1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to micromechanical sensors (also referred to as MEMS sensors) such as micromechanical accelerometers, micromechanical rate of rotation sensors and micromechanical sensors with comb drives.
More particularly, this invention pertains to an operating method and circuit for operating a capacitive micromechanical sensor having at least one differential capacitor formed by two stationary electrodes and a movable center electrode arranged between the latter and suspended in a resilient manner that can be deflected by an external force whose deflection is measured with opposite and equal excitation voltages being applied between the stationary electrodes and the center electrode.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In its basic variant, a MEMS sensor comprises a differential capacitor whose center electrode is resiliently suspended to react, with deflection, to forces acting upon it. The deflection is measured by corresponding known circuit measures. In a resetting system (closed-loop arrangement), the measured value is supplied to a controller that influences electrostatic forces acting on the plates of the differential capacitor to compensate the external acceleration force. This operation is referred to as a reset. The reset is perfect if the deflection of the center electrode becomes “0”.
It is the object of the invention to improve the accuracy of MEMS sensors.
The present invention addresses the preceding object by providing, in a first aspect, an operating method for a capacitive micromechanical sensor. Such a sensor has at least one differential capacitor formed by two stationary electrodes. A movable center electrode is arranged between the electrodes and is suspended in a resilient manner. The electrode can be deflected by an external force. Opposite excitation voltages are applied between the stationary electrodes and the center electrode and the deflection of the center electrode is measured.
A proportion of the charge that can be tapped off at the center electrode is compensated for. Such proportion corresponds to the electrostatic restoring force and is referred to as the reset crosstalk.
In a second aspect, the invention provides a circuit arrangement for operating a micromechanical sensor having at least one differential capacitor formed by two stationary electrodes and a center electrode. The electrode is movably suspended in a resilient manner between the electrode and can be deflected by an external force. The circuit arrangement has means for applying a respective excitation voltage of opposite polarity to the two stationary electrodes as well as means for outputting the deflection of the center electrode in the form of a measured value during the action of a force.
In the invention, a device is provided for compensating for the electrostatic restoring force (referred to as the reset crosstalk) at the center electrode.
The foregoing and other features of the invention will be set forth in the detailed description that follows. Such description is accompanied by a set of drawing figures in which numerals identify the features of the invention. Numerals of the drawing figures correspond to those of the written description with like numerals referring to like features throughout.
The invention is based on the knowledge that the force acting on the deflection of the center electrode of a differential capacitor is composed of an (external) acceleration force and an (internal) electrostatic force (restoring force). Based on this knowledge, in an operating method for a capacitive micromechanical sensor of the generic type mentioned above, the invention involves, on the one hand, compensating for a component that corresponds to the electrostatic restoring force. This is referred to as the “reset crosstalk” and is superimposed on the read-out signal (measured value).
Based on an arrangement for operating a micromechanical sensor which is formed by at least one differential capacitor having two stationary electrodes and a center electrode which is movably suspended in a resilient manner between the latter and can be deflected by an external force, such arrangement having means for applying an excitation voltage of opposite polarity to the two stationary electrodes and having means for outputting the deflection of the center electrode during the action of a force in the form of a measured value, the invention is characterized, on the other hand, by a device for compensating for distortion of the measured value (read-out signal), which distortion is referred to as the “reset crosstalk”.
In one preferred embodiment of the operating method, a signal corresponding to the reset crosstalk is added to the output signal from a basic arrangement of the micromechanical sensor and the result of the addition is provided in the form of a read-out signal which indicates deflection of the center electrode. During preferred closed-loop operation of the sensor, the read-out signal additionally influences the reset crosstalk signal via a controller in such a manner that the resultant capacitance of the restoring force counteracts a deflection of the center electrode in a compensating manner.
In order to prevent drift of the read-out signal from the sensor arrangement, it is advantageous to continuously reverse the polarity of the excitation voltage applied to the stationary electrodes according to a deterministic or stochastic polarity reversal method.
An inventive circuit arrangement for operating a micromechanical sensor of the generic type mentioned above is characterized, according to the invention, by a device for compensating for the distortion of the measured value, referred to as the reset crosstalk. The measured value from the sensor is output, for example, in the form of a voltage value, in which case it is advantageous to provide summation that adds a reset voltage value, corresponding to the reset crosstalk, to an output voltage value provided by the basic arrangement of the sensor. A controller may be provided in this case, a read-out signal which has been freed from reset crosstalk being applied to the input of the controller and the controller adjusting the reset voltage value in the case of deflection of the center electrode in such a manner that a capacitive restoring force generated counteracts the deflection of the center electrode.
The controller may be a proportional controller (P controller) or a proportional-integral controller (PI controller), each with a frequency-dependent gain. A PI controller is advantageously formed by an operational amplifier having a complex feedback path formed by the series connection of a nonreactive resistor and a capacitance. If provision is made for preventing drift of the read-out signal by deterministically or stochastically reversing the polarity of the excitation voltage at the stationary electrodes of the differential capacitor, as mentioned, the polarity of the capacitance in the complex feedback impedance of the PI controller should be able to be correspondingly reversed.
