EP1277277A2 - Method and subsystem for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices - Google Patents

Method and subsystem for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices

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Publication number
EP1277277A2
EP1277277A2 EP01931148A EP01931148A EP1277277A2 EP 1277277 A2 EP1277277 A2 EP 1277277A2 EP 01931148 A EP01931148 A EP 01931148A EP 01931148 A EP01931148 A EP 01931148A EP 1277277 A2 EP1277277 A2 EP 1277277A2
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EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
filter
micromechanical
subsystem
desired frequency
low noise
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
EP01931148A
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German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Clark T. C. Nguyen
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University of Michigan
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University of Michigan
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by University of Michigan filed Critical University of Michigan
Publication of EP1277277A2 publication Critical patent/EP1277277A2/en
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/46Filters
    • H03H9/462Microelectro-mechanical filters
    • H03H9/465Microelectro-mechanical filters in combination with other electronic elements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/02Details
    • H03H9/02244Details of microelectro-mechanical resonators
    • H03H9/02393Post-fabrication trimming of parameters, e.g. resonance frequency, Q factor
    • H03H9/02409Post-fabrication trimming of parameters, e.g. resonance frequency, Q factor by application of a DC-bias voltage
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/46Filters
    • H03H9/462Microelectro-mechanical filters
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/46Filters
    • H03H9/462Microelectro-mechanical filters
    • H03H9/467Post-fabrication trimming of parameters, e.g. center frequency
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/46Filters
    • H03H9/48Coupling means therefor
    • H03H9/50Mechanical coupling means
    • H03H9/505Mechanical coupling means for microelectro-mechanical filters
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01HELECTRIC SWITCHES; RELAYS; SELECTORS; EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE DEVICES
    • H01H59/00Electrostatic relays; Electro-adhesion relays
    • H01H59/0009Electrostatic relays; Electro-adhesion relays making use of micromechanics
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/02Details
    • H03H9/02244Details of microelectro-mechanical resonators
    • H03H2009/02488Vibration modes
    • H03H2009/02511Vertical, i.e. perpendicular to the substrate plane
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/02Details
    • H03H9/02244Details of microelectro-mechanical resonators
    • H03H2009/02488Vibration modes
    • H03H2009/02519Torsional
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/02Details
    • H03H9/02244Details of microelectro-mechanical resonators
    • H03H2009/02488Vibration modes
    • H03H2009/02527Combined

Definitions

  • This invention relates to methods and subsystems for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a comparison of MEMS and SAW technologies wherein MEMS offers the same or better high- ⁇ frequency selectivity with orders of magnitude smaller size.
  • a single mechanical link does not possess adequate processing power for most applications.
  • the true power of ⁇ mechanical links can be unleashed, and signal processing functions with attributes previously inaccessible to transistor circuits may become feasible.
  • the stability of the oscillator signals used for frequency translation, synchronization, or sampling is of utmost importance.
  • Oscillator frequencies must be stable against variations in temperature against aging, and against any phenomena, such as noise or microphonics, that cause instantaneous fluctuations in phase and frequency.
  • the single most important parameter that dictates oscillator stability is the Q of the frequency-setting tank (or of the effective tank for the case of ring oscillators). For a given application, and assuming a finite power budget, adequate long- and short-term stability of the oscillation frequency is insured only when the tank Q exceeds a certain threshold value.
  • Tank Q also greatly influences the ability to implement extremely selective IF and RF filters with small percent bandwidth, small shape factor, and low insertion loss. As tank Q decreases, insertion loss increases very quickly, too much even for IF filters, and quite unacceptable for RF filters. As with oscillators, high- ⁇ 2 tanks are required for RF and IF filters alike, although more so for the latter, since channel selection is done predominantly at the IF in super-heterodyne receivers. In general, the more selective the filter, the higher the resonator Q required to achieve a given level of insertion loss.
  • U.S. Patent No. 6,049,702 to Tham et al. discloses an integrated passive transceiver section wherein microelectromechanical (MEM) device fabrication techniques are used to provide low loss, high performance switches. Utilizing the MEM devices also makes possible the fabrication and use of several circuits comprising passive components, thereby enhancing the performance characteristics of the transceiver.
  • MEM microelectromechanical
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,872,489 to Chang et al. discloses an integrated tunable inductance network and method.
  • the network utilizes a plurality of MEM switches which selectively interconnect inductance devices thereby providing a selective inductance for a particular circuit.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,963,857 to Greywall discloses an article comprising a micromachined filter.
  • the micromachined filters are assembled as part of a radio to miniaturize the size of the radio.
  • U.S. Patent Nos. 5,976,994 and 6,169,321 to Nguyen et al. disclose a batch-compatible, post-fabrication annealing method and system to trim the resonance frequency and enhance the quality factor of micromechanical structures.
  • U.S. Patent Nos. 5,455,547; 5,589,082 and 5,537,083 to Lin et al. disclose microelectromechanical signal processors.
  • the signal processors include many individual microelectromechanical resonators which enable the processor to function as a multi-channel signal processor or a spectrum analyzer.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,640,133 to MacDonald et al. discloses a capacitance-based, tunable, micromechanical resonator.
  • the resonators may be selectively tuned and used in mechanical oscillators, accelerometers, electromechanical filters and other electromc devices.
  • U.S. Patent Nos. 5,578,976 to Yao, 5,619,061 to Goldsmith et al. and 6,016,092 to Qiu et al. disclose various micromechanical and microelectromechanical switches used in communication apparatus.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,839,062 to Nguyen et al. disclose a MEMS-based receiver including parallel banks of microelectromechanical filters.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,783,973 to Wehiberg et al. discloses a micromechanical, thermally insensitive silicon resonator and oscillator.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide a method and subsystem for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices to substantially reduce the need for RF front-end power.
  • a method for processing signals in an RF subsystem is provided to eliminate the need for a low noise amplifier therein.
  • the method includes providing a plurality of intercoupled micromechanical devices.
  • the method further includes vibrating the micromechanical devices to initially pass a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range and then to convert and filter the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
  • an RF receiver subsystem which eliminates the need for a low noise amplifier therein.
  • the subsystem includes an image-reject vibrating micromechanical filter for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range.
  • the subsystem also includes a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the filter and adapted to be coupled to electronics for converting and filtering the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
  • the low noise amplifier may be an RF low noise amplifier.
  • the filter may be a relatively wide band filter and the mixer-filter may be a narrow band mixer-filter.
  • an RF receiver subsystem which eliminates the need for a low noise amplifier.
  • the subsystem includes a vibrating micromechanical frequency range selector for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range.
  • the subsystem also includes a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the selector and adapted to be connected to electronics for converting and filtering the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
  • an RF transceiver subsystem is provided which substantially reduces the need for front-end power.
  • the subsystem includes a vibrating micromechanical frequency range selector for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range.
  • the subsystem also includes vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the selector and adapted to be connected to electronics for converting and filtering signals wherein the need for RF front-end power is substantially reduced.
  • a micromechanical mixer-filter apparatus for converting and filtering an information signal having a frequency without the need for a front end filter.
  • the apparatus includes a mixing micromechanical transducer having a first port for receiving the information signal, a second port for receiving an AC signal having a desired frequency and an output port.
  • the apparatus also includes a micromechanical resonator coupled to the transducer. The apparatus converts the frequency of the information signal based on the desired frequency and filters the information signal without the need for a front end filter.
  • the apparatus may also add gain to the information signal.
  • the transducer and the resonator may be intercoupled by a non- conductive part to isolate the first and second ports.
  • the apparatus may further include means for isolating each of the ports from each of the other ports.
  • the resonator is preferably switchable and tunable.
  • the apparatus may be an image-reject mixer filter that initially rejects an image while mixing and then filters.
  • a method for onverting and filtering an information signal having a frequency without the need for a front end filter includes providing a micromechanical device having a first port for receiving the information signal, a second port for receiving an AC signal having a desired frequency and an output port. The method further includes vibrating the micromechanical device so that the micromechanical device converts the frequency of the information signal based on the desired frequency and filters the information signal.
  • the method may further include isolating the first port from the second port.
  • the method may further include isolating each of the ports from each of the other ports.
  • the micromechanical device may be vibrated to also add gain to the information signal.
  • the device may be both switchable and tunable.
