APPARATUSES AND METHODS INVOLVING TRANSDUCERS AND THEIR TUNING
20250088798 ยท 2025-03-13
Inventors
- Ajay Singhvi (Stanford, CA, US)
- Aidan Fitzpatrick (Stanford, CA, US)
- Amin Arbabian (San Francisco, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H03H2009/02204
ELECTRICITY
B06B1/0292
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G10K2200/11
PHYSICS
H04B11/00
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
In certain examples, methods and circuit-based apparatuses involve or are directed to a transducer to be operated via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer, and to a tunable circuitry (e.g., negative capacitance control and/or resistance control) to change the resonance frequency and/or a bandwidth around the resonance frequency. In more specific aspects, a tunable negative capacitance control may be used to change the resonance frequency and/or damping resistance control without degrading a degree of sensitivity provided by the transducer. Another example, specific to a method, involves: operating a transducer, coupled to a negative capacitance, at a resonance frequency of the transducer; and changing or setting a characteristic concerning the resonance frequency by using a tunable circuit to effect a change of the resonance frequency and/or a bandwidth around the resonance frequency.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: a transducer to be operated with negative capacitance and via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer; and tunable circuitry including at least one of a tunable negative capacitance control to change one or more of said at least one resonance frequency and damping resistance control to change a frequency bandwidth around said at least one the resonance frequency.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the tunable circuitry is to effect the change without degrading a degree of sensitivity provided by the transducer.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the tunable negative capacitance control refers to or includes at least one of the following: a variable capacitor, a circuit to permit selection of one or more of a plurality of different capacitance circuits.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, further including an array of a plurality of transducer elements, wherein the transducer is one of among the array of a plurality of transducer elements.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, further including an array of transducer elements, wherein the transducer is one of among the array of transducer elements, and each of the transducer elements is biased towards its optimal bias voltage.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, further including control circuitry and an array of a plurality of transducer elements, wherein the transducer is one of among the array of transducer elements, and the control circuitry is to independently set the frequency response of at least two different ones of the transducer elements in the array.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, further including an array of transducer elements, wherein the transducer is one of among the array of transducer elements, and at least two different ones of the transducer elements in the array may be selected or controlled independently to provide at least one selectable characteristic associated with one or more of the transducer elements, the at least one selectable characteristic being from among: a certain frequency, and a bandwidth.
8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the tunable circuitry to effect the change as a change in bandwidth around said at least one resonance frequency.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the tunable circuitry to effect the change as a change in said at least one resonance frequency.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the transducer has an optimal bias voltage and the transducer is biased towards the optimal bias voltage.
11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the tunable circuitry includes the tunable negative capacitance control interfacing with the transducer, and the transducer is biased towards an optimal bias voltage of the transducer.
12. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the tunable circuitry is to mitigate or cancel parasitic capacitance.
13. The apparatus of claim 1, further including a control circuit to control an input of the tunable circuitry for changing one or more of said at least one resonance frequency and the frequency bandwidth around said at least one the resonance frequency.
14. An apparatus comprising: a transducer, coupled to a negative capacitance, to be operated via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer; tunable circuitry to change one or more of said at least one resonance frequency and a frequency bandwidth around said at least one the resonance frequency; and an operational amplifier, wherein the tunable circuitry includes tunable negative capacitance created via a feedback path around the operational amplifier.
15. The apparatus of claim 14, wherein the tunable circuitry includes at least one of a tunable negative capacitance control and a programmable damping resistance control to drive one or more inputs of the operational amplifier.
16. The apparatus of claim 15, further including a stability detection loop, coupled to the tunable negative capacitance control, for automatically providing a maximum allowable negative level of capacitance.
17. The apparatus of claim 15, further including a resonance frequency estimation circuit, coupled to the tunable negative capacitance control, for automatically providing a setting to the tunable negative capacitance control.
18. The apparatus of claim 14, wherein the tunable circuitry includes: a programmable damping resistance control to drive an input of the operational amplifier, and a resonance frequency and bandwidth estimation circuit, coupled to the tunable negative capacitance, for automatically providing a setting to the tunable negative capacitance and a setting to the programmable damping resistance control.
19. A method comprising: operating a transducer, coupled to a tunable negative capacitance, at a resonance frequency of the transducer; and changing or setting a characteristic concerning the resonance frequency by using a tunable circuit to effect a change of the resonance frequency or a bandwidth around the resonance frequency.
