Resonant MEMS lorentz-force magnetometer using force-feedback and frequency-locked coil excitation
09588190 ยท 2017-03-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B81B3/0032
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A method includes supplying a current to at least one conductive path integral with a MEMS device to thereby exert a Lorentz force on the MEMS device in the presence of a magnetic field. The method includes determining the magnetic field based on a control value in a control loop configured to maintain a constrained range of motion of the MEMS device. The control loop may be configured to maintain the MEMS device in a stationary position. The current may have a frequency equal to a resonant frequency of the MEMS device.
Claims
1. A method comprising: supplying a current to at least one conductive path integral with a proof mass of a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) device to thereby exert a Lorentz force on the MEMS device in the presence of a magnetic field; and determining the magnetic field based on a control value in a control loop configured to apply a feedback force to the proof mass that opposes the Lorentz force to compensate for a displacement of the proof mass from a nominally stationary position.
2. The method, as recited in claim 1, wherein the current has a frequency approximately equal to a resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS).
3. The method, as recited in claim 1, wherein the control value is based on sensed displacements of the proof mass from the nominally stationary position.
4. The method, as recited in claim 1, further comprising: in a first mode of operating the MEMS device, generating a signal indicative of a resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS); and in a second mode of operating the MEMS device, generating the current based on the signal, wherein in the first mode, the proof mass is configured to resonate, and in the second mode, the MEMS device is included in the control loop.
5. The method, as recited in claim 4, wherein in the first mode of operating the MEMS device, generating the signal comprises: configuring the MEMS device to generate an oscillating signal; and comparing a frequency of the oscillating signal to a frequency of a reference clock signal and generating the signal based on the comparison.
6. The method, as recited in claim 4, wherein generating the current comprises: adjusting a frequency of a version of a reference clock signal based on f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS.
7. The method, as recited in claim 1, further comprising: applying a force to the proof mass in opposition to a difference between a frequency of the current and a resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS), wherein the frequency of the current is approximately f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS.
8. The method, as recited in claim 1, wherein supplying the current comprises: generating the current using a second MEMS device configured to self-resonate.
9. The method, as recited in claim 8, wherein generating the current comprises: applying a force to the second MEMS device based on a difference between a frequency of the current and a resonant frequency of the second MEMS device.
10. The method, as recited in claim 1, further comprising: generating the current based on a reference clock signal; and providing an output signal indicative of the magnetic field, the output signal being based on the control value and the reference clock signal.
11. The method, as recited in claim 1, further comprising: generating the current based on a reference clock signal; providing an output signal indicative of the magnetic field, the output signal being based on the displacement and the reference clock signal; and generating the control value based on the output signal and a phase-shifted version of the reference clock signal.
12. The method, as recited in claim 1, further comprising: varying a frequency of the current over a range of frequencies; and determining a magnetic field as a function of frequency based on control values in the control loop, the control values corresponding to frequency values of the range of frequencies.
13. The method, as recited in claim 1, wherein the control loop is configured to generate the control value to apply the feedback force to the MEMS device to return the proof mass to the nominally stationary position.
14. The method, as recited in claim 1, wherein the displacement of the proof mass is with respect to a frame of the MEMS device.
15. An apparatus comprising: at least one conductive path integral with a proof mass of a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) device configured to exert a Lorentz force on the MEMS device in response to a current and in the presence of a magnetic field; and a circuit configured to determine the magnetic field based on a control value in a control loop configured to apply a feedback force to the proof mass that opposes the Lorentz force to compensate for a displacement of the proof mass of the MEMS device from a nominally stationary position.
16. The apparatus, as recited in claim 15, wherein the current has a frequency locked to a resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS).
17. The apparatus, as recited in claim 15, further comprising: a mixer configured to generate an output signal indicative of the magnetic field based on the control value and a periodic reference signal used to generate the current.
18. The apparatus, as recited in claim 17, wherein the periodic reference signal has a frequency equal to a resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS).
19. The apparatus, as recited in claim 17, further comprising: a second mixer configured to generate the control value based on the output signal and a phase-shifted version of the periodic reference signal used to generate the current.
20. The apparatus, as recited in claim 15, further comprising: a reference signal generator configured to generate a periodic reference signal having a frequency equal to a resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS), wherein the current is generated using the periodic reference signal.
