spaced apart a distance that is different than the spacing between fixed switch traces 46a, 46b so that only one signal path is active at one time no matter how the sliding portion 28 is positioned within the aperture 26.
The underside 32 of the sliding portion 28 of switch element 22 includes electrical contacts forming at least two switch paths—including a first switch path 54a and a second switch path 54b running somewhat perpendicular to the direction movement 30 of the sliding portion 28. The mounting surface 16 electrical contacts include first and second throw paths between fixed stripline switch elements 44 and 46a or 46b. The facing surface 32 electrical contacts include a first slider switch element 54a effecting electrical continuity along the first throw path—e.g. between elements 44 and 46a—when the sliding portion is in the first activated position. The facing surface 32 further includes a second slider switch element 54b effecting electrical continuity along the second throw path—e.g. between elements 44 and 46b—when the sliding portion is in the second activated position.
In
It has been found that always maintaining ground pad contact greatly improves RF isolation between switch paths. The primary function of the continuous ground contact is to provide an unvarying ground reference to the conducting medium. This creates a controlled impedance environment thereby reducing signal reflections caused by impedance mismatch. The secondary function of the continuous ground contact is to reduce the chance that the signal trace will catch on its mating trace during sliding by maintaining the planarity of the sliding structure.
Stripline switch 22 includes backside ground structures including a ground plane formed on opposing surface 34 of the sliding portion 28 and the opposing surface of the substrate 16. Vias 60, 62 formed between the facing surface 32 and opposing surface 34 of the sliding portion 28 connect the front (e.g. contact side) ground to the backside ground—e.g. via 60 connecting frontside ground 56a to the ground formed on opposing surface 34, and via 62 connecting frontside ground 56b to the backside ground on opposing surface 34.
Vias are also formed between frontside (e.g. contact) ground structures on the substrate 16 and those on its backside (not shown). Via 64 is part of a pattern of such vias spaced along groundplane 48. Via 66 is part of a similar pattern of such vias spaced along groundplane 50. Finally, the structure includes a via 68 coupling groundplane 52 with the backside ground formed on the opposite side of the substrate 16.
An advantage of forming the switch as a coplanar waveguide is that active devices can be mounted on top of the circuit or microstrip. More importantly, it can provide extremely high frequency response (100 GHz or more) since connecting to CPW does not entail any parasitic discontinuities in the ground plane.
The microswitch 10 is preferably formed using specified materials to effect durability of the device. The fixed portion window 24 and the sliding portion 28 of the stripline switch element 22 each preferably include sapphire wear surfaces in sliding contact with one another. Furthermore, all contracts are preferably made from refractory metals that are extraordinarily resistant to heat and wear. Examples of such metals include Niobium (Nb), Molybdenum (Mo), Tantalum (Ta), Tungsten (W), Rhenium (Re), Titanium (Ti), Vanadium (V), Chromium (Cr), Zirconium (Zr), Ruthenium (Ru), Rhodium (Rh), Hafnium (Hf), Osmium (Os), and Iridium (Ir) and their respective alloys. Most preferably, all contacts are made from the following subgroup of refractory metals and their alloys, including Niobium (Nb), Molybdenum (Mo), Tantalum (Ta), Tungsten (W), and Rhenium (Re). Most preferably, the contacts are made from Rhodium (Rh) or Platinum (Pt). These metals having similar properties of durability, including a melting point above 2000° C. and high hardness at room temperature. They are chemically inert and have a relatively high density, and their high melting points make powder metallurgy the method of choice for fabricating components from these metals.
Electromagnet 12 is coupled via wires 72, 74 to driving circuit traces 76a, 78a formed on substrate 16 to energize and drive the polarity of the electromagnet 12. Electromagnet 14 is similarly configured to couple via wires (not shown) to driving circuit traces 76b, 78b. In operation, the sliding waveguide circuit 28 is magnetically clamped to the fixed waveguide circuit 25 formed on substrate 16 to make a stripline waveguide having a first circuit path—e.g. along fixed trace 44, sliding contact 54a, and fixed trace 46a—when the sliding waveguide circuit 28 is in a first activated position with respect to the fixed waveguide circuit, and a second circuit path—e.g. along fixed trace 44, sliding contact 54b, and fixed trace 46b—when the sliding waveguide circuit 28 is in a second activated position [see, e.g.
As shown in
The step of changing the reluctance of both magnetic paths includes switching voltage polarities of the electromagnets 12, 14 to thereby reduce a magnetic resistance equivalent adjacent the first activated position and increase a magnetic resistance equivalent adjacent the second activated position so that a net magnetic force moves the permanent magnet 36 and coupled sliding waveguide circuit 28 to the first activated position. To switch the circuit to the second activated position, the polarities driving the electromagnets can be switched, as via driving contacts 76a, 78a and 76b, 78b, to thereby reduce the magnetic resistance equivalent adjacent the second activated position and increase a magnetic resistance equivalent adjacent the first activated position so that a net magnetic force moves the permanent magnet 36 and coupled sliding waveguide circuit 28 to the second activated position. While the field of the electromagnets does not overwhelm the permanent magnetic field of the permanent magnet 36, it does reduce the reluctance of the magnetic path on the side that the permanent magnet is desired to move to. It also increases the reluctance of the opposite side path so that less magnetic flux flows in that path. The result is a net magnetic force pulling and pushing the magnet 36 into position with the path of least reluctance.
It has been found that electromagnets 12, 14 need not be continuously energized. Instead, once the magnet 36 has moved to the loss reluctance side, it will stay there due to residual magnetic fields and the lower maintained reluctance on that side. The electromagnets may be pulse-energized, that is switched on and then off with a switched polarity, to effect movement of the switch to the opposite (e.g. second) activation position. The electromagnets may be pulse-energized a second time with a differently switched polarity to again move the switch to the first activation position. If additional holding strength is required due to harsh vibrational environments, then the power to the electromagnets can be left on, which will increase the magnetic forces holding the sliding circuit 28 in place.
One advantage of the switch described is that it can be hot-switchable, meaning attenuation can be changed on the fly without powering down the system and thereby allowing test data to be read continuously. Other advantages result from the apparatus having a stripline structure to provide better high frequency performance and RF isolation between switch positions while using a variable magnetic reluctance circuit for moving the elements of the stripline switch between positions.
Although particular embodiments have been described, it will be appreciated that the principles of the invention are not limited to those embodiments. Variations and modifications may be made without departing from the principles of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4839619 | Mutton | Jun 1989 | A |
20120013425 | Tor et al. | Jan 2012 | A1 |