Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9699713 | Sensors and Actuators A: Physical | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
A resonant accelerometer manufactured in silicon bulk micromachining with electrothermal excitation and piezoresistive detection is presented. The structure is a seismic mass supported by two parallel flexure hinges as a doubly-sustained cantilever, with a resonating microbeam located between the hinges. The acceleration normal to the chip plane induces an axial stress in the microbeam and, in turn, a proportional change in the microbeam resonant frequency. Beam resonant frequency of around 70Â kHz and acceleration sensitivity of 35Â Hz/g over the range 0-3Â kHz were measured on prototypes, in accordance with analytical calculations and simulations. The microbeam operates unsealed at atmospheric pressure, therefore a comparatively low quality factor results due to air damping. In this condition, the effect of the input-output cross-talk was found to be significant. The cross-talk is analyzed and modeled, and an electronic active compensation is proposed. The compensated sensor was inserted into a phase-locked loop oscillator and tested. Reported experimental results show that the sensor performs in excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
V. Ferrari, A. Ghisla, D. Marioli, A. Taroni,