  • FIGURE 1 is a prior art, schematic view of the front-end of a transceiver including off-chip, board-level implementation of SAW, ceramic and crystal resonators in a schematic perspective view
  • FIGURE 2a is a prior art, schematic perspective view of a SAW resonator and a number of MEMS resonators formed on a silicon die to compare the two approaches;
  • FIGURE 2b is a prior art, enlarged schematic perspective view of one of the MEMS resonators as indicated at 2b in Figure 2a;
  • FIGURE 3 is a system level schematic block diagram of the front-end design for a typical wireless transceiver showing off-chip, high-Q, passive components targeted for replacement via micromechanical versions of the present invention
  • FIGURE 4 is a graph of transmission [dB] versus frequency illustrating desired filter characteristics
  • FIGURE 5a is a perspective schematic view of a symmetrical two- resonator VHF /imechanical filter with typical bias, excitation and signal conditioning electronics;
  • FIGURE 5b is an electrical equivalent circuit for the filter of Figure
  • FIGURE 6 is a system level block diagram of an RF front-end receiver including an RF channel-select receiver architecture utilizing large numbers of micromechanical resonators in banks and schematically and prospectively illustrating a typical micromechanical filter of Figure 5a;
  • FIGURE 7 is a system circuit diagram for an RF channel-select micromechanical filter bank
  • FIGURE 8 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figure 6 and schematically and prospectively illustrating a micromechanical switch thereof;
  • FIGURE 9 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figures 6 and 8 and schematically and prospectively illustrating a mixer- filter-gain stage thereof based on the filter of Figures 6 and 5a;
  • FIGURE 10 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figures 6, 8 and 9 and schematically and prospectively illustrating a micromechanical resonator oscillator thereof;
  • FIGURE 11 is a system/circuit diagram for a switchable / imechanical resonator synthesizer
  • FIGURE 12 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figures 6, 8, 9 and 10 wherein the LNA is shown eliminated by phantom lines due to the low loss channel selector, the T/R switch and the mixer-filter-gain stage;
  • FIGURE 13 is a system block diagram architecture showing the receive path of a communication device
  • FIGURE 14 is a system block diagram of an RF channel-select transmitter architecture utilizing high-power imechanical resonators
  • FIGURE 15 is a schematic top perspective view of a 92 MHZ (VHF) free-free beam polysilicon imechanical resonator wherein support beams isolate the resonator beam element from a substrate thereby allowing higher Q operation;
  • VHF 92 MHZ
  • FIGURE 16 is a graph illustrating a measured frequency characteristic for the resonator of Figure 15;
  • FIGURE 17a is a schematic perspective view of a UHF imechanical filter utilizing free-free beam /imechanical resonators designed to operate at a second mode; and FIGURE 17b is a partial equivalent circuit for the filter of Figure 17a, identifying the circuit functions of individual beam elements.
  • Figure 3 presents a system level schematic block diagram for a typical super-heterodyne wireless transceiver.
  • a small box is positioned in the corner of each box to represent a component that can be replaced with a micromechanical (MEMS) version.
  • MEMS micromechanical
  • several of the constituent components can already be miniaturized using integrated circuit transistor technologies. These include the low noise amplifiers (LNA's) in the receive path, the solid-state power amplifier (SSPA) in the transmit path, synthesizer phase-locked loop (PLL) electronics, mixers, and lower frequency digital circuits for baseband signal demodulation.
  • LNA's low noise amplifiers
  • SSPA solid-state power amplifier
  • PLL synthesizer phase-locked loop
  • the SSPA (and sometimes the LNA's) are often implemented using compound semiconductor technologies (i.e. , GaAs). Thus, they often occupy their own chips, separate from the other mentioned transistor-based components, which are normally realized using silicon-based bipolar and CMOS technologies. However, given the rate of improvement of silicon technologies (silicon-germanium included), all of the above functions may be integrated onto a single-chip.
  • clamped-clamped and free-free f ⁇ exural-mode beams with Q's on the order of 10,000 (in vacuum) and temperature coefficients on the order of -12 ppm/°C, are available for the VHF range, while thin-film bulk acoustic resonators ( ⁇ 2 ⁇ 1 ,000) have so far addressed the UHF range.
  • Anchor loss mechanisms can be greatly alleviated by using "anchor- less" resonator designs, such as shown in the above-noted patent application Serial No. 09/482,670 and as illustrated by the view of Figure 15.
  • This device utilizes a free-free beam (i.e. , xylophone) 60 suspended above a ground plane and sense electrode 61 and a drive electrode 63 by four torsional support beams 62 attached at flexural node points. The beams 62, in turn, are supported at anchors 64.
  • the impedance presented to the beam 60 by the supports 62 can be effectively nulled out, leaving the beam 60 virtually levitated and free to vibrate as if it had no supports.
  • UHF frequency is obtained via use of free- free beam resonators specifically designed to operate at higher modes.
  • the desired mode is selected (while suppressing other modes), by strategic placement and excitation of electrodes, and by the use of dimples under the structure 60 to force node locations corresponding to the desired mode.
  • the mode can also be specified by placing the support beams at nodal locations, as in Figure 17a.
  • Figure 16 shows a frequency characteristic for a 92.25 MHz version of this xmechanical resonator with a Q of nearly 8,000 — still plenty for channel- select RF applications.
  • Table 1 presents expected resonance frequencies for various beam dimensions, modes, and structural materials, showing a wide range of attainable frequencies, from VHF to UHF.
  • Timoshen o methods Determined for free-free beams using Timoshen o methods that include the effects of finite h and W r
  • Micromechanical Filters Among the more useful imechanical circuits for communications are those implementing low-loss bandpass filters, capable of achieving frequency characteristics as shown in Figure 4 where a broader frequency passband than achievable by a single resonator beam is shown, with a sharper roll-off to the stopband (i.e. , smaller shape factor).
  • a number of micromechanical resonators may be coupled together by soft coupling springs.
  • a coupled resonator system is achieved that exhibits several modes of vibration.
  • the frequency of each vibration mode corresponds to a distinct peak in the force-to-displacement frequency characteristic, and to a distinct, physical mode shape of the coupled mechanical resonator system.
  • each resonator in the lowest frequency mode, all resonators vibrate in phase; in the middle frequency mode, the center resonator ideally remains motionless, while the end resonators vibrate 180° out of phase; and finally, in the highest frequency mode, each resonator is phase- shifted 180° from its adjacent neighbor.
  • the complete mechanical filter exhibits a jagged passband.
  • termination resistors designed to lower the ⁇ 2's of the input and output resonators r by specific amounts are required to flatten' the passband and achieve a more recognizable filter characteristic, such as in Figure 4.
  • the filters use a number of high- ⁇ 2 micromechanical beam elements connected in a network that achieves the specified bandpass frequency response. If effect, a micromechanical filter is another example of a micromechanical circuit, similar to that of Figure 15, but in this case using a plurality of beam elements to achieve a frequency shaping response not achievable by a single beam element.
  • the constituent resonators in imechanical filters are normally designed to be identical, with identical dimensions and resonance frequencies.
  • the center frequency of the overall filter is equal to the resonance frequency f 0 of the resonators, while the filter passband (i.e. , the bandwidth) is determined by the spacings between the mode peaks.
  • the relative placement of the vibration peaks in the frequency characteristic — and thus, the passband of the eventual filter — is determined primarily by the stiffnesses of the coupling springs (k si ) and of the constituent resonators at the coupling locations (k r ). Specifically, for a filter with center frequency f 0 and bandwidth B, these stiffnesses must satisfy the expression:
  • k tj is a normalized coupling coefficient found in filter cookbooks.
  • the filter bandwidth is not dependent on the absolute values of resonator and coupling beam stiffness; rather, their ratio k sij /k r dictates bandwidth.
  • the procedure for designing a mechanical filter involves two main steps (not necessarily in this order): first, design of a mechanical resonator with resonance frequency f 0 and adjustable stiffness k r ; and second, design of coupling springs with appropriate values of stiffness k siJ to enable a desired bandwidth within the adjustment range of resonator k r 's.
  • Figure 5a shows a perspective view schematic of a practical two- resonator micromechanical filter capable of operation in the HF to VHF range.
  • the filter consists of two /imechanical clamped-clamped beam resonators with anchors 18 at their opposite ends, coupled mechanically by a soft coupling spring or beam 19, all suspended above a substrate (not shown).
  • Conductive (polysilicon) strips 20, 22, 24, and 26 underlie each resonator by approximately 1000 A (as also in Figures 6, 9 and 17a), a center one 20 serving as a capacitive transducer input electrode positioned to induce resonator vibration in a direction perpendicular to the substrate, a center one 24 serving as an output electrode and the flanking ones 22 and 26 serving as tuning or frequency pulling electrodes capable of voltage-controlled tuning of resonator frequencies.
  • the resonator-to-electrode gaps are determined by the thickness of a sacrificial oxide spacer during fabrication and can thus be made quite small (e.g. , 0.1 ⁇ m or less) to maximize electromechanical coupling.
  • the filter is excited with a DC-bias voltage V P applied to the conductive mechanical network, and an AC signal applied to the input electrode, but this time through an appropriately valued source resistance R Q that loads the Q of the input resonator to flatten the passband.
  • the output resonator of the filter must also see a matched impedance to avoid passband distortion, and the output voltage v 0 is generally taken across this impedance.