20. The method of claim 19, further including: controlling an input of the tunable negative capacitance to change a bandwidth at the resonance frequency of the transducer; and wherein using a tunable circuit includes effecting a change of the resonance frequency and a change of the bandwidth around the resonance frequency, wherein the tunable circuit includes a programmable variable negative capacitance control to effect a change of the resonance frequency and further includes a programmable damping resistance to change the bandwidth around the resonance frequency.
21. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES
[0013] Various example embodiments, including experimental examples, may be more completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description in connection with the accompanying drawings, each in accordance with the present disclosure, in which:
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[0029] While various embodiments discussed herein are amenable to modifications and alternative forms, aspects thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the disclosure to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the scope of the disclosure including aspects defined in the claims. In addition, the term example as used throughout this application is only by way of illustration, and not limitation.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] Aspects of the present disclosure are believed to be applicable to a variety of different types of apparatuses, systems and methods involving a transducer to be operated via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer along with a tunable negative capacitance control to change or set the resonance frequency of a transducer and/or a tunable damping circuit to change or set a bandwidth around the resonance frequency. Further, in certain example contexts specific types of transducers (e.g., CMUTs, PMUTs) are discussed in the present disclosure to highlight certain application-specific aspects or benefits. While the present disclosure is not necessarily limited to such aspects, an understanding of specific examples in the following description may be understood from discussion in such specific contexts.
[0031] In certain specific example embodiments, aspects of the present disclosure are directed to circuit-based apparatuses, and/or methods of using such apparatus, that involve or are directed to a transducer to be coupled to a negative capacitance and operated via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer, and to changing or setting at least one of the resonance frequency by using a tunable negative capacitance control and a bandwidth around the resonance frequency by using a tunable damping resistance. The tunable negative capacitance control may refer to or include a variable capacitor and/or a circuit to permit selection of one or more of a plurality of different capacitance circuits. For a generalized view of exemplary types of individual negative capacitance transducer-based circuits consistent with aspects of the present disclosure, reference may be made to the examples below discussed in connection with exemplary transducer-based circuits illustrated in
[0032] Relating to or building on the above aspects, certain other specific examples of the present disclosure are directed to biasing the transducer towards an optimal bias voltage of the transducer and/or the tunable negative capacitance control being used with other circuitry and/or may be operated to implement one or more specific features. As examples, the tunable negative capacitance control may interface with the transducer, and/or the tunable negative capacitance control may be implemented to mitigate or cancel parasitic capacitance
[0033] In connection with certain other specific examples, methods and circuit-based apparatuses involve or are directed to a transducer to be operated via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer, a tunable negative capacitance control to change the resonance frequency, and an operational amplifier, wherein the tunable negative capacitance is created via a feedback path around the operational amplifier.
[0034] In more specific example embodiments, other circuitry may be included to provide specific functionally-related aspects. For example, a programmable damping resistance control may be included so as to drive an input of the operational amplifier, a stability detection loop (e.g., coupled to the tunable negative capacitance control) may be included for automatically providing a maximum allowable negative level of capacitance, and a resonance frequency estimation circuit (e.g., coupled to the tunable negative capacitance control) may be included for automatically providing a setting to the tunable negative capacitance control. In a further specific example embodiment, such additional circuitry may include or refer to a programmable damping resistance control to drive an input of the operational amplifier, and a resonance frequency and bandwidth estimation circuit, coupled to the tunable negative capacitance control, for automatically providing a setting to the tunable negative capacitance control and a setting to the programmable damping resistance control.
[0035] In connection with the above specific aspects (e.g., building on one or more of the above-characterized aspects), the tunable negative capacitance control: may change the resonance frequency without degrading a degree of sensitivity provided by the transducer and/or may change a bandwidth at the resonance frequency.
[0036] In connection with yet other specific aspects, the present disclosure is directed to or involves a transducer, as one of among an array of a plurality of transducers or transducer elements, to be operated via at least one resonance frequency of the transducer, and to a tunable negative capacitance control to change the resonance frequency, and optionally, one or more of the plurality of transducer elements is biased towards its optimal bias voltage.