21. The apparatus, as recited in claim 20, wherein the reference signal generator comprises: a second MEMS device having approximately a same resonant frequency as the MEMS device and configured to resonate at the resonant frequency and generate the periodic reference signal having a frequency equal to the resonant frequency.
22. The apparatus, as recited in claim 15, further comprising: a reference signal generator configured to generate a clock signal having a reference frequency, wherein the microelectromechanical system (MEMS) device further includes a drive actuation transducer configured to apply a required force to change the resonant frequency to the reference frequency.
23. The apparatus, as recited in claim 15, wherein the at least one conductive path includes a conductive path formed using isolated portions of conductive material included as part of the proof mass.
24. The apparatus, as recited in claim 15, further comprising: the control loop configured to generate the control value to apply the feedback force to the MEMS device to return the proof mass to the nominally stationary position.
25. A method comprising: supplying a sensing signal to a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) device; supplying a current to at least one conductive path integral with a mass of the MEMS device to thereby exert a Lorentz force on the MEMS device in the presence of a magnetic field; generating an output signal having a level proportional to displacement from a nominally stationary position of the mass of the MEMS device with respect to a frame of the MEMS device, the output signal being generated by the MEMS device using the sensing signal; generating a feedback force based on the output signal, the feedback force compensating for the displacement to return the mass of the MEMS device to the nominally stationary position, the feedback force being approximately equal and opposite to the Lorentz force; and generating a magnetic sensor output signal indicative of the magnetic field based on a control value in a control loop configured to generate the feedback force based on the output signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention may be better understood, and its numerous objects, features, and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings.
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(26) The use of the same reference symbols in different drawings indicates similar or identical items.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(27) Embodiments of the invention exploit microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) devices to sense magnetic fields using a MEMS Lorentz-force magnetometer configured in a force-feedback control loop. Before describing embodiments of the invention, some background information on MEMS devices is provided. In general, a MEMS device has dimensions in the micron scale and has both electrical and mechanical components that form a system. MEMS devices include resonators, sensors, and actuators, which may be used in various applications, e.g., oscillators in timing applications, accelerometers, gyroscopes, and inertial sensors, and the number of applications is growing. Certain structural components of a MEMS device are typically capable of some form of mechanical motion. MEMS devices may be formed as a separate MEMS device or formed as part of an integrated circuit using a MEMS manufacturing process that is compatible with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit manufacturing techniques (e.g., Low Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition, (LPCVD), Plasma Enhanced CVD (PECVD), patterning using photolithography, and Reactive Ion Etching (RIE), etc.) or other integrated circuit manufacturing processes.
(28) The mechanical systems of a typical MEMS device may be modeled as a harmonic resonator (
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and a quality factor,
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where k is a spring constant, m is mass, and is a damping coefficient. The quality factor of a resonator is a dimensionless parameter that describes how under-damped an oscillator or resonator is, or equivalently, characterizes the bandwidth of the resonator relative to its center frequency. A higher Q indicates a lower rate of energy loss relative to the stored energy of the resonator, i.e., the oscillations die out more slowly. For a sinusoidally driven resonator, an increased Q corresponds to greater amplitudes of resonation, but a smaller range of frequencies around the resonant frequency for which it resonates (i.e., smaller bandwidth). Although in some applications higher selectivity (i.e., higher Q) is a critical design parameter for a MEMS device, in other applications, a wider bandwidth (i.e., lower Q) is a critical design parameter.
(31) A MEMS device may have a variety of physical shapes, e.g., beams and plates.
(32) Referring to
F.sub.TOT=m{umlaut over (x)}+{dot over (X)}+kx,
where is the damping coefficient. In general, a damping force is proportional to the mass velocity {dot over (x)}(e.g., F.sub.={dot over (x)}).
(33) Referring to
(34) While the MEMS device described in
(35) Referring to
(36) In addition, MEMS magnetic sensor includes a conductive path formed on the mass so current (shown as a dotted line) can flow along a surface of the mass. The conductive paths 502 are formed using oxide or other isolation layer 504 to isolate portions of the conductive material of the mass so as to form conductive paths 502 integral with the mass. In the particular illustrated embodiment, the conductive paths are formed of the same material as the other portions of the mass, but in other embodiments they may be formed of a different material on a surface of the mass. However formed, the conductive path is integral with the mass such that any force exerted on current flowing along the conductive paths is imparted to the mass to affect its position.