  • the required value of I/O port termination resistance can be tailored for different applications, and this can be advantageous when designing low noise transistor circuits succeeding the filter, since such circuits can then be driven by optimum values of source resistance to minimize noise.
  • An electrical input signal is applied to the input port and converted to an input force by the electromechanical transducer (which for the case of Figure 5 a is capacitive) that can then induce mechanical vibration in the A; direction;
  • Mechanical vibration comprises a mechanical signal that is processed in the mechanical domain — specifically, the signal is rejected if outside the passband of the filter, and passed if within the passband;
  • micromechanical signal processor clearly suits this device. Details of the design procedure for micromechanical filters now follow.
  • the network topologies for the mechanical filters of this work differ very little from those of their purely electronic counterparts, and in principal, can be designed at the system-level via a procedure derived from well-known, coupled resonator ladder filter synthesis techniques.
  • a procedure derived from well-known, coupled resonator ladder filter synthesis techniques Given the equivalent LCR element values for a prototype / imechanical resonator, it is possible to synthesize a mechanical filter entirely in the electrical domain, converting to the mechanical domain only as the last step.
  • such a procedure is not recommended, since knowledge and ease of design in both electrical and mechanical domains can greatly reduce the effort required.
  • the coupling beam is recognized as an acoustic transmission line that can be made transparent to the filter when designed with quarter-wavelength dimensions as described in the prior art.
  • the filter bandwidth B is determined not by absolute values of stiffness, but rather by a ratio of stiffnesses (k sl2 /k rc ), where the subscript c denotes the value at the coupling location; and second, the value of resonator stiffness k rc varies with location (in particular, with location velocity) and so can be set to a desired value by simply choosing an appropriate coupling beam attachment point.
  • the location is easily determined as described in the prior art.
  • Figure 5b presents the equivalent circuit for the two-resonator micromechanical filter of Figure 5a. Each of the outside resonators are modeled via circuits.
  • the coupling beam actually operates as an acoustic transmission line, and thus, is modeled by a T-network of energy storage elements.
  • Transformers are used between the resonator and coupling beam circuits of Figure 5b to model the velocity transformations that arise when attaching the coupling beams at locations offset from the center of the resonator beam.
  • the whole circuit structure of Figure 5b can be recognized as that of the LC ladder network for a bandpass filter.
  • Figure 17a is similar to Figure 5a and presents the schematic of a filter structure, along with a partial equivalent electrical circuit of Figure 17b (obtained via electromechanical analogy) that identifies the mechanical network as a bandpass filter.
  • the filter structure is seen to be comprised of a number of mechanical resonators (modeled by LCR tanks) connected by acoustic transmission lines (modeled by T-networks of energy storage elements) — a structure similar to other resonator-based filters, but using micromechanical elements with orders of magnitude higher Q, giving it the ability to perform with much lower insertion loss than other technologies. (Not to mention orders of magnitude smaller size.)
  • UHF frequency is obtained via use of a second mode free-free beam resonator including beams 70 and 72 coupled together and to an output beam 74 by coupling beams 73.
  • the resonator is specifically designed to operate at higher modes.
  • the desired mode is selected (while suppressing other modes), by strategic placement and excitation of balanced input electrodes 76 and 78, and by the use of dimples 80 under the beams 70, 72 and 74 to force node locations corresponding to the desired mode.
  • Balanced output electrodes 81 are positioned under the output beam 74.
  • the beams 70 and 74 are supported by non-intrusive supports or beams 82 and 84, respectively, which, in turn, are supported by anchors 86 and 88, respectively.
  • the filter of Figure 17a constitutes the first attempt of its kind to implement filter circuits using free-free beam micromechanical resonators. Unlike previous filters using clamped-clamped beams (that could only attain VHF frequency), both transversal and torsional motions are considered for the coupling beams in Figure 17a.
  • Figure 9 presents the schematic for a symmetrical /xmechanical mixer- filter, showing the bias and input scheme required for down-conversion with a gain stage.
  • this device provides filtering as part of its function, the overall mechanical structure is exactly that of a xmechanical filter. The only differences are the applied inputs and the use of a non-conductive coupling beam to isolate the IF port from the LO. If the source providing V P to the second resonator is ideal (with zero source resistance) and the series resistance in the second resonator is small, LO signals feeding across the coupling beam capacitance are shunted to AC ground before reaching the IF port. In reality, finite resistivity in the resonator material allows some amount of LO-to-IF leakage.
  • the mixer conversion gain/loss in this device is determined primarily by the relative magnitudes of the DC-bias V P applied to the resonator and the local oscillator amplitude V w .
  • the mixer-filter device described above is one example of a
  • FIG. 8 presents an operational schematic for a xmechanical switch.
  • a conductive or actuation plate 30 is suspended above a pair of actuation electrodes 32 by suspension beams 34 having anchors 36.
  • a switch conductor portion 38 of the plate 30 is suspended over a pair of grounds 40 and a sense electrode or conductor 42. When the switch is in the "on-state" here, the conductor 42 is shorted to the grounds 40.
  • switches In general, to minimize insertion loss, the majority of switches use metals as their structural materials. It is their metal construction that makes xmechanical switches so attractive, allowing them to achieve "on-state" insertion losses down to 0.1 dB — much lower than FET transistor counterparts, which normally exhibit ⁇ 2 dB of insertion loss. In addition to exhibiting such low insertion loss, / xmechanical switches are extremely linear, with IIP3's greater than 66 dBm, and can be designed to consume no DC power (as opposed to FET switches, which sink a finite current when activated).
  • Figure 3 shows the use of other MEMS-based passive components, such as medium- ⁇ micromachined inductors and tunable capacitors used in VCO's and matching networks, as well as low-loss (-0.1 dB) /xmechanical switches that not only provide enhanced antenna diversity, but that can also yield power savings by making TDD (rather than FDD) more practical in future transceivers.
  • MEMS-based passive components such as medium- ⁇ micromachined inductors and tunable capacitors used in VCO's and matching networks, as well as low-loss (-0.1 dB) /xmechanical switches that not only provide enhanced antenna diversity, but that can also yield power savings by making TDD (rather than FDD) more practical in future transceivers.
  • timechanical circuits offer the same system complexity advantages over off-chip discrete components that planar IC circuits offer over discrete transistor circuits.
  • planar IC circuits offer over discrete transistor circuits.
  • / xmechanical circuits should be utilized on a massive scale, or at least as much as possible.
  • Figure 6 presents the system-level block diagram for a possible receiver front-end architecture that takes full advantage of the complexity achievable via xmechanical circuits, such as the micromechanical filter of Figure 5a.
  • the main driving force behind this architecture is power reduction, attained in several of the blocks by trading power for high selectivity (i. e. , high- .
  • the key power saving blocks in Figure 6 are now described.
  • channel selection (rather than pre-selection) were possible at RF frequencies (rather than just an IF)
  • succeeding electronic blocks in the receive path e.g. , LNA, mixer
  • LNA local oscillator
  • Figure 7 presents one fairly simple rendition of the key system block that realizes the desired RF channel selection.
  • this block consists of a bank of / xmechanical filters with all filter inputs connected to a common block input and all outputs to a common block output, and where each filter passband corresponds to a single channel in the standard of interest.
  • each filter passband corresponds to a single channel in the standard of interest.
  • it does not have to be limited to a single channel. It could also be several channels as well (e.g. , 3 channels) and this could still be very advantageous, depending upon the communications standard.
  • a given filter is switched on (with all others off) by decoder-controlled application of an appropriate DC-bias voltage to the desired filter.
  • the desired force input and output current are generated in a imechanical resonator only when a DC-bias V P is applied (i.e. , without V P , the input and output electrodes are effectively open-circuited).
  • this RF channel selector can be quantified by assessing its impact on the LNA linearity specification imposed by the IS-98-A interim standard for CDMA cellular mobile stations.
  • the required IIP3 of the LNA is set mainly to avoid desensitization in the presence of a single tone (generated by AMPS) spaced 900 kHz away from the CDMA signal center frequency.
  • AMPS AMPS-generated single tone spaced 900 kHz away from the CDMA signal center frequency.
  • reciprocal mixing of the local oscillator phase noise with the 900 kHz offset single tone and cross-modulation of the single tone with leaked transmitter power outputs dictate that the LNA IIP3 exceeds +7.6 dBm.
  • the power requirement in the sustaining amplifier might be dictated solely by loop gain needs (rather than by phase noise needs), which for a /xmechanical resonator-based VCO with R X ⁇ 40 ⁇ , L x ⁇ 84 ⁇ H, and C x ⁇ 0.5fF, might be less than 1 mW.
