Title: RF Signal Processing using MEMS: Challenges and Prospects
1RF Signal Processing using MEMS Challenges and
Prospects
- Roger T. Howe
- Depts. of EECS and ME
- Berkeley Sensor Actuator Center
- University of California at Berkeley
2Outline
- What is the killer app for MEMS/NEMS mechanical
filters? - Challenges in fabricating and integrating RF
micro/nano resonators - BSAC/BWRC Integrated Microwatt Transceiver
project 2001-2005
3Motivation for RF MEMS
- From S. Chou, MEMS RD at Intel, April 25, 2001
4RF Transceiver Block Diagram
- Eliminating off-chip filters Intel, Discera
(Michigan spin-off)
5FBARs
- Agilent (followed by Lucent, TDK, and Samsung)
- are nearing production of these 1-5 GHz
resonators
- Use FBARs fortrying out newradio
architec-tures (BWRC) - Advanced RF packaging ismandatory
R. Ruby, et al, (Agilent Technologies), ISSCC
2001.
6What about MEMS Resonators?
- Features high Q resonance with low power, but
with impedance matching, interconnect, and
power handling issues - Not a drop-in replacement of a ceramic or SAW
filter in cell phones!
7Outline
- What is the killer app for MEMS/NEMS mechanical
filters? - Challenges in fabricating and integrating RF
micro/nano resonators - BSAC/BWRC Integrated Microwatt Transceiver
project 2001-2005
8Progress in MEMS Resonators
- Structures approaching fo 1 GHz
- Harold Craighead (Cornell) Si at 350 MHz
- Clark Nguyen (Michigan) poly-Si at gt150 MHz
- Michael Roukes (Caltech) SiC at 635 MHz
- Q, noise, transduction, and dynamic range issues
- John Vig (ARL), Michael Roukes, Tom Kenny
(Stanford)
9Resonator Design Choices
- High stiffness or low stiffness?
- Bulk modes are stiff
- Bending or tornsional modes are soft
- Transduction (drive and sense)
- Electrostatic
- Piezoelectric (FBARs)
- Materials and processes
10First-Run Bulk Longitudinal Resonator
- Stiff mode
- High frequency with micro rather than
nano - Poisson effect useful coupling on sides
- Deep sub-?m gaps
- Compare another stiff mode by Michigan at
IEDM-00
- B. Bircumshaw, O. OReilly, and A. P. Pisano,
BSAC
11Bulk Longitudinal Resonator
- B. Bircumshaw, A. P. Pisano, O. OReilly
12Nano Tuning Fork
- S. Bhave, L. Chang, T.-J. King, and R. T. Howe
13Circuit Model for MEMS Resonator
- Electrostatic drive, capacitive sense
14Motional Resistance Scaling
- Symmetrical plate drive and sense
-
- Shrinking the electrode gap g (4th power) or
- Raising the DC bias VP (2nd power)
15 Demanding Requirements for Resonators
- small structural dimensions (mms)
- even smaller gaps (lt 100 nm)
- low material damping, low anchor losses
- very tight control on structural dimensions and
materials
16Implications of Req Scaling
- Lowering Req ? deep submicron gaps (sidewall
structures for lateral excitation, J. Clark, et
al, IEDM 2000) - DC electric fields (VP/g) ? push to field
emission limit - Bottom line Req in the 10 k? range appears
feasible at 1 GHz
17Further Application Issues
- Dynamic range
- High end nonlinearity in drive and sense
- Low end noise (see J. Vig., IEEE Trans. UFFC,
Nov. 1999) - Frequency reproducibility
- Fabrication variations
- Temperature variations
18Extrinsic Circuit Elements
- Interconnect to and from IC adds resistances Rint
and capacitances Cint - Feedthrough capacitance Cf
19Applications?
- Not a drop-in replacement of a ceramic or SAW
filter! - Features high Q resonance with ultra-low
power, but with impedance matching and
interconnect issues - Candidate application
- LO-less sensor node transceivers
20Outline
- What is the killer app for MEMS/NEMS mechanical
filters? - Challenges in fabricating and integrating RF
micro/nano resonators - BSAC/BWRC Integrated Microwatt Transceiver
project 2001-2005
21Goals
- Reduce power by 100 x over state-of-the art
sensor node transceivers using CMOS off-chip
components - Can autonomy be achieved?