The schematic diagrams of
The same excitation voltage U0—with opposite polarity—is applied to the stationary electrodes E1 and E2 toward the output of an operational amplifier OP1 having input connected to the center electrode E0. The output of the operational amplifier OP1 provides an output voltage value Ua. A voltage Ui, whose significance is explained below, is also applied to the center electrode E0 via a reference capacitor C. In order to achieve a bridge balance that is independent of deflection of the center electrode E0, temperature and aging, it is particularly advantageous to form the reference capacitor C by connecting two variable capacitances Ca1(x) and Ca2(x) in parallel (refer to
C(x)=Ca1(x)+Ca2(x) (2)
If Ca1(x)˜C1 (x) and Ca2(x)˜C2(x) are selected, the following applies
irrespective of deflection.
This measure is suitable for all MEMS sensors with reset crosstalk, including micromechanical Coriolis gyroscopes.
The read-out and reset functions of the first basic circuit of a MEMS sensor with a differential capacitor are analyzed below.
With reference to
Q1=C1(Ua+U0) (3)
Q2=C2(Ua−U0) (4)
For the reference capacitor C
Q=CUi (5)
The common circuit node (i.e., the center electrode E0) is at virtual ground. According to Kirchhoff's law,
Q+Q1+Q2=0 (6)
applies to an ideal operational amplifier OP1 when the initial charge disappears. It follows from equations (3) to (6) that
C1(Ua+U0)+C2(Ua−U0)=−CUi (7)
or with equations (1) and (2)
In equations (1) to (11), x0 denotes the reference point for deflection x and C0 denotes the sum of the two partial capacitances C1, C2 in the quiescent position of the differential capacitor (x=0). The term Ua for the output voltage of the basic sensor arrangement is composed of two parts, as equation (11) reveals. The first part is the read-out function which depends on deflection x. The second part depends on Ui, a measure of the internal electrostatic force (restoring force), as is shown in the next section and is used to reset the sensor. This second (undesirable) part is called the reset crosstalk.
The reset function is explained in greater detail below:
For the voltages across the differential capacitor, the following applies to the capacitor element C1:
U1=Ua+U0 (12)
and the following applies to the capacitor element C2:
U2=Ua−U0 (13)
Electrostatic forces which act, in total, on the movable electrode E0 of the differential capacitor result as follows:
The electrostatic force F is composed of a part that depends on Ui, the internal electrostatic force, and a (undesirable) part, that depends on the deflection x, corresponds to the external acceleration force and is determined by a negative spring constant.
The following applies to the read-out function:
In this case, the first term of the read-out voltage Ua of the basic sensor arrangement denotes the read-out function that depends on the deflection x and the second term denotes the reset crosstalk.
The following applies to the reset function of the part that relates to the internal electrostatic force (similar to equation (17)):
Compensation for the reset crosstalk according to the invention is described in more detail below.
As is clear from equations (11) and (19), the two circuit variants according to
If the basic block diagram of
is obtained if the reset voltage Ui is added to the output signal Ua from the basic sensor circuit at a summation point S. If the read-out signal
is additionally applied to a controller CR, closed-loop operation results, as depicted by the dashed addition in
The circuit examples of
with correct mathematical sign is obtained at the output A by means of a decoupling operational amplifier OP2.
During closed-loop operation, the controller must operate correctly, i.e., when a deflection x occurs Ui must be adjusted so that the resultant restoring force counteracts the deflection. This means that the circuit of
If the reference capacitor C, the differential capacitor C0 formed by the partial capacitances C1, C2 and the individual resistors Ra, Rb are implemented in the same technology, the balancing condition C/C0=Ra/Rb can be complied with well over time and in the event of temperature fluctuations.
One implementation for the controller during closed-loop operation is described below:
The controller must insure that a deflection x is counteracted. This controller essentially comprises an amplifier of gain α, which possibly depends on frequency. The controller can then be, for example, in the form of a proportional controller (P controller) with a frequency-independent gain α or in the form of a proportional-integral controller (PI controller) with a frequency-dependent gain (α=β+1/jωγ). The controller must additionally provide the correct mathematical sign of the gain. That is, it is necessary to distinguish between an inverting controller (
where the negative mathematical sign (−) applies to the controller in
It should be mentioned that bias currents of the operational amplifier OP1 on the left in the figures may result in zero point drift. According to an advantageous addition to the invention, this can be overcome by reversing the polarity of the excitation voltage U0, (e.g., at regular intervals) and by employing a very large resistor R∞ leading from the output of the operational amplifier OP1 to the inverting input of the latter. As described above, the mathematical sign of U0 is included in both the read-out factor and the mathematical sign of the force, with the result that the mathematical sign of the controller remains unchanged. The polarity of U0 may be reversed either periodically or according to a random or pseudo-random function. The bias current for the operational amplifier OP1 is then determined.
In the event that the polarity of U0 is reversed in accordance with a particular function for the reasons mentioned, the polarity of the capacitor Cr of the impedance of the PI controller must also be reversed according to the same function, resulting in the circuit of
The combination of compensation for the reset crosstalk and control during closed-loop operation of the MEMS sensor is described below for a particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention.
The functions of compensation for the reset crosstalk and control can be advantageously combined.
sets the gain α of the controller. This becomes infinite for Rα=R. It should be noted that the stated relationships apply only for C=C0. If this condition is not satisfied, Rα must be scaled accordingly.
The circuit structure of
It becomes infinite for Rα=R.
It should be mentioned that, for both circuits according to
While the invention has been described with reference to a presently preferred embodiment, it is not limited thereto. Rather, this invention is limited only insofar as it is defined by the following set of patent claims and includes within its scope all equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 027 652 | Jun 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/002059 | 3/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/4/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/151683 | 12/18/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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7109727 | Hayakawa et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
7131315 | Rojo et al. | Nov 2006 | B2 |
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