The present invention relates generally to frequency control devices and, in particular, to frequency control devices that deploy high and low frequency resonators and temperature sensing elements.
Contemporary electronic devices utilize several frequency reference components deployed to facilitate various communication functions such as cellular communications, GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, etc. The said frequency reference components commonly include high frequency resonators and real-time clock (RTC) resonators.
In order to minimize frequency instability caused by changing ambient temperature, the high frequency resonator is often packaged together with a temperature sensing component (such as a thermistor or a diode), the latter used to sense the high frequency resonator's temperature and work out the actual resonator's frequency at that temperature. This method of computational frequency correction requires high resolution expensive analog-to-digital convertors for converting the temperature sensing voltage. When attempting to minimize the RTC frequency instability using the temperature sensing and computational correction method, one encounters the additional difficulty presented by the difference between the temperature of the RTC resonator and that of the temperature sensing element.
The present invention provides a single structure that incorporates three elements—a high frequency resonator, a low frequency resonator and a temperature sensing element, and wherein all three elements are closely thermally coupled so that the temperature difference between any of the three elements is further reduced. Such a structure offers the following advantages:
it facilitates improved accuracy of temperature sensing and improved resolution of temperature sensing,
it eliminates the need for expensive high resolution analog-to-digital convertors;
it offers reduced physical size and reduced cost.
In the accompanying drawings:
The embodiments presented herein are examples of possible implementations of the present invention. The disclosed embodiments do not limit the scope of the present invention, the said scope described in the Claims section of this disclosure.
Referring to
Referring to
In some situations, it may be more convenient to use readily available “standard” packaged high and/or low frequency resonators as in an embodiment shown in
Other construction variants are of course possible, and a person skilled in the art will be able to develop other structures without deviating from the scope of the present invention.
The close spatial proximity and the resulting thermal coupling between the three elements allow a more accurate and more efficient sensing of temperature of the two resonating elements 1 and 2, as the said temperature sensing is done through the use of a single temperature sensing element 3 and a single measurement (or a single series of measurements pertaining to both resonating elements 1 and 2). The ability to use a single temperature sensing measurement for both resonating elements reduces power consumption in the application system.
The close spatial proximity and the resulting thermal coupling between the three elements offer an additional advantage: the presented by this invention structure facilitates a higher resolution and cheaper temperature sensing method whereby the frequency of the low frequency resonating element (e.g., a tuning fork crystal) is used as an indication of temperature of the device. In this method, the frequency of the low frequency resonating element (e.g., a tuning fork crystal) is measured using the high frequency resonating element's signal (AT-cut crystal's frequency) as a reference frequency. In this scheme, the need for high-resolution analog-to-digital convertor required for temperature sensing using a thermistor, is eliminated since the thermistor will only be used for an approximate determination of temperature in order to determine which half of the parabolic F(T) curve of the tuning fork resonator the current temperature point “belongs” to.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/710,938, filed Oct. 8, 2012.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NZ2013/000186 | 10/8/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/058328 | 4/17/2014 | WO | A |
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4616194 | Renoult | Oct 1986 | A |
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20170155393 | Hattori | Jun 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2004091100 | Oct 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150280686 A1 | Oct 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61710938 | Oct 2012 | US |