  • a switchable bank similar to that of Figure 7 but using /xmechanical resonators 46, not filters, each corresponding to one of the needed LO frequencies, and each switchable into or out of an oscillator sustaining circuit 48 by transistor switches 49 at their electrodes 51 is illustrated in Figure 11 and is preferred over the tuning-fork- resonator oscillator 50 illustrated in Figure 10. Because imechanical resonators are now used in this implementation, the Q and thermal stability of the oscillator may now be sufficient to operate without the need for locking to a lower frequency crystal reference. The power savings attained upon removing the PLL and prescaler electronics needed in past synthesizers can obviously be quite substantial.
  • synthesizer power consumption can be reduced from the -90 mW dissipated by present-day implementations using medium-Q L and C components, to something in the range of only 1-4 mW. Again, all this is attained using a circuit topology that would seem unreasonable if only macroscopic high- ⁇ resonators were available, but that becomes plausible in the micromechanical arena.
  • Figure 11 presents the basic topology of the LO synthesizer.
  • a bank of numerous switchable high- ⁇ (Q > 5,000) micromechanical resonators is utilized, where each resonator corresponds to one of the needed frequencies in a given communications network.
  • no phase-locking circuit is required, since the local oscillator merely switches the appropriate resonator into the oscillator feedback loop to generate the needed output frequency.
  • the Q of the micromechanical resonators are orders of magnitude higher than before ( ⁇ -5,000, as opposed to 40),the phase noise performance of this oscillator should be orders of magmtude better than present-day VCO's.
  • the l/ 2 -to- white noise corner frequency of the standard phase noise vs. frequency plot may be so close to the carrier, that llf 2 noise may no longer be a major consideration, and only white noise is present at the important frequency offsets.
  • power could be traded for Q to such an extent that it may become possible to operate the oscillator with less than 1 mW of power consumption. Combined with the fact that phase-locking is no longer required in the scheme of Figure 11, this constitutes more than 90 mW of power savings, while improving the performance of the oscillator.
  • a single-chip LO synthesizer, using the architecture of Figure 11 can achieve impressive phase noise performance at UHF frequencies (-800 MHz). By using higher-mode, free-free beam resonator designs previously described, UHF (and possibly S-Band or higher) frequency synthesizers are feasible. K- or Ka-Band applications are not unreasonable, and should benefit from the architecture of Figure 11 either directly as shown, or indirectly, since a UHF high-Q reference oscillator should greatly improve the stability of K- or Ka-band synthesizers.
  • the use of a imechanical mixer-filter in the receive path as illustrated in Figure 9 eliminates the DC power consumption associated with the active mixer normally used in present-day receive architectures.
  • the mixer-filter-gain stage includes a pair of n-type resonators 21 ,23 coupled together by a p-type or undoped beam or spring 19 similar to filters of Figures 5a and 6.
  • the RF input can be made to appear purely capacitive to the LNA (i.e. , at the RF frequency), and the LNA would no longer require a driver stage to match a certain impedance. Rather, an inductive load can be used to resonate the capacitance, allowing power savings similar to that previously discussed in association with impedance matching.
  • a direct down-converting receiver architecture without the need for a front-end filter or channel selector, is also possible wherein the signal received by the antenna goes directly into the mixer-filter.
  • the resulting micromechanical mixer-filter may be termed a "quadrature mixer-filter” or “image-reject mixer-filter” that rejects the "image” while mixing, then filters.
  • the "image” is rejected in the mechanical domain.
  • FIG. 13 depicts a receive path comprised of a relatively wideband image reject /xmechanical RF filter followed immediately by a narrowband IF mixer-filter that then feeds subsequent IF electronics.
  • the only active electronics operating at RF in this system are those associated with the local oscillator, which if it uses a bank of xmechanical resonators as previously described, may be able to operate at less than 1 mW.
  • Figure 14 depicts one rendition, in which an RF channel selector is placed after the power amplifier (PA) in the transmit path.
  • This channel selector uses a similar circuit as that of Figure 7, but using /xmechanical resonators with sufficient power handling capability.
  • This transmit topology provides enormous power savings.
  • the high- ⁇ , high-power filter with less than 1 dB of insertion loss follows the PA, cleaning all spurious outputs, including those arising from spectral regrowth. Consequently, more efficient PA designs can be utilized, despite their non-linearity.
  • a PA previously restricted by linearity considerations to 30% efficiency in present-day transmitter architectures may now be operable closer to its maximum efficiency, perhaps 50% . For a typical transmit power of 600 mW, this efficiency increase corresponds to 800 mW of power savings.
  • a more efficient PA topology could be used, such as Class E, with theoretical efficiencies approaching 100% , the power savings could be much larger.
  • the architecture of Figure 14 also features a micromechanical upconverter that uses a mixer-filter device, such as previously described, to upconvert and filter the information signal before directing it to the power amplifier.
  • the baseband signal at frequency ⁇ IF to be upconverted is applied to the input electrode 20 and the upconverting carrier signal at frequency ⁇ L0 is applied to the input resonator device 21. Upconversion occurs through mixing around the nonlinear capacitive transducer between the input electrode 20 and the resonator 21. Specifically, the electrical baseband information signal at frequency ⁇ IF is upconverted to a force at frequency ⁇ L0 + ⁇ IF . This force is then filtered by the filter structure of Figure 9, which is now designed to have a passband around ⁇ L0 + ⁇ IF .
  • this passband is made small enough, channel selection to the point of removing not only distortion harmonics, but also spectrally regrown components, is possible.
  • V p dc-bias V p
  • the displacement of this resonator is converted to an electrical output voltage or current, depending upon the output load.
  • gain is possible in upconverting the baseband signal to the RF signal, so this stage also serves as a gain stage, as well.
  • the second method for upconversion involves filtering the based band signal first, then upconverting. In this method, the baseband signal is again applied to the input electrode 20, but the dc-bias is applied to the input resonator, and the carrier signal to the output resonator. This way, the baseband signal is first filtered by the structure, then upconverted at the output via electromechanical amplitude modulation. Again, gain is possible in this configuration.
  • High power handling micromechanical resonators may use alternative geometries (e.g. , no longer flexural mode) and the use of alternative transduction (e.g. , piezoelectric, magnetostrictive).
  • alternative geometries e.g. , no longer flexural mode
  • alternative transduction e.g. , piezoelectric, magnetostrictive
  • Vibrating imechanical resonators constitute the building blocks for a new integrated mechanical circuit technology in which high Q serves as a principal design parameter that enables more complex circuits.
  • high Q serves as a principal design parameter that enables more complex circuits.

Abstract

Several MEMS-based methods and architectures which utilize vibrating micromechanical resonators in circuits to implement filtering, mixing, frequency reference and amplifying functions are provided. A method and subsystem are provided for processing RF signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices typically in the form of an IF mixer-filter and an RF channel selector or an image-reject RF filter. One of the primary benefits of the use of such architectures is a savings in power consumption by trading power for high selectivity (i.e., high Q). Also, such methods and circuits can elimitate the need for a low noise amplifier in a receiver or transceiver subsystem. Consequently, the present invention relies on the use of a large number of micromechanical links in SSI networks to implement signal processing functions with basically zero DC power consumption.

Description

METHOD AND SUBSYSTEM FOR PROCESSING SIGNALS UTILIZING A PLURALITY OF VIBRATING MICROMECHANICAL DEVICES
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. F30602-97-2-0101 awarded by DARPA. The government has certain rights in the invention.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to methods and subsystems for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices.
2. Background Art
The need for passive off-chip components has long been a key barrier against communication transceiver lriiniaturization. In particular, the majority of the high-<2 bandpass filters commonly used in the RF and IF stages of heterodyning transceivers are realized using off-chip, mechanically-resonant components, such as crystal and ceramic filters and SAW devices, as illustrated in Figure 1. Due to higher quality factor Q, such technologies greatly outperform comparable filters implemented using transistor technologies, in insertion loss, percent bandwidth, and achievable rejection. High Q is further required to implement local oscillators or synchronizing clocks in transceivers, both of which must satisfy strict phase noise specifications. Again, as illustrated in Figure 1, off-chip elements (e.g. , quartz crystals) are utilized for this purpose. Being off-chip components, the above mechanical devices must interface with integrated electronics at the board level, and this constitutes an important bottleneck against the miniaturization of super-heterodyne transceivers. For this reason, recent attempts to achieve single-chip transceivers for paging and cellular communications have utilized alternative architectures that attempt to eliminate the need for off-chip high-β components via higher levels of transistor integration. Unfortunately, without adequate front-end selectivity, such approaches have suffered somewhat in overall performance, to the point where they so far are usable only in less demanding applications.
Given this, and recognizing that future communication needs will most likely require higher levels of performance, single-chip transceiver solutions that retain high-β components and that preserve super-heterodyne-like architectures are desirable.
