Title :
Surface Micromachined Combined Magnetometer/Accelerometer for Above-IC Integration
Author :
Elsayed, Mohannad Yomn ; Cicek, Paul-Vahe ; Nabki, Frederic ; El-Gamal, Mourad N.
Author_Institution :
Wireless Integrated Circuits & Microelectromechanical Syst. Group, McGill Univ., Montréal, QC, Canada
Abstract :
This paper presents a combined magnetometer/accelerometer sharing a single surface micromachined structure. The device utilizes electrical current switching between two perpendicular directions on the structure to achieve a 2-D in-plane magnetic field measurement based on the Lorentz force. The device can concurrently serve as a 1-D accelerometer for out-of-plane acceleration, when the current is switched off. Accordingly, the proposed design is capable of separating magnetic and inertial force measurements, achieving higher accuracy through a single compact device. The sensor supports static operation at atmospheric pressure, precluding the need for complex vacuum packaging. It can alternatively operate at resonance under vacuum for enhanced sensitivity. The device is fabricated using a low-temperature surface micromachining technology, which is fully adapted for above-IC integration on standard CMOS substrates. The resonance frequency of one of the fabricated structures is measured to be 6.53 kHz with a quality factor of ~30 at a 10-mTorr ambient vacuum level. The magnetic field and acceleration sensitivities of the device are measured using discrete electronics to be 1.57 pF/T and 1.02 fF/g, respectively, under static operation.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; accelerometers; magnetometers; micromachining; microsensors; 1D accelerometer; 2D in-plane magnetic field measurement; CMOS substrate; Lorentz force; above IC integration; atmospheric pressure; combined magnetometer-accelerometer; electrical current switching; frequency 6.53 GHz; inertial force measurement; low temperature surface micromachining technology; out-of-plane acceleration; pressure 10 mtorr; static operation; surface micromachined structure; Accelerometers; Electrodes; Force; Magnetic resonance; Magnetic separation; Magnetometers; Silicon carbide; Lorentz force magnetometers; Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS); above-IC integration; above-IC integration.; micromachined accelerometers; silicon carbide (SiC); surface micromachining;
Journal_Title :
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JMEMS.2014.2375574