(37) In the exemplary embodiment shown, the current enters the conductive path from electrode 516, which is tied through an interconnect to a current supply described later herein. In the illustrated embodiment, the current flows along the mass as shown by the dotted line, is interconnected (not shown) to the other conductive portions of mass 540. The current flows along the mass from electrode 516, through electrodes 506, which are coupled in other portions of the integrated circuit. The current flows along the mass from electrodes 506 to electrodes 507, which are coupled together in other portions of the integrated circuit. The current flows along the mass from electrodes 507 toward electrode 509, and exits through electrode 509 to a low impedance node such as ground. In the example shown, the current path is on the surface of the mass flowing in a vertical configuration. In other embodiments, isolation layers may be used to form one or more current paths in the mass that have other configurations. Note that while multiple current paths are shown, a single current path having other configuration can in fact be formed on the mass with appropriately formed isolation material to route the current. Additional isolation layers may be utilized in the embodiment shown in
(38) When the MEMS magnetic sensor 500 is in the presence of a magnetic field 501 orthogonal to both the direction of current flow and the direction of free motion of mass 540, a force is imparted on mass 540 due to the Lorentz force interacting with the point charges of the current thereby causing the position of the mass to change, which change will be sensed by the output transducer. The force due to the magnetic field is described as F.sub.L=NilB, where N is the number of parallel conductors in the coil, the vector B is the magnetic field, i is the current, l is a vector, having a magnitude that is the length of the conductor, and a direction that is along the conductor, aligned with the direction of conventional current flow, and x is the cross product. Assuming the magnetic field 501 in a direction along the z-axis into the page, the Lorentz force is the cross product as stated above. The current flows vertically, along the y-axis. The Lorentz force therefore exerts a force illustrated by arrows 541 on the current flowing in the conductive path of mass 540. That force displaces mass 540 horizontally along the x-axis (e.g., in a negative direction). The amount of displacement is dependent on factors such as the strength of the magnetic field, the current, and the number of current paths in the MEMS device. Given a magnetic field such as the earth's magnetic field, sufficient force will be imparted to affect the mass position and thereby detect the field.
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(40) MEMS magnetic sensor 600 includes a conductive path formed on mass frame 606 so a current (shown as dotted line 604) can flow along a surface of the mass. The conductive path is formed using oxide or other isolation layer 608 to isolate portions of the conductive material of the mass so as to form a conductive path integral with the mass. In the particular illustrated embodiment, the conductive path is formed of the same material as the other portions of the mass, but in other embodiments it may be formed of a different material on a surface of the mass. However formed, the conductive path is integral with the mass such that any force exerted on the current flowing along the conductive path is imparted to the mass to affect its position.
(41) In MEMS magnetic sensor 600, the current enters the conductive path at anchor 613, which is tied through an interconnect to a current supply described later herein. In the illustrated embodiment, the current flows along the mass as shown by the dotted line, and exits through the anchor 615 to a low impedance node such as ground. In the example shown, the current path is on the surface of the mass in a counterclockwise configuration. Additional isolation layers may be utilized in the embodiment shown in
(42) Note that MEMS magnetic sensors 500 and 600 of
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In contrast, when sensing acceleration, the acceleration noise is proportional to
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and the SNR is proportional to {square root over (m)}. Therefore, in general, MEMS devices designed for magnetic sensing applications may be designed to have an amount of mass that is less than the amount of mass targeted for MEMS devices designed for accelerometer or gyroscope applications.