Recent demonstrations of vibrating beam micromechanical ("μmechanical") resonator devices with frequencies in the VHF range and <2's in the tens of thousands have sparked a resurgence of research interest in communication architectures using high-β passive devices as disclosed in the above- noted patent application entitled "Device Including A Micromechanical Resonator Having An Operating Frequency and Method of Extending Same." Much of the interest in these devices derives from their use of IC-compatible microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) fabrication technologies to greatly facilitate the on-chip integration of ultra-high-β passive tanks together with active transistor electronics, allowing substantial size reduction.
Figure 2 illustrates a comparison of MEMS and SAW technologies wherein MEMS offers the same or better high-β frequency selectivity with orders of magnitude smaller size. Indeed, reductions in size and board-level packaging complexity, as well as the desire for the high performance attainable by superheterodyne architectures, are principal drivers for this technology. Although size reduction is certainly an advantage of this technology (commonly dubbed "RF MEMS"), it merely touches upon a much greater potential to influence general methods for signal processing. In particular, since they can now be integrated (perhaps on a massive scale) using MEMS technology, vibrating ^mechanical resonators (or /xmechanical links) can now be thought of as tiny circuit elements, much like resistors or transistors, in a new mechanical circuit technology. Like a single transistor, a single mechanical link does not possess adequate processing power for most applications. However, again like transistors, when combined into larger (potentially, VLSI) circuits, the true power of ^mechanical links can be unleashed, and signal processing functions with attributes previously inaccessible to transistor circuits may become feasible.
The Need for High O in Oscillators
For any communications application, the stability of the oscillator signals used for frequency translation, synchronization, or sampling, is of utmost importance. Oscillator frequencies must be stable against variations in temperature against aging, and against any phenomena, such as noise or microphonics, that cause instantaneous fluctuations in phase and frequency. The single most important parameter that dictates oscillator stability is the Q of the frequency-setting tank (or of the effective tank for the case of ring oscillators). For a given application, and assuming a finite power budget, adequate long- and short-term stability of the oscillation frequency is insured only when the tank Q exceeds a certain threshold value.
Given the need for low power in portable units, and given that the synthesizer (containing the reference and VCO oscillators) is often a dominant contributor to total transceiver power consumption, modern transceivers could benefit greatly from technologies that yield high-β tank components. The Need for Hish O in Filters
Tank Q also greatly influences the ability to implement extremely selective IF and RF filters with small percent bandwidth, small shape factor, and low insertion loss. As tank Q decreases, insertion loss increases very quickly, too much even for IF filters, and quite unacceptable for RF filters. As with oscillators, high-<2 tanks are required for RF and IF filters alike, although more so for the latter, since channel selection is done predominantly at the IF in super-heterodyne receivers. In general, the more selective the filter, the higher the resonator Q required to achieve a given level of insertion loss.
Micromechanical Circuits
Although mechanical circuits, such as quartz crystal resonators and SAW filters, provide essential functions in the majority of transceiver designs, their numbers are generally suppressed due to their large size and finite cost. Unfortunately, when minimizing the use of high-<2 components, designers often trade power for selectivity (i.e. , Q), and hence, sacrifice transceiver performance. As a simple illustration, if the high-Q IF filter in the receive path of a communication subsystem is removed, the dynamic range requirement on the subsequent IF amplifier, IQ mixer, and A/D converter circuits, increases dramatically, forcing a corresponding increase in power consumption. Similar trade-offs exist at RF, where the larger the number or greater the complexity of high-<2 components used, the smaller the power consumption in surrounding transistor circuits.
The Micromechanical Beam Element
To date, the majority of ^mechanical circuits most useful for communication applications in the VHF range have been realized using //mechanical flexural-mode beam elements, such as shown hi Figure 2 with clamped-clamped boundary conditions. Although several micromachining technologies are available to realize such an element in a variety of different materials, surface micromachining has been the preferred method for imechanical communication circuits, mainly due to its flexibility in providing a variety of beam end conditions and electrode locations, and its ability to realize very complex geometries with multiple levels of suspension.
U.S. Patent No. 6,049,702 to Tham et al. discloses an integrated passive transceiver section wherein microelectromechanical (MEM) device fabrication techniques are used to provide low loss, high performance switches. Utilizing the MEM devices also makes possible the fabrication and use of several circuits comprising passive components, thereby enhancing the performance characteristics of the transceiver.
U.S. Patent No. 5,872,489 to Chang et al. discloses an integrated tunable inductance network and method. The network utilizes a plurality of MEM switches which selectively interconnect inductance devices thereby providing a selective inductance for a particular circuit.
U.S. Patent No. 5,963,857 to Greywall discloses an article comprising a micromachined filter. In use, the micromachined filters are assembled as part of a radio to miniaturize the size of the radio.
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,976,994 and 6,169,321 to Nguyen et al. disclose a batch-compatible, post-fabrication annealing method and system to trim the resonance frequency and enhance the quality factor of micromechanical structures.
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,455,547; 5,589,082 and 5,537,083 to Lin et al. disclose microelectromechanical signal processors. The signal processors include many individual microelectromechanical resonators which enable the processor to function as a multi-channel signal processor or a spectrum analyzer.
U.S. Patent No. 5,640,133 to MacDonald et al. discloses a capacitance-based, tunable, micromechanical resonator. The resonators may be selectively tuned and used in mechanical oscillators, accelerometers, electromechanical filters and other electromc devices.
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,578,976 to Yao, 5,619,061 to Goldsmith et al. and 6,016,092 to Qiu et al. disclose various micromechanical and microelectromechanical switches used in communication apparatus.
U.S. Patent No. 5,839,062 to Nguyen et al. disclose a MEMS-based receiver including parallel banks of microelectromechanical filters.
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,491,604 and 5,955,932 to Nguyen et al. disclose β-controlled microresonators and tunable filters using the resonators.
U.S. Patent No. 5,783,973 to Wehiberg et al. discloses a micromechanical, thermally insensitive silicon resonator and oscillator.
The following articles are of general interest: Nguyen et al. , "Design and Performance of CMOS Micromechanical Resonator Oscillators", 1994 IEEE INTERNATIONAL FREQUENCY CONTROL SYMPOSIUM, pp. 127-134; Wang et al, "Q- Enhancement of Microelectromechanical Filters Via Low- Velocity Spring Coupling" , 1997 IEEE ULTRASONICS SYMPOSIUM, pp. 323-327; Bannon, III et al. , "High Frequency Microelectromechanical IF Filters", 1996 IEEE ELECTRON DEVICES MEETING, San Francisco, CA, Dec.8-11, 1996, pp. 773-776; and Clark et al., "Parallel-Resonator HF Micromechanical Bandpass Filters" 1997 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOLID-STATE SENSORS AND ACTUATORS" , pp. 1161-1164.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the present invention is to provide a method and subsystem for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices to substantially reduce the need for RF front-end power. In carrying out the above objects and other objects of the present invention, a method for processing signals in an RF subsystem is provided to eliminate the need for a low noise amplifier therein. The method includes providing a plurality of intercoupled micromechanical devices. The method further includes vibrating the micromechanical devices to initially pass a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range and then to convert and filter the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
Further in carrying out the above object and other objects of the present invention, an RF receiver subsystem is provided which eliminates the need for a low noise amplifier therein. The subsystem includes an image-reject vibrating micromechanical filter for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range. The subsystem also includes a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the filter and adapted to be coupled to electronics for converting and filtering the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
The low noise amplifier may be an RF low noise amplifier.
The filter may be a relatively wide band filter and the mixer-filter may be a narrow band mixer-filter.
Still further in carrying out the above object and other objects of the present invention, an RF receiver subsystem is provided which eliminates the need for a low noise amplifier. The subsystem includes a vibrating micromechanical frequency range selector for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range. The subsystem also includes a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the selector and adapted to be connected to electronics for converting and filtering the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier. Yet still further in carrying out the above object and other objects of the present invention, an RF transceiver subsystem is provided which substantially reduces the need for front-end power. The subsystem includes a vibrating micromechanical frequency range selector for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range. The subsystem also includes vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the selector and adapted to be connected to electronics for converting and filtering signals wherein the need for RF front-end power is substantially reduced.
Still further in carrying out the above objects and other objects of the present invention in an RF receiver subsystem, a micromechanical mixer-filter apparatus for converting and filtering an information signal having a frequency without the need for a front end filter is provided. The apparatus includes a mixing micromechanical transducer having a first port for receiving the information signal, a second port for receiving an AC signal having a desired frequency and an output port. The apparatus also includes a micromechanical resonator coupled to the transducer. The apparatus converts the frequency of the information signal based on the desired frequency and filters the information signal without the need for a front end filter.
The apparatus may also add gain to the information signal.
The transducer and the resonator may be intercoupled by a non- conductive part to isolate the first and second ports.
The apparatus may further include means for isolating each of the ports from each of the other ports.
The resonator is preferably switchable and tunable.
