DocumentCode
2072442
Title
Embedding technologies for an automotive radar system
Author
Becker, K.-F. ; Koch, M. ; Kahle, R. ; Braun, T. ; Böttcher, L. ; Ostmann, A. ; Kostelnik, J. ; Ebling, F. ; Noack, E. ; Sommer, J.P. ; Richter, M. ; Schneider, M. ; Reichl, H.
Author_Institution
Fraunhofer Inst. for Reliability & Microintegration, Berlin
fYear
2009
fDate
26-29 May 2009
Firstpage
1453
Lastpage
1459
Abstract
Radar sensors are already employed in production model vehicles e.g. for adaptive cruise control (ACC) systems. Further development of driver assistance systems has also led to the use of radar sensors in active safety systems (active brake assistance, collision warning, emergency braking, etc). However, the costs of manufacturing such radar-based systems, capable of gathering reliable information from surroundings, for vehicles across the market spectrum or for compact executive cars are still too high. Thus, despite the improved reliability characteristics, detection properties and safety required for these sensors, the aim is to manufacture such systems more cost-effectively. The German national ldquoKRAFAS (Cost-optimized Radar Sensor for Active Driver Assistance Systems)rdquo project is aiming at integrating 77 GHz components (esp. SiGe MMICs) into a printed circuit board, combining driver and 77 GHz RF circuitry and integrating antenna elements. This will significantly reduce current costs of the 77 GHz RF module by 20-30%. A sketch of such a module with an adapted cylindrical radar lens is depicted in Figure 1. In this paper, design, simulation, technological development, demonstrator realization and subsequent measurement of interconnects of embedded active 77 GHz chips to a high frequency substrate using microvia technology is described. The used molded embedding technology offers great opportunities for a very broad range of frequencies and applications as well as large potential for cost reduction.
Keywords
adaptive systems; interconnections; microassembling; printed circuits; radar detection; sensors; RF circuitry; active brake assistance; adapted cylindrical radar lens; antenna elements; automotive radar system; collision warning; embedding technology; emergency braking; frequency 77 GHz; interconnects; microvia technology; printed circuit board; radar sensors; Automotive engineering; Costs; Driver circuits; Manufacturing; Radar antennas; Radio frequency; Safety; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Sensor systems; Vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electronic Components and Technology Conference, 2009. ECTC 2009. 59th
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA
ISSN
0569-5503
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-4475-5
Electronic_ISBN
0569-5503
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ECTC.2009.5074203
Filename
5074203
Link To Document