0% found this document useful (0 votes)
96 views13 pages

Mechanical Transducers: Accelerometers

Several micromachined sensors have evolved over the last two decades. Among them the pressure sensors occupy almost 60% of the market. A schematic isometric cut-away view of a piezoresistive pressure sensor die.Here, we can seestors (piezoresistors) integrated on a micromachined silicon diaphragm.Micromined accelerometer is yet another device which has received considerable attention from the aerospace, automobile, and biomedical industries.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
96 views13 pages

Mechanical Transducers: Accelerometers

Several micromachined sensors have evolved over the last two decades. Among them the pressure sensors occupy almost 60% of the market. A schematic isometric cut-away view of a piezoresistive pressure sensor die.Here, we can seestors (piezoresistors) integrated on a micromachined silicon diaphragm.Micromined accelerometer is yet another device which has received considerable attention from the aerospace, automobile, and biomedical industries.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Mechanical Transducers

Accelerometers
Prepared bu
V.M.Kulkarni,
M.I.T Aurangabad
SILICON CAPACITIVE ACCELEROMETER:Overview

• An accelerometer measures the acceleration of a body on which it is


mounted.
• It becomes a tilt sensor if it measures gravitational acceleration.
• Almost all types of accelerometers have a basic structure consisting
of an inertial mass (also called a proof mass or a seismic mass ), a
suspension, and a transducing mechanism to convert the acceleration
signal to an electrical signal.
• In a capacitive accelerometer, the sensing method is capacitive in
that any change in acceleration results in a change of capacitance
that is measured electronically.
• One of the first micromachined accelerometers was reported in 1979
by Roylance and Angell at Stanford University.
• It used piezoresistive transduction and weighed less than 0.02 g in a
230.6mm3 package. It took over 15 years for such devices to be
accepted as a product for large-volume applications.
Overview conti….
• A wide variety of micromachined capacitive accelerometers is
commercially available today.
• Some of the manufacturers of this type of accelerometer are Analog
Devices, Honeywell, Texas Instruments, Endevco Corporation, PCB
Piezotronics, Freescale Semiconductors, Crossbow, Delphi, Motorola,
etc.
• Some of these are sold for less than 500 and some of them cost more
than 50,000.
• This is because of the variation in performance and the applications.
• Low-cost accelerometers are used in consumer applications.
Advantages of Silicon Capacitive Accelerometers
• Silicon capacitive accelerometers have:
1. Very low sensitivity to temperature-induced drift.
2. Higher output levels than other types.
3. Amenability for force-balancing and hence for closed-loop
operation.
4. High linearity.
Typical Applications

• Typical applications of silicon capacitive


accelerometers include:
1. Consumer: airbag deployment systems in cars,
active suspensions, adaptive brakes, alarm
systems, shipping recorders, home appliances,
mobile phone, toys, etc.
2. Industrial: crash-testing robotics, machine
control, vibration monitoring, etc.
3. High-end applications: military/space/aircraft
industry navigation and inertial guidance, impact
detection, tilt measurement, high-shock
environments, cardiac pacemaker, etc.
Materials Used :

• The materials used to form these devices include:


1. Single-crystal silicon to form the physical structure.
2. Silicon dioxide sandwiched in a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer
gives electrical isolation.
3. Handle-layer of the SOI wafer is the substrate.
4. Gold for electrodes.

Fabrication Process :
This is a bulk micromachining. In general, almost any microfabrication process can
be used to make an accelerometer.
Key Definitions
• The important terms used and their definitions are:
1.Proof mass: the inertial mass used in the accelerometer whose displacement
relative to a rigid frame is a measure of the influence of external acceleration.
2. Suspension: the compliant structure by which the proof mass is suspended from
the frame.
3.Capacitance: the capacity of a body to hold an electrical charge. Capacitance is
also a measure of the amount of electric charge stored for a given electric potential.
For a two-plate capacitor, if the charges on the plates are +q and -q and V is the
voltage between the plates, then the capacitance is given by C = q/V. The
international standard (SI) unit of capacitance is the farad (1 farad = 1
coulomb/volt).
4.Parallel-plate capacitor: a pair of parallel plates separated by a dielectric
(nonconducting substance) medium.
5.Differential capacitance arrangement: in this arrangement, there are three plates
with a movable middle plate. As the plate moves, the capacitance between one of
the pairs will increase while that of the other decreases. This gives a signal that is
linearly proportional to the applied acceleration, and hence is the preferred
configuration.
6.Quality factor: a system’s quality factor, Q, describes the sharpness of the system’s
dynamic response.
Principle of Operation
• An accelerometer can be thought of as a mass suspended by a spring.
• When there is acceleration, there will be a force on the mass.
• The mass moves, and this movement is determined by the spring constant
of the suspension.
• By measuring the displacement, we can get an estimate of the acceleration
(Figure).
• A capacitor may be formed with two plates of which one is fixed while the
other moves
• A capacitor may be formed with two plates of which one is fixed while the
other moves [Figures (a), (b)].
• In another arrangement, the mass can move in between two plates [Figure
(c)]. In all three, the capacitance changes according to the motion caused by
acceleration
Accelerometers
Static deformation:
F Ma
Spring Damping d static  
F=kx F=Dv k k

M Inertial mass
F=Ma Dynamic behavior

d 2x dx
M 2  D  kx  Fext  Ma
•When the spring mass system is subjected to linear dt dt
acceleration,a force equal to mass times acceleration
k Resonance frequency
acts on the proof mass, causing it to deflect.
•This deflection is sensed by a suitable means and
r 
M
converted into an equivalent electrical signal.
 r M Quality factor
• Some form of damping is required, otherwise the Q
system would not stabilize quickly under applied D
acceleration.
Accelerometers
Accelerometer parameters
• acceleration range (G) (1G=9.81 m/s2)
• sensitivity (V/G)
• resolution (G)
• bandwidth (Hz)
• cross axis sensitivity

Application Range Bandwidth Comment


Air Bag Deployment ± 50 G ~ 1 kHz
Engine vibration ±1G > 10 kHz resolve small accelerations (< 1 micro G)
Cardiac Pacemaker control ±2G < 50 Hz multiaxis, ultra-low power consumption
Capacitive Accelerometers
Anchor to substrate

Spring Displacement Inertial Mass

Stationary Polysilicon fingers

Based on ADXL accelerometers, Analog Devices, Inc.


An Example Prototype
• Figure (a) shows a photograph of a
packaged, two-axis, planar,
micromachined capacitive
accelerometer with the mechanical
sensor element and two Application
Specific Integrated Circuit Chips
(ASICs).
• Figure (b) shows a close-up view of
the sensor element and
• Figure (c) shows its schematic
details.
• This device is one of the many
accelerometers developed in research
laboratories in academia and
industry and has the same features
that can be found in any capacitive
accelerometer.
• The physical arrangement and shapes
of components differ among the
different types. Materials and
fabrication processes used may also
be different.

You might also like