The apparatus may be an image-reject mixer filter that initially rejects an image while mixing and then filters. Yet still further in carrying out the above objects and other objects of the present invention in an RF receiver subsystem, a method for onverting and filtering an information signal having a frequency without the need for a front end filter is provided. The method includes providing a micromechanical device having a first port for receiving the information signal, a second port for receiving an AC signal having a desired frequency and an output port. The method further includes vibrating the micromechanical device so that the micromechanical device converts the frequency of the information signal based on the desired frequency and filters the information signal.
The method may further include isolating the first port from the second port.
The method may further include isolating each of the ports from each of the other ports.
The micromechanical device may be vibrated to also add gain to the information signal.
The device may be both switchable and tunable.
The above object and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best mode for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIGURE 1 is a prior art, schematic view of the front-end of a transceiver including off-chip, board-level implementation of SAW, ceramic and crystal resonators in a schematic perspective view; FIGURE 2a is a prior art, schematic perspective view of a SAW resonator and a number of MEMS resonators formed on a silicon die to compare the two approaches;
FIGURE 2b is a prior art, enlarged schematic perspective view of one of the MEMS resonators as indicated at 2b in Figure 2a;
FIGURE 3 is a system level schematic block diagram of the front-end design for a typical wireless transceiver showing off-chip, high-Q, passive components targeted for replacement via micromechanical versions of the present invention;
FIGURE 4 is a graph of transmission [dB] versus frequency illustrating desired filter characteristics;
FIGURE 5a is a perspective schematic view of a symmetrical two- resonator VHF /imechanical filter with typical bias, excitation and signal conditioning electronics;
FIGURE 5b is an electrical equivalent circuit for the filter of Figure
5a;
FIGURE 6 is a system level block diagram of an RF front-end receiver including an RF channel-select receiver architecture utilizing large numbers of micromechanical resonators in banks and schematically and prospectively illustrating a typical micromechanical filter of Figure 5a;
FIGURE 7 is a system circuit diagram for an RF channel-select micromechanical filter bank;
FIGURE 8 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figure 6 and schematically and prospectively illustrating a micromechanical switch thereof; FIGURE 9 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figures 6 and 8 and schematically and prospectively illustrating a mixer- filter-gain stage thereof based on the filter of Figures 6 and 5a;
FIGURE 10 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figures 6, 8 and 9 and schematically and prospectively illustrating a micromechanical resonator oscillator thereof;
FIGURE 11 is a system/circuit diagram for a switchable /imechanical resonator synthesizer;
FIGURE 12 is a system level block diagram of the RF front-end receiver of Figures 6, 8, 9 and 10 wherein the LNA is shown eliminated by phantom lines due to the low loss channel selector, the T/R switch and the mixer-filter-gain stage;
FIGURE 13 is a system block diagram architecture showing the receive path of a communication device;
FIGURE 14 is a system block diagram of an RF channel-select transmitter architecture utilizing high-power imechanical resonators;
FIGURE 15 is a schematic top perspective view of a 92 MHZ (VHF) free-free beam polysilicon imechanical resonator wherein support beams isolate the resonator beam element from a substrate thereby allowing higher Q operation;
FIGURE 16 is a graph illustrating a measured frequency characteristic for the resonator of Figure 15;
FIGURE 17a is a schematic perspective view of a UHF imechanical filter utilizing free-free beam /imechanical resonators designed to operate at a second mode; and FIGURE 17b is a partial equivalent circuit for the filter of Figure 17a, identifying the circuit functions of individual beam elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT(S)
To illustrate more concretely the specific transceiver functions that can benefit from micromechanical implementations to be discussed herein, Figure 3 presents a system level schematic block diagram for a typical super-heterodyne wireless transceiver. A small box is positioned in the corner of each box to represent a component that can be replaced with a micromechanical (MEMS) version. As implied in Figure 3, several of the constituent components can already be miniaturized using integrated circuit transistor technologies. These include the low noise amplifiers (LNA's) in the receive path, the solid-state power amplifier (SSPA) in the transmit path, synthesizer phase-locked loop (PLL) electronics, mixers, and lower frequency digital circuits for baseband signal demodulation. Due to noise, power, and frequency considerations, the SSPA (and sometimes the LNA's) are often implemented using compound semiconductor technologies (i.e. , GaAs). Thus, they often occupy their own chips, separate from the other mentioned transistor-based components, which are normally realized using silicon-based bipolar and CMOS technologies. However, given the rate of improvement of silicon technologies (silicon-germanium included), all of the above functions may be integrated onto a single-chip.
Unfortunately, placing all of the above functions onto a single chip does very little toward decreasing the overall super-heterodyne transceiver size, which is dominated not by transistor-based components, but by the numerous passive components indicated in Figures 1 and 3. The presence of so many frequency-selective passive components is easily justified when considering that communication systems designed to service large numbers of users require numerous communication channels, which in many implementations (e.g. , Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)) must have small bandwidths and must be separable by transceiver devices used by the system. The requirement for small channel bandwidths results in a requirement for extremely selective filtering devices for channel selection and extremely stable (noise-free) local oscillators for frequency translation. For the vast majority of cellular and cordless standards, the required selectivity and stability can only be achieved using high-g components, such as discrete inductors, discrete tunable capacitors (i.e. , varactors), and SAW and quartz crystal resonators, all of which interface with IC components at the board level. The needed performance cannot be achieved using conventional IC technologies, because such technologies lack the required Q. It is for this reason that virtually all commercially available cellular or cordless phones contain numerous passive SAW and crystal components.
Micromechanical Resonators
For communications applications, clamped-clamped and free-free fϊexural-mode beams with Q's on the order of 10,000 (in vacuum) and temperature coefficients on the order of -12 ppm/°C, are available for the VHF range, while thin-film bulk acoustic resonators (<2~ 1 ,000) have so far addressed the UHF range.
From a design perspective, one Q-limiting loss mechanism that becomes more important with increasing frequency is loss to the substrate through anchors. The frequency dependence of this mechanism arises because the stiffness of a given resonator beam generally increases with resonance frequency, giving rise to larger forces exerted by the beam on its anchors during vibration. As a consequence, more energy per cycle is radiated into the substrate via the anchors. Anti-symmetric resonance designs, such as balanced tuning forks, could prove effective in alleviating this source of energy loss.
Anchor loss mechanisms can be greatly alleviated by using "anchor- less" resonator designs, such as shown in the above-noted patent application Serial No. 09/482,670 and as illustrated by the view of Figure 15. This device utilizes a free-free beam (i.e. , xylophone) 60 suspended above a ground plane and sense electrode 61 and a drive electrode 63 by four torsional support beams 62 attached at flexural node points. The beams 62, in turn, are supported at anchors 64. By choosing support dimensions corresponding to a quarter-wavelength of the free-free beam's resonance frequency, the impedance presented to the beam 60 by the supports 62 can be effectively nulled out, leaving the beam 60 virtually levitated and free to vibrate as if it had no supports. UHF frequency is obtained via use of free- free beam resonators specifically designed to operate at higher modes. The desired mode is selected (while suppressing other modes), by strategic placement and excitation of electrodes, and by the use of dimples under the structure 60 to force node locations corresponding to the desired mode. The mode can also be specified by placing the support beams at nodal locations, as in Figure 17a.
Figure 16 shows a frequency characteristic for a 92.25 MHz version of this xmechanical resonator with a Q of nearly 8,000 — still plenty for channel- select RF applications.
Table 1 presents expected resonance frequencies for various beam dimensions, modes, and structural materials, showing a wide range of attainable frequencies, from VHF to UHF.
TABLE 1. itMechanical Resonator Frequency Design*
* Determined for free-free beams using Timoshen o methods that include the effects of finite h and Wr
Micromechanical Filters Among the more useful imechanical circuits for communications are those implementing low-loss bandpass filters, capable of achieving frequency characteristics as shown in Figure 4 where a broader frequency passband than achievable by a single resonator beam is shown, with a sharper roll-off to the stopband (i.e. , smaller shape factor).
To achieve the characteristic of Figure 4, a number of micromechanical resonators may be coupled together by soft coupling springs. By linking resonators together using (ideally) massless springs, a coupled resonator system is achieved that exhibits several modes of vibration. The frequency of each vibration mode corresponds to a distinct peak in the force-to-displacement frequency characteristic, and to a distinct, physical mode shape of the coupled mechanical resonator system. For the example case of a three-resonator filter, in the lowest frequency mode, all resonators vibrate in phase; in the middle frequency mode, the center resonator ideally remains motionless, while the end resonators vibrate 180° out of phase; and finally, in the highest frequency mode, each resonator is phase- shifted 180° from its adjacent neighbor. Without additional electronics, the complete mechanical filter exhibits a jagged passband. As described hereinbelow, termination resistors designed to lower the <2's of the input and output resonators r by specific amounts are required to flatten' the passband and achieve a more recognizable filter characteristic, such as in Figure 4.
