Title: University of Central Florida
1Passive, Wireless Surface Acoustic Wave
Technology for Identification and Multi-Sensor
Systems
- D. C. Malocha
- School of Electrical Engineering Computer
Science, University of Central Florida, Orlando,
Fl., 32816-2450 - dcm_at_ece.engr.ucf.edu
2What is a typical SAW Device?
- A solid state device
- Converts electrical energy into a mechanical wave
on a single crystal substrate - Provides very complex signal processing in a very
small volume - It is estimated that approximately 4 billion SAW
devices are produced each year
Applications Cellular phones and TV (largest
market) Military (Radar, filters, advanced
systems Currently emerging sensors, RFID
3SAW Introduction
- Operates from 10MHz to 3 GHz
- Fabricated using IC technology
- Manufactured on piezoelectric substrates
- Operate from cryogenic to 1000 oC
- Small, cheap, rugged, high performance
SAW packaged filter showing 2 transducers, bus
bars, bonding, etc.
4General SAW Background
5SAW Advantage
6Basic Operation of a SAW Electromechanical
Transduction
A SAW transducer is a mapping of time into
spatial distance on the substrate
Velocitytimedistance Velocitydistance/time
7SAW Reflector Array
SAW Input
SAW Output
With ¼ wavelength electrodes, all reflections add
in phase (synchronous) which makes a distributed
reflector. This is an acoustic mirror.
Perturbation at each electrode is small which
minimizes losses and mode conversion (BAW
generation)
8SAW Tag Sensor Advantages
- Extremely robust
- Operating temperature range cryogenic to 1000
oC - Radiation hard, solid state
- Wireless and passive
- Coding and spread spectrum embodiments
- Security in coding
- Multi-sensors or tags can be interrogated
- Wide range of sensors in a single platform
- Temperature, pressure, liquid, gas, etc.
9Why Use SAW Sensors and Tags?
- External stimuli affects device parameters
(frequency, phase, amplitude, delay) - Operate from cryogenic to gt1000oC
- Ability to both measure a stimuli and to
wirelessly, passively transmit information - Frequency range 10 MHz 4 GHz
- Monolithic structure fabricated with current IC
photolithography techniques, small, rugged
10Response of SAW Reflector Test Structure
Frequency Response
Time Response
Reflector response is a time echo which produces
a frequency ripple
Transducer response
Measurement of S21 using a swept frequency
provides the required data.
11Current SAW RF ID Tag Schematic
- Good for ID tags in close proximity
- All reflectors are at the same frequency
- Typical insertion loss is from 40 to 60 dB
12Orthogonal Frequency Coded (OFC) SAW Sensors a
New Embodiment
- Simultaneous sensing and tagging possible using
multiple frequencies - Interrogation using RF chirp is possible
- Reduced time ambiguity of compressed pulses
- Improved security using spread spectrum
- Ultra-wide band (UWB) possible
13 Orthogonal Frequency Coded (OFC) SAW Device
Concept
Example OFC Tag
Wideband input transducer- coded or uncoded,
connected to antenna. A chip in time is
represented by a reflector at a given Bragg
frequency. Each reflector approximates an ideal
Rect (t/T)cos (wot) time response with a
specified carrier frequency. Multiple chips
(reflectors) constitutes a bit ( entire reflector
bank). Coding is contained in chip frequency,
phase and delay.