[0037] Accordingly, in the following description various specific details are set forth to describe specific examples presented herein. It should be apparent to one skilled in the art, however, that one or more other examples and/or variations of these examples may be practiced without all the specific details given below. In other instances, well known features have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the description of the examples herein. For ease of illustration, the same connotation and/or reference numerals may be used in different diagrams to refer to the same elements or additional instances of the same element. Also, although aspects and features (such as those characterized above) may in some cases be described in individual figures, it will be appreciated that aspects and features from one figure or example embodiment can be combined with aspects/features of another figure or example embodiment even though the combination is not explicitly shown or explicitly described as a combination. In connection with the above aspects, it will also be appreciated that such an apparatus or method may involve aspects/features presented and claimed in U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 63/303,181 filed on Jan. 26, 2022 (STFD.439P1 S21-457) with Appendices, to which priority is claimed. To the extent permitted, such subject matter is incorporated by reference in its entirety generally and to the extent that further aspects and examples (such as experimental and/more-detailed embodiments) may be useful to supplement and/or clarify.
[0038] In certain contexts, specific aspects of the present disclosure are directed to applications finding benefit from being able to use exclusively electronic approaches for tuning the sensitivity and bandwidth of acoustic transducers. In vet more more-specific contexts, these applications are benefited by not needing to provide such tuning of the sensitivity and bandwidth through the use of increasingly complex transducer geometries which seem to inherently involve high fabrication time, cost, and large process variations.
[0039] One type of specific example embodiment, according to specific aspects of the present disclosure, is directed to an approach involving remote US detection in air by using highly sensitive, air-coupled capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducer (CMUT) arrays to overcome the large water-air interface loss. CMUTs, like other MEMS sensors, have an inherent sensitivity-bandwidth tradeoff that directly impacts the SNR and data rates of US links. In one implementation, instead of increasingly complex CMUT architectures to provide a balance between sensitivity and bandwidth (which results in lower reliability and higher fabrication cost, time, and effort), electronic tuning knobs are exclusively usedfor bias voltage and negative capacitance-to independently program the resonance frequency of each element in an array of identical, conventional vacuum CMUT elements that are easier to fabricate at scale. This approach allows for synthesizing a wideband response across the CMUT array without any drop in sensitivity, thereby overcoming the fundamental sensitivity-bandwidth barrier and demonstrating a noise equivalent pressure (NEP) that is more than a thousand times lower than state-of-the-art water-to-air US links, while still achieving a high data rate and perhaps including the highest rate demonstrated by acoustic water-to-air links (e.g., more than 20 kb/s, more than 25 kb/s, and more than 28 kb/s).
[0040] In other specific examples the present disclosure are directed to an apparatus or method of using the apparatus by: programmably changing or tuning multiple elements, to be used in an acoustic transducer and its interface circuit, to a single resonance frequency (e.g., without significant loss of sensitivity, while optimizing sensitivity, while realizing a relatively high synthesized bandwidth); and/or wherein changing or tuning the elements may be used to account for variations in the resonance frequency or, more specifically, variations in the resonance frequency as may be due, for example, to fabrication-related variations, ongoing-use of the elements and/or aging of the elements.
[0041] In yet another specific example, an apparatus or method of using the apparatus may be directed to: one or more elements in an acoustic transducer array and its circuit, and/or certain circuitry in the interface circuits for the acoustic transducer, wherein the one or more elements and/or certain circuitry may be programmably changed or tuned to set at least one resonance frequency; programmably changing or tuning a single acoustic transducer element and its interface circuit, sequentially, from a first resonance frequency to at least one additional resonance frequency (e.g., without significant loss of sensitivity, while optimizing sensitivity, and/or while realizing a relatively high bandwidth); and/or wherein changing or tuning the element may or may not be used to account for variations in the resonance frequency and/or variations in the resonance frequency due, as examples, to fabrication-related variations, ongoing-use of the elements and/or aging of the elements.
[0042] In certain specific contexts and implementations, certain aspects of the present disclosure are directed to use of certain manual controls, such as a knob or dial, for tuning the resonance frequency of an acoustic transducer. Advantages from these specific contexts are readily apparent from applications benefiting from allowing for multi-frequency operation without (some or any) degradation in sensitivity and thereby helping to alleviate the fundamental sensitivity versus bandwidth tradeoff that seems to be inherent in the designs of resonant MEMS sensors.
