Title: Integrated Accelerometers
1Integrated Accelerometers
- -Presentation for Area Exam
- Kush Gulati
- Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science - Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
3Introduction Motivation / Goals
MOTIVATION Chip Scale integration of
accelerometers creates new markets
- GOALS
- Representation of all major accelerometer types
- (Sensors, with/ without Feedback, Surface/Bulk
Micromachining) - Performance Issues, trade-offs and comparison
- More focus on circuit details
- More focus on capacitive sensors (most popular
sensor)
4Introduction Application Space
- Automotive
- Air-bag Actuation
- Vehicle Stabilization
- Space/Defense
- Inertial Guidance for
- space-ships missiles
Industrial Robotics Vibration Sensing
- Consumer
- Virtual Reality
- 3D Mouse
- Sports Equipment
- Camcorder
- Personal Navigation
Desired Specifications Airbag 3
Personal Navigation Range /-
50g /-1g Bandwidth DC-400Hz DC-10Hz Resolut
ion lt100mg lt10µg
5Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
6Concept
- STEP 1 Acceleration to Displacement
- STEP 2 Displacement measurement
- STEP 3 Force-Feedback (Optional)
7Concept STEP 1- Acceleration to Displacement
Spring/Proof-mass System
mmass, kspring constant, ddamping constant
Example Proof-mass Suspensions
8Concept STEP 1- Acceleration to Displacement,
contd.
- Sensitivity - Bandwidth Trade-off
- Sensitivity enhanced by reducing Wr
- Bandwidth enhanced by increasing Wr
- Sensitivity proportional to m/k (mass/
spring-constant) - Integration gt lower mass
- Can recover lower sensitivity with more compliant
spring
9Concept STEP 2- Displacement Measurement
- Capacitive Sensors
- Tunneling Current Sensors
- Piezoresistive Sensors
10Concept STEP 3- Force Feedback
- Advantages of Force Feedback
- A. Extended Dynamic Range
- B. Linearity
- C. Shock resistance
- D. Accuracy
- E. Extended Bandwidth
- F. Lower Brownian Noise
Closed Loop Force Feedback Model
Hxa/Wr2 Hedisplacement to voltage HcLoop
Stability Compensation HfVoltage to Force
(electrostatic Actuation)
11Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
12Performance Parameters
- SNR
- Bandwidth
- Linearity
- Off-axis Sensitivity
- Power Consumption
- Range
- Offset
- Area
- Shock Survival
13Performance Specifications SNR
SNR amax/anoise
- Mechanical Noise
- Random collisions of gas/air molecules with mass.
- Electronic Noise
- Thermal noise of Transistors
For m0.5ug, fr10KHz, Q0.5
For fr10KHz, gm10mA/V, xo1um, Vs2V Cs500ff,
Ci500ff, NG3
200ug/rt(Hz) for air damping 1ug/rt(Hz) for
vacuum (with larger Q)
2.2ug/rt(Hz)
14Performance Specifications Bandwidth
Force Feedback allows d0 (vacuum) while
employing electronic damping
15Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
16Capacitive Accelerometer - Concept
- Concept
- Make proof-mass one plate of one or more
capacitors - Proof-mass displacement causes capacitance to
change which is then measured electrically - Examples
- Analog Devices ADXL50 (closed-loop, surface
micromachined, fully integrated) - ADXL105 (open-loop, surface micromachined,
fully integrated) - Motorola MMA1201P (open-loop, surface-micromachin
ed, 2 chip single package)
17Capacitive Accelerometers Physical Structures
Two main types of capacitive structures
Single ended
Differential
18Capacitive Accelerometers Physical Structures,
contd.
Differential as compared to single-ended
- Advantages
- Single ended is inherently asymmetrical needs
offset compensation - Differential lends itself more easily to high
performance differential circuits - Disadvantages
- Single ended has larger cap for given area
- Single ended has smaller fringe cap/ area cap
ratio more sensitive - Single-ended has greater mass for given area
less mechanical noise
19Capacitive Accelerometers Electronics
Sensing Schemes (a) Voltage Sensing (b)
Charge Sensing Circuitry (a) Single-ended
(b) Differential
Voltage Sensing
1mggt 0.1Aº (for fr5KHz) gt5aF change in 500ff
capgt40µV
20Capacitive Accelerometers Electronics - Sensing
Schemes, contd.