14UCF OFC Sensor Successful Demonstrations
- Temperature sensing
- Cryogenic liquid nitrogen
- Room temperature to 250oC
- Currently working on sensor for operation to
750oC - Cryogenic liquid level sensor liquid nitrogen
- Pressure sensor
- Hydrogen gas sensor
15Schematic of OFC SAW ID Tag
16The peak of one chip is at the null of all others
tB NtC
17Bit, PN, OFC Signal Comparison
Bit Frequency Response
Processing Gain time-bandwidth product
Matched Filter Correlated Response
OFC format 7 chips 7 frequencies, PG49
18OFC Sensor Platform for Many Sensor Applications
- OFC reflectors repeated on both sides of
transducer - Transceiver yields two compressed pulses
- Pulse separation proportional to sensed
information - Different free space delays (t1 ? t2) yield
temperature - For gas, chemo or bio sensing a sensitive film,
such as palladium for hydrogen gas, is placed in
one delay path and a change in differential delay
senses the gas (t1 t2)
19Schematic and Actual OFC Gas Sensor
OFC Sensor Schematic
Actual device with RF probe
- For palladium hydrogen gas sensor, Pd film is in
only in one delay path, a change in differential
delay senses the gas (t1 t2)
20Orthogonal Frequency Coded (OFC) SAWs
- Multiple access operation using Spread Spectrum
Coding - Improved range due to enhanced processing gain
and low loss (due to OFC reflectors) - One platform for diverse sensors
- Inherent security using spread spectrum
- Fractional bandwidth can meet ultra-wideband
(UWB) specifications
21COM Simulation versus Experimental Results
Example 1 Ngr .72
Dual delay 250 MHz, BW28, 7 chips/bank,
YZ LiNbO3
COM predictions
Chip reflector loss4dB
Experimental Measurement
22 COM Simulation versus Experimental Results
Example 2 - Ngr2.38
250 MHz, YZ LiNbO3, 8 chips BW11.5 Al
shorted-electrode reflectivity was 3.4 Ng70
_at_f0 Ngr2.38 Chip reflector losslt.5dB
23Chirp Interrogation Transceiver Schematic
Picture of RF Section Transceiver, A/D and Post
Processing is Accomplished in Computer
Transceiver Block Diagram
24Compressed Pulse Responses
Temperature Sensor Example
25Example of Current Hardware Simulator Results
- A simple RF front end and wired SAW device with
digital oscilloscope captures trace and simulates
A/D and processor - Picture scale
- Vertical 5mV / div
- Horizontal 50ns / div
Auto-Correlation
26Temperature Sensor Results
- 250 MHz LiNbO3 OFC SAW sensor tested using
temperature controlled RF probe station - Temp range 25-200oC
- Results applied to simulated transceiver and
compared with thermocouple measurements
27OFC Cryogenic Sensor Results
Scale Vertical 50 to -200 oC Horizontal
Relative time (min)
OFC SAW temperature sensor results and
comparison with thermocouple measurements at
cryogenic temperatures. Temperature scale is
between 50 oC and -200 oC and
horizontal scale is relative time in minutes.
Measurement system with liquid nitrogen Dewar and
vacuum chamber fro DUT
28OFC Bench Marks - Coding
- Number of possible codes gt2NN! For N chips
- For N7 chips 7 frequencies, Codes 645,000
- For equivalent single frequency tag Codes 128
- PN coding /- phase of chip
- Time division multiplexing Extend the possible
number of chips and allow 1, 0, -1 amplitude - of codes increases dramatically, MgtN chips,
gt2MN! - Reduced code collisions in multi-device
environment - Frequency division multiplexing System uses
N-frequencies but any device uses M lt N
frequencies - of codes decreases
- Reduced code collisions in multi-device
environment
29OFC Bench Marks Time Frequency
- System Bandwidth N -1
- For single frequency -1
- Processing gain BW N2
- For single frequency N
- Synchronous time integration using multiple
pings can yield increased PG - OFC and single frequency devices use
approximately the same time lengths
30OFC Bench Marks Other
- Device insertion loss OFC reflector losses can
be dramatically reduced yielding 30-60 dB less
insertion loss - Ideal OFC devices can have near zero loss
- Size
- Number of sensors/codes Using the OFC
diversity, 25 - 100 devices per interrogator - Interrogation Distance
31Discussion
- Current efforts include OFC SAW liquid level,
hydrogen gas, pressure and temperature sensors - Transceiver is under development for complete
wireless, passive SAW OFC sensor system - A/D sampled
- Near zero IF
- Software radio demodulation
- Adaptive filter integration
- Small, efficient antenna design
- OFC Code development for multi-sensors
- New OFC device embodiments
32Applications
- Multi-sensor spread spectrum systems
- Cryogenic sensing
- High temperature sensing
- Space applications
- Turbine generators
- Harsh environments
- Ultra Wide band (UWB) Communication
- UWB OFC transducers
- Potentially many others
33Graduate Research Student Contributors
- Daniel Gallagher
- Brian Fisher
- Nick Kozlovski
- Matt Pavlina
- Bianca Santos
- Mike Roller
- Rick Puccio
- Nancy Saldanha
34Acknowledgment
- The authors wish to thank continuing support from
NASA, and especially Dr. Robert Youngquist,
NASA-KSC. - The foundation of this work was funded through a
NASA Graduate Student Research Program
Fellowship, the University of Central Florida -
Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC), and a NASA
STTR Phase I contract NNK04OA28C. - Continuing research is funded through NASA
contracts and industrial collaboration with
Applied Sensor Research and Development
Corporation, contracts NNK05OB31C, NNK06OM24C,
and NNK06OM24C and Mnemonics Corp. Under a new
NASA 2007 Phase I STTR.
Thank you for your attention!