The filters use a number of high-<2 micromechanical beam elements connected in a network that achieves the specified bandpass frequency response. If effect, a micromechanical filter is another example of a micromechanical circuit, similar to that of Figure 15, but in this case using a plurality of beam elements to achieve a frequency shaping response not achievable by a single beam element.
In practical implementations, because planar IC processes typically exhibit substantially better matching tolerances than absolute, the constituent resonators in imechanical filters are normally designed to be identical, with identical dimensions and resonance frequencies. For such designs, the center frequency of the overall filter is equal to the resonance frequency f0 of the resonators, while the filter passband (i.e. , the bandwidth) is determined by the spacings between the mode peaks.
The relative placement of the vibration peaks in the frequency characteristic — and thus, the passband of the eventual filter — is determined primarily by the stiffnesses of the coupling springs (ksi) and of the constituent resonators at the coupling locations (kr). Specifically, for a filter with center frequency f0 and bandwidth B, these stiffnesses must satisfy the expression:
where ktj is a normalized coupling coefficient found in filter cookbooks. The filter bandwidth is not dependent on the absolute values of resonator and coupling beam stiffness; rather, their ratio ksij/kr dictates bandwidth. Thus, the procedure for designing a mechanical filter involves two main steps (not necessarily in this order): first, design of a mechanical resonator with resonance frequency f0 and adjustable stiffness kr; and second, design of coupling springs with appropriate values of stiffness ksiJ to enable a desired bandwidth within the adjustment range of resonator kr's.
To take advantage of the maturity of LC ladder filter synthesis techniques, the enormous database governing LC ladder filter implementations, and the wide availability of electrical circuit simulators, realization of a particular imechanical filter often also involves the design of an LC ladder version to fit the desired specification. The elements in the LC ladder design are then matched to lumped mechanical equivalents via electromechanical analogy, where inductance, capacitance, and resistance in the electrical domain equate to mass, compliance, and damping, respectively, in the mechanical domain. A Two-Resonator HF-VHF Micromechanical Filter
Figure 5a shows a perspective view schematic of a practical two- resonator micromechanical filter capable of operation in the HF to VHF range. As shown, the filter consists of two /imechanical clamped-clamped beam resonators with anchors 18 at their opposite ends, coupled mechanically by a soft coupling spring or beam 19, all suspended above a substrate (not shown). Conductive (polysilicon) strips 20, 22, 24, and 26 underlie each resonator by approximately 1000 A (as also in Figures 6, 9 and 17a), a center one 20 serving as a capacitive transducer input electrode positioned to induce resonator vibration in a direction perpendicular to the substrate, a center one 24 serving as an output electrode and the flanking ones 22 and 26 serving as tuning or frequency pulling electrodes capable of voltage-controlled tuning of resonator frequencies. The resonator-to-electrode gaps are determined by the thickness of a sacrificial oxide spacer during fabrication and can thus be made quite small (e.g. , 0.1 μm or less) to maximize electromechanical coupling.
The filter is excited with a DC-bias voltage VP applied to the conductive mechanical network, and an AC signal applied to the input electrode, but this time through an appropriately valued source resistance RQ that loads the Q of the input resonator to flatten the passband. The output resonator of the filter must also see a matched impedance to avoid passband distortion, and the output voltage v0 is generally taken across this impedance. As described hereinbelow, the required value of I/O port termination resistance can be tailored for different applications, and this can be advantageous when designing low noise transistor circuits succeeding the filter, since such circuits can then be driven by optimum values of source resistance to minimize noise.
From a signal flow perspective, the operation of the above filter can be briefly summarized as follows:
(1) An electrical input signal is applied to the input port and converted to an input force by the electromechanical transducer (which for the case of Figure 5 a is capacitive) that can then induce mechanical vibration in the A; direction;
(2) Mechanical vibration comprises a mechanical signal that is processed in the mechanical domain — specifically, the signal is rejected if outside the passband of the filter, and passed if within the passband; and
(3) The mechanically processed signal appears as motion of the output resonator and is reconverted to electrical energy at the output transducer, ready for processing by subsequent transceiver stages.
From the above, the name "micromechanical signal processor" clearly suits this device. Details of the design procedure for micromechanical filters now follow.
HF-VHF Filter Desi
As can be summarized from Figure 5b, the network topologies for the mechanical filters of this work differ very little from those of their purely electronic counterparts, and in principal, can be designed at the system-level via a procedure derived from well-known, coupled resonator ladder filter synthesis techniques. In particular, given the equivalent LCR element values for a prototype /imechanical resonator, it is possible to synthesize a mechanical filter entirely in the electrical domain, converting to the mechanical domain only as the last step. However, although possible, such a procedure is not recommended, since knowledge and ease of design in both electrical and mechanical domains can greatly reduce the effort required.
The design procedure for the two-resonator micromechanical filter of Figure 5a can be itemized as follows:
(1) Design and establish the /imechanical resonator prototype to be used, choosing necessary geometries for the needed frequency and insuring that enough electrode-to-resonator transducer coupling is provided to allow for predetermined termination resistor values. For a given resonator, with predetermined values of Wr, h, We, Vp, and RQ, this amounts to solving for the resonator length Lr and electrode-to- resonator gap spacing d that simultaneously satisfy a number of well known equations. Table 2 summarizes the needed gap spacings to achieve various values of RQ for micromechanical filters centered at 70 MHz and 870 MHz, and with Q= 10,000, B = 1.25 MHz, and VP= 10V.
Table 2: Two-Resonator iMechanical Filter Electrode-to-Resonator Gap Spacing Design*
* Determined with β= 10,000, B= 1.25 MHZ, VJ,= 10V. f CCBeam, polysilicon, Lr= 14.52 μm, Wr=S μm, h=4 μm.
* CCBeam, diamond, Lr=9.36 μm, Wr=8 μm, h=4 μm.
(2) Choose a manufacturable value of coupling beamwidth Wsl2 and design coupling beam(s) corresponding to a "quarter- wavelength" of the filter center frequency. Here, the coupling beam is recognized as an acoustic transmission line that can be made transparent to the filter when designed with quarter-wavelength dimensions as described in the prior art.
(3) Determine the coupling location(s) on the resonators corresponding to the filter bandwidth of interest. This procedure is based upon two important properties of this filter and the resonators comprising it: First, the filter bandwidth B is determined not by absolute values of stiffness, but rather by a ratio of stiffnesses (ksl2/krc), where the subscript c denotes the value at the coupling location; and second, the value of resonator stiffness krc varies with location (in particular, with location velocity) and so can be set to a desired value by simply choosing an appropriate coupling beam attachment point. The location is easily determined as described in the prior art.
(4) Generate a complete equivalent circuit for the overall filter and verify the design using a circuit simulator. Figure 5b presents the equivalent circuit for the two-resonator micromechanical filter of Figure 5a. Each of the outside resonators are modeled via circuits.
The coupling beam actually operates as an acoustic transmission line, and thus, is modeled by a T-network of energy storage elements.
Transformers are used between the resonator and coupling beam circuits of Figure 5b to model the velocity transformations that arise when attaching the coupling beams at locations offset from the center of the resonator beam. The whole circuit structure of Figure 5b can be recognized as that of the LC ladder network for a bandpass filter.
Further details on the design of micromechanical filters can be found in the literature.
RF Micromechanical Filters
As shown in Figure 16, one of the highest demonstrated frequencies to date for polysilicon micromechanical resonators is 92 MHz with a β~8,000. The above-noted patent application Serial No. 09/482,670 also discloses a way of extending the frequency. As shown in Table 1, the above frequency (and higher) is geometrically feasible, but special design and material precautions are necessary to maintain adequate Q as frequencies rise. If <2's can be maintained > 5,000, then record insertion loss performance on the order of 0.5 dB should be achievable, which could greatly enhance the sensitivity of receivers used in both short- and long- range communications. In fact, if Q~ 10,000 can be achieved, then RF channel- selection would be achievable using a switchable bank of filters, one for each channel, as described hereinbelow. The ability to do channel-selection right at the front-end of a transceiver can potentially save substantial amounts of power in both the receive and transmit paths, due to relaxed dynamic range requirements and the ability to use higher efficiency power amplifiers.
Figure 17a is similar to Figure 5a and presents the schematic of a filter structure, along with a partial equivalent electrical circuit of Figure 17b (obtained via electromechanical analogy) that identifies the mechanical network as a bandpass filter. In particular, the filter structure is seen to be comprised of a number of mechanical resonators (modeled by LCR tanks) connected by acoustic transmission lines (modeled by T-networks of energy storage elements) — a structure similar to other resonator-based filters, but using micromechanical elements with orders of magnitude higher Q, giving it the ability to perform with much lower insertion loss than other technologies. (Not to mention orders of magnitude smaller size.)