(45) Referring to
(46) In general, since a current flowing through a MEMS magnetic sensor multiplies the magnetic field to produce a Lorentz force, modulation of the current at the resonant frequency of the MEMS magnetic sensor (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS) will produce a Lorentz force that is translated in frequency by f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS. A DC magnetic field will produce a Lorentz force at f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS, which is where the MEMS sensor has maximum gain. Thus, MEMS device 702 is most sensitive at frequencies around the resonant frequency of the MEMS device (i.e., f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS) with a relatively narrow bandwidth (e.g., approximately 100 Hz). That is, MEMS device 702 applies the highest gain to sensed displacements having frequencies in a narrow range around f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS. Accordingly, I.sub.MEMS applied to MEMS device 702 is frequency-locked to the resonant frequency of MEMS device 702. Reference generator 714 generates a signal having a frequency that is approximately matched to the resonant frequency of the moving conductors on the MEMS device 702 and the corresponding current, I.sub.MEMS, is provided to the conductive elements on MEMS device 702. In the presence of a magnetic field B.sub.IN that points parallel to the plane of the current loop, a Lorentz force displaces the mass of MEMS device 702. A sense capacitor generates the output voltage V.sub.O proportional to a motional current that indicates a rate of change of capacitance of the sense capacitor of MEMS device 702. In at least one embodiment of system 700, MEMS device 702 receives an AC excitation signal having a frequency f.sub.MOD, as described above with reference to
(47) In at least one embodiment, controller 710 includes a proportional-integral-derivative controller (e.g., A(s) controller 715), which can be configured using set points to reduce or eliminate error by generating a force-feedback voltage V.sub.FFB based on a weighted sum of present, past, and future errors in response to a current rate of change, as is well-known in the art. Transducer 716 converts the force-feedback voltage to a force applied to a MEMS device 702 to change the displacement of the mass. Controller 710 can be configured to implement a force-feedback configuration that compensates for any displacement of the mass with respect to the frame of MEMS device 702. In at least one embodiment, controller 710 includes a band-pass filter that restricts the energy of the control signal to a narrow frequency band centered around f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS. That bandlimited control signal generated by controller 710 is provided to MEMS 702, which exerts a force on the mass to compensate for the Lorentz force in response to the control signal. In addition, the control signal output generated by controller 710 is demodulated by demodulator 717 using the reference signal generated by reference generator 714 to thereby recover a signal indicative of the magnetic field incident on MEMS device 702. Use of the same signal to sense/modulate the magnetic field and demodulate the sensed magnetic field reduces or eliminates long-term noise components. In addition, since MEMS device 702 is not self-resonating, noise introduced by resonance is eliminated. The noise generated by MEMS device 702 is scaled by the signal. By limiting movement of the mass using force-feedback control, MEMS device 702 can be implemented using relatively small capacitive gaps for sensing motion of the resonator. For example, the capacitive gaps in a MEMS device 702 that is not configured to resonate can be smaller than the capacitive gaps used in a MEMS device 702 that is configured to resonate.
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(49) The resonant frequency of a manufactured MEMS device can vary from a design target resonant frequency as a result of variations in manufacturing process and/or environmental factors. Similarly, manufacturing process and/or environmental factors may independently cause frequency of the signal generated by a reference signal generator to vary from a target frequency. Thus, the reference signal frequency (f.sub.REf) may not be approximately equal to the resonant frequency of the MEMS device (f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS) in a manufactured magnetometer. The difference in those frequencies reduces the Q-enhanced movement of the mass in response to the Lorentz force. Accordingly, system 700 may be implemented using techniques to match the frequency of a reference clock signal and the resonant frequency of MEMS device 702 after manufacture, thereby locking the frequency of the current in the coil to the resonant frequency of MEMS device 702.
(50) Referring to
(51) During the calibration mode, reference generator 714 is configured to determine one or more control settings for use in the magnetometer mode. Those control settings will be used to generate a reference signal having a frequency that matches f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS. For example, reference generator 714 uses those control signals to lock the frequency of a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) 728 of a fractional-N phase-locked loop to the resonant frequency of MEMS device 702. Voltage controlled oscillator 728 is designed to generate an oscillating signal having a frequency that is close to an integer P times a design target for the resonant frequency of MEMS device 702. Voltage-controlled oscillator 728 is included in a phase-locked loop (PLL) circuit including phase detector 722, loop filter 726 and divider 732. During the calibration mode, another control loop adjusts an M-bit fractional divide value that is stored in FRAC 754 and is updated until the frequency-divided output of divider 748 is equal to frequency f.sub.MEMS coming from the MEMS resonator when configured in calibration mode.