Charge Sensing Parasitic Insensitive
21Capacitive Accelerometers Electronics - Circuits
Differential Circuit
Single-ended Circuit
- Advantages
- Single clock supply Even a few µV difference can
mask the signal - Improved noise rejection from substrate, external
interference, power supply. - Disadvantages
- Introduces large CM swing at opamp inputs
Differential compared to Single-ended
22Capacitive Accelerometers Force Feedback
Generic Force Feedback Model
Exact Circuit Implementation
23Capacitive Accelerometers Digital Force Feedback
- Advantages
- Intrinsically Linear Feedback
- Free A/D Conversion
- Disadvantages
- Limit Cycles
- Dead zone
24Capacitive Accelerometers Comments
- Incorrect Expressions and Numerical errors
- Input referred electronic noise
- Incorrect estimate of optimal value of Cgs for
minimizing noise - Offset hasnt been addressed at all
- 1-bit Digital force feedback leads to large dead
zone (9mg in ref 7 in paper) - Analog Feedback linearity problems can be
addressed simply by including calibration step
25Capacitive Accelerometers Comments, contd.
- Consider following circuit
- Advantages (compared to previous approaches)
- Voltage difference between V1 and V2 has no
impact. - Improved noise rejection from substrate, external
interference, power supply. - No large CM swing at opamp inputs.
26Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
27Tunneling Accelerometer - Concept
- Concept
- Based on Tunneling Phenomenon
- Proof-mass displacement causes change in
tunneling current which is detected electrically. - Commercial Examples
- None known. Research at Univ. Michigan, JPL,
Stanford
? (ht. Of tunneling barrier)0.2eV
28Tunneling Accelerometer - Electronics
Linear forward gain
Logarithmic forward gain
29Tunneling Accelerometer - Force feedback
- Force Feedback is mandatory
- Small Distance between Tunneling electrodes
- Exponential position-to-current relationship
30Tunneling Accelerometer - Comments
- High voltage is unattractive for portable
applications - Additional noise source in this device - Shot
noise - Due to large displacement-to-current gain, this
device less effected by electronic noise - Tip characteristic change is very problematic
31Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
32Piezoresistive Accelerometer - Concept
- Concept
- Place piezoresistor on high stress region of
beam. - Proof-mass displacement causes change in
piezoresistance which is detected electrically. - Commercial Examples
- Endevco
33Piezoresistive Accelerometer - Position Sense
Note The above wheatstone configuration is a
typical configuration. Paper does not report
configuration
34Piezoresistive Accelerometer - Electronics
- Typical piezoresistive bridge susceptible to
- non-linearity, offset, temperature dependent
sensitivity and offset drift - Electronics thrust
- Sensitivity drift correction by making power
supply dependent on temperature - Digital offset correction loop
- Offset drift correction using replica wheatstone
bridge
35Piezoresistive Accelerometer - Comments
- Paper chosen for high performance device and
integrated approach - Circuit details extremely
unclear though - Device will have high off-axis sensitivity
- In general Piezoresistor response highly effected
by accurate positioning
36Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
37Comparison
- Fabrication (cost, sensor/circuit integration,
electronic noise)gt Capacitive most attractive - Power Supply gt Tunneling sensor unattractive
- Offset Drift with Temperature gt piezoresistive
sensor unattractive
38Overview
- I. Introduction
- II. Concept
- III. Performance Specifications
- IV. Accelerometer Designs
- Capacitive
- Tunneling
- Piezoresistive
- V. Comparison
- VI. Conclusions
39Conclusions
- Three promising integrated accelerometer have
been discussed, critiqued and compared - sensing schemes
- electronics
- force feedback
- Capacitive Sensors are promising due to
technology advantage whereas Tunneling sensors
are attractive due to potentially high
performance - Possible new capacitive sensing scheme for use
with differential circuits is suggested
40Acknowledgements
Mathew Varghese (MIT) for his technical
assistance