[0043] In yet further specific contexts, certain aspects of the present disclosure are directed to all-electronic approaches/circuitry which provides compensation for fabrication-related variations in resonance frequency, bandwidth, sensitivity and/or parasitic capacitance in multiple elements of a transducer and in some instances, across elements of a transducer array, across functionally-related elements operating as subset of all elements in the array, and/or selectively implementing two or more of these (e.g., by way of programming to compensate for resonance frequency variations ensuing from fabrication issues and/or from ongoing use of the transducers, and to adjust resonance frequency of the element(s) for functionally-related aspects or applications).
[0044] In applications and examples seeking to benefit from combinations of the above aspects and advantages, other specific aspects of the present disclosure are directed to uses and implementations of an easy-to-fabricate conventional acoustic transducer element as a single master design which may be manufactured and/or implemented for use either individually or in an array. Such aspects may also use completely electronic approaches to tune the transducer and system parameters and further, such tuning may be on the fly depending upon application requirements.
[0045] Consistent with the above exemplary aspects, another specific example embodiment of the present disclosure is directed to a programmable tuning circuit that includes a voltage-mode analog front-end, with a tunable negative capacitance and tunable resistance that interfaces with an acoustic transducer element which is biased close to its optimal bias voltage. Also, the tunable negative capacitance may be used to allow mitigation or cancellation of any parasitic capacitance as well as tune the parallel resonance frequency of the transducer. For example, as more of the transducer active capacitance is cancelled, the parallel resonance frequency of the transducer increases (while remaining just as sensitive as it was at its original optimal operation regime). Further, the tunable resistance allows for dampening the resonance, thereby lowering the transducer quality factor and increasing bandwidth.
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[0047] In connection with certain specific implementations consistent with the exemplary transducer-based circuits shown in
[0048] In connection with the above and certain other specific implementations consistent with the exemplary transducer-based circuits shown in
[0049] For example, in connection with certain experimental examples and/or proof-of-concept embodiments, such an apparatus employs a synthesized bandwidth from 1 kHz-100 MHz, to accommodate a wide variety of possible applications, and for certain specific exemplary applications, such data rate and imaging resolution ranges may be, respectively: (a) 1 kbits/second-10 Mbits/second data rate and 10 m-100 cm imaging resolution, for an application involving acoustic reception in air, and (b) 1 kbits/second-100 Mbits/second and 1 m-100 cm for an application involving acoustic reception in immersion); and/or providing one or more elements in the acoustic transducer array and its interface circuit to be synthesized (e.g., as so programmed) to provide a certain frequency response (e.g., a wideband response, a single-frequency response, and/or one or more responses associated with selected frequencies or frequency ranges) during operation of the acoustic transducer.
[0050] Consistent with the example of
[0051] Consistent with the above example of
[0052] Consistent with the example of
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[0059] As yet another feature in connection with any of the array-based examples of
[0060] Subsequent steps may be implemented as may be appropriate for each type of implementation. As examples, such subsequent steps may be carried out for maintaining secure communications between transmitting and receiving circuits using the array to channel data (e.g., by modulating a channel or output signal using the transducer circuit), maintaining and resetting the response with degradation of component values which tend to change the response over time, and maintaining and resetting the response with changes of the response due to environmental-related stresses (e.g., humidity, temperature, voltage-related stresses).
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[0065] Discussion now turns to certain more-detailed and/or experimentally-directed example embodiments, for example, pertaining to proof of concept for certain aspects of the present disclosure. In one such example embodiment, electronic circuitry has been designed to be integrated with or interface with an air-coupled capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducer (CMUT) element, and using this electronic circuitry certain measurement are made in connection with such experimental efforts. While the measurement results pertain to an air-coupled CMUT element, the examples of the present disclosure show that similar examples can also be applied to other types of transducers, including but not limited to air-coupled and immersion-based acoustic transducers such as piezoelectric transducers, other capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducers (CMUTs), piezoelectric micromachined ultrasound transducers (PMUTs), and electrostatic transducers among others.
[0066] In such experimental efforts, electrical characterizations are conducted in the form of impedance measurements, demonstrating the frequency tunability of the above-discussed approaches and exemplary advantages which certain of these examples may realize (depending on the implementation) over previously-known circuits. For example, such experimental efforts have include acoustic characterizations via pitch catch experiments with a calibrated microphone, demonstrating improved sensitivity and no deterioration in CMUT minimum detectable pressure (also verified via simulations). Further, while certain of the measurement results show frequency tunability in the 50-100 KHz range, this is merely for a proof-of-concept/experimental example. With finer grained capacitance cancellation, various examples, according to aspects of the present disclosure, readily realize operation at frequencies as low as one MHz to several tens of MHZ, at higher frequencies, and/or at wider (or narrower) synthesized bandwidths for air-coupled and immersion transducers to enable improved (higher) levels of resolution imaging and improved (higher) data rate communication relative to performance provided by previously-known examples.
