Title :
Acceleration sensitivity of small-gap capacitive micromechanical resonator oscillators
Author :
Kim, Bongsang ; Akgul, Mehmet ; Lin, Yang ; Li, Wei-Chang ; Ren, Zeying ; Nguyen, Clark T -C
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract :
The vector components of acceleration sensitivity Γ for a closed-loop oscillator referenced to a wine-glass disk array-composite resonator employing tiny (~92 nm) electrode-to-resonator capacitive transducer gaps were measured along axes perpendicular and parallel to the substrate to be Γvertical~13.6ppb/g and Γlateral~4.92ppb/g, respectively, which are on par with commercial quartz-based oscillator products. Interestingly, the measured acceleration sensitivity greatly exceeds the prediction of theory. In particular, models for frequency shifts due to variations in electrical stiffness and mechanical stress predict acceleration sensitivities orders of magnitude lower than measured here. Consideration of other microphonic contributors reveals that the measurements of this work were probably limited by the bond wires and package stresses of the board-level realization of the oscillator, so are very likely not representative of the performance actually achievable by a fully-integrated micromechanical resonator oscillator, where MEMS and transistors share a single chip. Still, the measured microphonic performance on par with mid-grade quartz oscillators at least provides some reassurance that the tiny electrode-to-resonator gaps used in high frequency capacitively transduced micromechanical resonators will not compromise the stabilities of oscillators referenced to them in conventional applications that currently accept mid-grade quartz resonators.
Keywords :
acceleration measurement; capacitive sensors; crystal oscillators; micromechanical resonators; MEMS; acceleration sensitivity; bond wires; capacitive micromechanical resonator oscillators; closed-loop oscillator; electrical stiffness; electrode-to-resonator capacitive transducer gaps; mechanical stress; microphonic contributors; quartz oscillators; quartz-based oscillator products; transistors; wine-glass disk array-composite resonator; Acceleration; Finite element methods; Oscillators; Resonant frequency; Sensitivity; Stress; Vibrations; MEMS; acceleration sensitivity; capacitive transducer; electrical stiffness; microphonics; small gap; vibration;
Conference_Titel :
Frequency Control Symposium (FCS), 2010 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Newport Beach, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6399-2
DOI :
10.1109/FREQ.2010.5556327