(52) In at least one embodiment of the control loop that generates the M-bit fractional divide value, frequency counter 760 counts event frequency of the signal generated by VCO 728 (e.g., having a frequency of Pf.sub.REF) with respect to event frequency of f.sub.MEMS. Digital circuit 761 subtracts the predetermined divide value P from the output of frequency counter 760 and provides the difference to accumulator 758. When the frequency of the signal generated by VCO 728 matches P times the frequency of f.sub.MEMS, the output error provided to accumulator 758 is approximately zero. Otherwise a non-zero error signal indicates the frequency error, which is provided to accumulator 758. Error logic 756 uses an accumulated error signal to generate a fractional divide value that is used by the phase-locked loop to adjust the frequency of the output of VCO 728 to lock Pf.sub.REF to Pf.sub.MEMS. In at least one embodiment of the calibration mode, reference generator 714 also implements an open-loop temperature compensation technique that determines and stores temperature coefficients. Those predetermined temperature coefficients may be applied to the fractional divider value or other system parameters used in the magnetometer mode to generate the reference signal having a frequency matched to f.sub.O.sub._.sub.MEMS.
(53) At the end of the calibration mode, which is long enough for the PLL of reference generator 714 to lock Pf.sub.REF to Pf.sub.MEMS, one or more associated control signals are stored for later use during the magnetometer mode. For example, FRAC 754 stores an M-bit fractional divider value. During magnetometer mode, the contents of FRAC 754 are not updated and the stored M-bit fractional divider value is provided to delta-sigma modulator 752, which provides a stream of K-bit divide values (where K<M) to multi-modulus divider 732 to implement an effective divide value that approximates the stored fractional divider value. As a result, in magnetometer mode, VCO 728 generates a signal having a frequency that achieves a predetermined ratio (P) with respect to the resonant frequency of MEMS 702. Accordingly, frequency divider 748 frequency divides by P to generate a signal f.sub.REF that has a frequency matched to the resonant frequency of MEMS device 702.
(54) Rather than generating the reference signal using a PLL including VCO 728, as illustrated in
(55) In the implementations of
(56) In general, embodiments of the MEMS magnetometer described above sense DC or low bandwidth magnetic fields (e.g., magnetic fields of a permanent magnet or the geomagnetic field). As discussed above, the MEMS magnetometer modulates the current in the suspended mass at a frequency f.sub.REF that is set equal to the MEMS sensor resonant frequency f.sub.MEMS during calibration. When the current in the movable mass encounters a DC magnetic field, a Lorentz force is created that is centered at f.sub.REFf.sub.MEMS. The MEMS magnetometer has a narrow bandwidth around f.sub.MEMS, in which it is sensitive to the Lorentz force as illustrated in
(57) However, a magnetic field to be sensed by the sensor may have a bandwidth that is wider than the MEMS resonator bandwidth. Accordingly, embodiments of the MEMS magnetometer may be used as a magnetic spectrum analyzer by varying the frequency of the current generated by the reference generator used to modulate the Lorentz force. Thus, the broad frequency spectrum of the magnetic field to be sensed can be selectively translated into a Lorentz force centered at a peak sensitivity spectrum of the MEMS resonator. As the system sweeps the frequency of the current in the moving mass, the system will sweep the resulting Lorentz force through the f.sub.MEMS resonant frequency. The sweeping of the measured Lorentz force frequency through the sensitive narrowband region of the MEMS resonator is analogous to the way a local oscillator is used in conjunction with a mixer to sweep a signal to be measured through the narrow bandwidth of a filter in a spectrum analyzer.
(58) For example, referring back to
(59) The magnetic field as a function of frequency can be determined using embodiments of the force-feedback MEMS system described above in
(60) A magnetic spectrum analyzer can be implemented using the AGC magnetometer technique by configuring a MEMS device to resonate and generate a constant output by generating the loop current using an AGC. Referring to
(61) The description of the invention set forth herein is illustrative, and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims. For example, while the invention has been described in embodiments in which capacitive sensing is used, one of skill in the art will appreciate that the teachings herein can be utilized with other sensing techniques (e.g., piezoresistive, piezoelectric, optical, magnetic position detection). Variations and modifications of the embodiments disclosed herein, may be made based on the description set forth herein, without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth in the following claims.