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[0069] With regards to
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[0071] In
[0072] Also according to various examples of the present disclosure,
[0073] In one experimental/more-detailed example embodiment, to demonstrate a water-to-air US uplink (e.g., as discussed in connection with
[0074] As a preliminary tuning knob, the programmable bias voltage from the charge pump may be used to electronically tune the parallel resonance frequency, fp, of the CMUT. When tuning the bias voltage (e.g., 30 to 52V), CMUT impedance and pitch-catch measurements show a wide frequency range but have lower open-circuit sensitivities (Voc) at low bias voltages due to a loss in electro-mechanical conversion efficiency. To overcome this shortcoming, a second frequency tuning mechanism may be used to keep the CMUT biased at high voltage for efficient electro-mechanical conversion, while using the negative capacitance generated at the AFE input to tune the parallel resonance frequency. Unlike certain traditional equalization strategies that utilize negative capacitances, in addition to the parasitics, in this specific example, the sensor's active capacitance is canceled to generate large frequency shifts. By tuning the negative capacitance (e.g., 0 to 58 pF, 1 pF granularity) a higher impedance is obtained as more of the CMUT capacitance is canceled, providing higher sensitivities at higher frequencies albeit with lower quality factors (due to imperfect R.sub.damp compensation). These two tuning mechanisms can thus be used to provide a synthesized frequency range (e.g., >20 wider than the intrinsic CMUT bandwidth).
[0075] It is recognized and appreciated that as specific examples, the above-characterized figures and discussion are provided to help illustrate certain aspects (and advantages in some instances) which may be used in the manufacture of such structures and devices. These structures and devices include the exemplary structures and devices described in connection with each of the figures as well as other devices, as each such described embodiment has one or more related aspects which may be modified and/or combined with the other disclosed devices and examples as described hereinabove may also be found in the Appendices of the above-referenced Provisional Application.
[0076] The skilled artisan would also recognize various terminology as used in the present disclosure by way of their plain meaning. As examples, the Specification may describe and/or illustrates aspects useful for implementing the examples by way of various semiconductor materials/circuits which may be illustrated as or using terms such as layers, blocks, modules, device, system, unit, controller (or control), and/or other circuit-type depictions. Such circuitry, circuit elements and/or related circuit components and/or circuit-based subsections may be used together with other elements to exemplify how certain examples may be carried out in the form or structures, steps, functions, operations, activities, etc.
[0077] Also and particularly in connection with discussion of circuitry (e.g., control or controller) characterizing logic use to provide control over the resonance frequency or bandwidth associated with the characterized transducers in the various examples of the present disclosure, in certain example embodiments using CPU-related logic (e.g., a programmable CPU circuit), aspects of the present disclosure are directed to memory circuitry (e.g., non-volatile memory device) for storing and accessing a program to be executed as a set (or sets) of instructions (and/or to be used as configuration data to define how the programmable circuit is to perform such control), and an algorithm or process as described herein is used by the programmable circuit to perform related steps, functions, operations, activities, etc. Depending on the application, the instructions (and/or configuration data) can be configured for implementation in such logic circuitry, with the instructions (whether characterized in the form of object code, firmware or software) stored in and accessible from a memory (circuit) whereupon access of the instructions causes the programmable circuit or CPU-related logic to carry out the related steps, functions, operations, activities.
[0078] It would also be appreciated that terms to exemplify orientation, such as above/below, may be used herein to refer to relative positions of elements as shown in the figures. It should be understood that the terminology is used for notational convenience only and that in actual use the disclosed structures may be oriented different from the orientation shown in the figures.
[0079] Based upon the above discussion and illustrations, those skilled in the art will readily recognize that various modifications and changes may be made to the various embodiments without strictly following the exemplary embodiments and applications illustrated and described herein. For example, methods as exemplified in the Figures may involve steps carried out in various orders, with one or more aspects of the embodiments herein retained, or may involve fewer or more steps. Such modifications do not depart from the true spirit and scope of various aspects of the disclosure, including aspects set forth in the claims.