- Less than 100 ??W average power use ambient
energy scavenging - Applications CITRIS project
22Analog OFDM Subsamping Transceiver using RF NM
Filters
- B. Otis and Prof. J. M. Rabaey, EECS Dept. and
BWRC
23NM Filter Specs
- Motional resistance 25 k?
- 10 resonators per channel ? 2.5 k?
- Linearity, dynamic range challenging for
electrostatic transduction - NM resonator technologies
24Transmitter Architecture
- B. Otis and Prof. J. M. Rabaey, EECS Dept. and
BWRC
25Options for Integration
- Integrate after deep submicron CMOS
- Parasitic elements degrade performance if MEMS
resonators are on a separate chip or even
fabricated adjacent to CMOS - Parallel assembly processes to integrate
MEMS/NEMS resonators into microsystem
26Polysilicon MEMS-CMOS Integration
- 1.02 MHz tuning fork with Pierce amplifier
- 3000 Å-thick polysilicon interconnects (RC
low-pass filters) - T. A. Roessig, et al, Hilton Head 1998. (BSAC
design in Sandia IMEMS)
200 ?m
27Polycrystalline Silicon Germanium
- Semiconductor alloy
- Compatible with CMOS
- Conventional LPCVD furnace
- SiH4 or Si2H6, GeH4, B2H6
- Leverage IC industry research
- Heterojunction BJTs (in production)
- CMOS gates
28Poly-SiGe MEMS after CMOS
- UC Berkeley baseline CMOS with Al-2 Si
- Post-CMOS temperature lt 450ºC
- 90oC H2O2 release maskless!
29Stacked Resonator on Amplifier
25 ?m
- Andrea Franke, et al, HH 2000.
30Schematic Cross-Section
31Poly-SiC Liftoff Process
- Exploits poornucleation on SiO2
32Poly-SiC Test Structures
10 mm
patterned Si substrate
33Parallel Microassembly Processes
K. Böhringer, et al, ICRA, Leuven, Belgium, May
1998
34NM Resonator Metrology
- Imaging a NM resonator is a critical capability
(for all NMASP projects)
Scanning Acoustic Tunneling Microscope
Prof. Jeff Bokor
35Taxonomy of Microassembly
- Parallel microassembly
- Multiple parts assembled simultaneously
- Deterministic pre-determined destination for
parts - Stochastic random process determines part
destinations - Serial microassembly
- Pick and place on a microscale
36Stochastic Microassembly
- Pattern complementary hydrophobic shapes onto
parts and substrates using SAMs. - no shape constraints on parts
- no bulk micromachining of substrate
- submicron, orientational alignment
- U. Srinivasan, Ph.D. ChemEng, May 2001
37Mirrors onto Microactuators
- Self-assemble mirrors onto microactuator arrays
- Si (100) mirrors
- Nickel-polySi bimorph actuators
38Mirrors on Microactuators
39Commercial Stochastic Self-Assembly
- Alien Technology
- (Prof. J. Stephen Smith, UC Berkeley EECS
Dept.) - Gravitational energy well
- 11,000 elements/min
- 99.99 yield
- 1 µm alignment
Alien Technology
40Transceiver Integration
Micropart orientation by complementary binding
sites
RF passive
NEMS filter bank
Dense vertical feedthroughs
J. S. Smith and R. T. Howe
CMOS transceiver
41Conclusions
- Micro/nano resonators
- Ultra-low power is one application space
- Fabrication technology challenges
- Many, but no show-stoppers
- FBARs are coming (or here )
- stepping stone for system designers
42Project Personnel
- Faculty Investigators
- Roger Howe and Jan Rabaey, co-PIs
- Jeff Bokor (metrology)
- Tsu-Jae King (poly-SiGe)
- Roya Maboudian (poly-SiC)
- Al Pisano (NM resonator design)
- Steve Smith (integration by assembly)
43Acknowledgements
- DARPA MEMS Program
- Modular SiGe-RF MEMS Project
- Profs. T.-J. King, A. P. Pisano,R. Maboudian, J.
M. Rabaey, O. OReilly and J. S. Smith, UC
Berkeley - Graduate students Brian Bircumshaw (ME) Brian
Otis (EECS) and Sunil Bhave (EECS)