In the design of Figure 17a, UHF frequency is obtained via use of a second mode free-free beam resonator including beams 70 and 72 coupled together and to an output beam 74 by coupling beams 73. The resonator is specifically designed to operate at higher modes. The desired mode is selected (while suppressing other modes), by strategic placement and excitation of balanced input electrodes 76 and 78, and by the use of dimples 80 under the beams 70, 72 and 74 to force node locations corresponding to the desired mode. Balanced output electrodes 81 are positioned under the output beam 74.
The beams 70 and 74 are supported by non-intrusive supports or beams 82 and 84, respectively, which, in turn, are supported by anchors 86 and 88, respectively.
The filter of Figure 17a constitutes the first attempt of its kind to implement filter circuits using free-free beam micromechanical resonators. Unlike previous filters using clamped-clamped beams (that could only attain VHF frequency), both transversal and torsional motions are considered for the coupling beams in Figure 17a.
Micromechanical Mixer-Filters
Figure 9 presents the schematic for a symmetrical /xmechanical mixer- filter, showing the bias and input scheme required for down-conversion with a gain stage. As shown, since this device provides filtering as part of its function, the overall mechanical structure is exactly that of a xmechanical filter. The only differences are the applied inputs and the use of a non-conductive coupling beam to isolate the IF port from the LO. If the source providing VP to the second resonator is ideal (with zero source resistance) and the series resistance in the second resonator is small, LO signals feeding across the coupling beam capacitance are shunted to AC ground before reaching the IF port. In reality, finite resistivity in the resonator material allows some amount of LO-to-IF leakage.
The mixer conversion gain/loss in this device is determined primarily by the relative magnitudes of the DC-bias VP applied to the resonator and the local oscillator amplitude Vw.
In general, conversion gain is possible if VL0 > VP.
Micromechanical Switches
The mixer-filter device described above is one example of a
/ mechanical circuit that harnesses non-linear device properties to provide a useful function. Another very useful mode of operation that further utilizes the non-linear nature of the device is a /xmechanical switch. Figure 8 presents an operational schematic for a xmechanical switch. A conductive or actuation plate 30 is suspended above a pair of actuation electrodes 32 by suspension beams 34 having anchors 36. A switch conductor portion 38 of the plate 30 is suspended over a pair of grounds 40 and a sense electrode or conductor 42. When the switch is in the "on-state" here, the conductor 42 is shorted to the grounds 40. The operation of the switch of Figure 8 is fairly simple: To achieve the "on-state" for one of the electrodes apply a sufficiently large voltage across the plate and a desired electrode to pull that part of the plate down and short it (in either a DC or AC fashion) to the desired electrode.
In general, to minimize insertion loss, the majority of switches use metals as their structural materials. It is their metal construction that makes xmechanical switches so attractive, allowing them to achieve "on-state" insertion losses down to 0.1 dB — much lower than FET transistor counterparts, which normally exhibit ~ 2 dB of insertion loss. In addition to exhibiting such low insertion loss, /xmechanical switches are extremely linear, with IIP3's greater than 66 dBm, and can be designed to consume no DC power (as opposed to FET switches, which sink a finite current when activated).
RF Receiver Front-End Architectures Using MEMS
The methods by which the above-noted mechanical circuits are best incorporated into communications sub-systems are now considered. Three approaches to using micromechanical vibrating resonators are described in order of increasing performance enhancement:
1) Direct replacement of off-chip high-Q passives; 2) Use of an RF channel select architecture using a large number of high-<2 micromechanical resonators in filter banks and switchable networks; and 3) Use of an all-mechanical RF front-end.
In the RF channel-select architecture, /xmechanical circuits are assumed to be able to operate at UHF with Q's on the order of 10,000. However, this isn't absolutely necessary. It is needed for today's communications, but in the future, a communications standard may come about that allows even less Q. Direct Replacement of Off-Chip High-0 Passives
Perhaps the most direct way to harness xmechanical circuits is via direct replacement of the off-chip ceramic, SAW, and crystal resonators used in RF preselect and image reject filters, IF channel-select filters, and crystal oscillator references, as illustrated in Figures 1 and 3. In addition to high-β components, Figure 3 also shows the use of other MEMS-based passive components, such as medium-β micromachined inductors and tunable capacitors used in VCO's and matching networks, as well as low-loss (-0.1 dB) /xmechanical switches that not only provide enhanced antenna diversity, but that can also yield power savings by making TDD (rather than FDD) more practical in future transceivers.
Of course, the main benefits from the above approach to using MEMS are size reduction and, given the potential for integration of MEMS with transistor circuits, the ability to move more components onto the silicon die. A limited number of performance benefits also result from replacement of existing high-<2 passives by /imechanical ones, such as the ability to tailor the termination impedances required by RF and IF filters (c.f. , Table 2). Such impedance flexibility can be beneficial when designing low-noise amplifiers (LNA's) and mixers in CMOS technology, which presently often consume additional power to impedance match their outputs to 50Ω off-chip components. If higher impedances can be used, for example at the output of an LNA, significant power savings are possible. As an additional benefit, since the source impedance presented to the LNA input is now equal to RQ, it can now be tailored to minimize noise figure (NF).
Although beneficial, the performance gains afforded by mere direct replacement by MEMS are quite limited when compared to more aggressive uses of MEMS technology. More aggressive architectures are described hereinbelow. An RF Channel-Select Architecture
To fully harness the advantages of /imechanical circuits, one must first recognize that due to their micro-scale size and zero DC power consumption, timechanical circuits offer the same system complexity advantages over off-chip discrete components that planar IC circuits offer over discrete transistor circuits. Thus, to maximize performance gains, /xmechanical circuits should be utilized on a massive scale, or at least as much as possible.
Perhaps one of the simplest ways to harness the small size of micromechanical circuits is to add multi-band reconfigurability to a transceiver by adding a preselect and image reject filter for each communication standard included.
Due to the small size of micromechanical filters, this can be done with little regard to the overall size of the transceiver.
Although the above already greatly enhances the capability of today's wireless transceivers, it in fact only touches upon a much greater potential for performance enhancement. In particular, it does not utilize micromechanical circuits to their fullest complexity. Figure 6 presents the system-level block diagram for a possible receiver front-end architecture that takes full advantage of the complexity achievable via xmechanical circuits, such as the micromechanical filter of Figure 5a. The main driving force behind this architecture is power reduction, attained in several of the blocks by trading power for high selectivity (i. e. , high- . The key power saving blocks in Figure 6 are now described.
Switchable RF Channel-Select Filter Bank
If channel selection (rather than pre-selection) were possible at RF frequencies (rather than just an IF), then succeeding electronic blocks in the receive path (e.g. , LNA, mixer) would no longer need to handle the power of alternate channel interferers. Thus, their dynamic range can be greatly relaxed, allowing substantial power reductions. In addition, the rejection of adjacent channel interferers also allows reductions in the phase noise requirements of local oscillator (LO) synthesizers, providing further power savings.
To date, RF channel selection has been difficult to realize via present- day technologies. In particular, low-loss channel selection at RF would require tunable resonators with Q's in the thousands. Unfortunately, however, high-β often precludes tunability, making RF channel selection via a single RF filter a very difficult prospect.
On the other hand, it is still possible to select individual RF channels via many non-tunable, or slightly tunable, high-β filters, one for each channel, and each switchable (and tunable) by command. Depending upon the standard, this could entail hundreds or thousands of filters — numbers that would be absurd if off- chip macroscopic filters are used, but that may be perfectly reasonable for microscale, passive, /xmechanical filters, such as previously described.
Figure 7 presents one fairly simple rendition of the key system block that realizes the desired RF channel selection. As shown, this block consists of a bank of /xmechanical filters with all filter inputs connected to a common block input and all outputs to a common block output, and where each filter passband corresponds to a single channel in the standard of interest. However, it is to be noted that it does not have to be limited to a single channel. It could also be several channels as well (e.g. , 3 channels) and this could still be very advantageous, depending upon the communications standard.
In the scheme of Figure 7, a given filter is switched on (with all others off) by decoder-controlled application of an appropriate DC-bias voltage to the desired filter. The desired force input and output current are generated in a imechanical resonator only when a DC-bias VP is applied (i.e. , without VP, the input and output electrodes are effectively open-circuited).
The potential benefits afforded by this RF channel selector can be quantified by assessing its impact on the LNA linearity specification imposed by the IS-98-A interim standard for CDMA cellular mobile stations. In this standard, the required IIP3 of the LNA is set mainly to avoid desensitization in the presence of a single tone (generated by AMPS) spaced 900 kHz away from the CDMA signal center frequency. Here, reciprocal mixing of the local oscillator phase noise with the 900 kHz offset single tone and cross-modulation of the single tone with leaked transmitter power outputs dictate that the LNA IIP3 exceeds +7.6 dBm. However, if an RF channel-select filter bank such as shown in Figure 7 precedes the LNA and is able to reject the single tone by 40 dB, the requirement on the LNA then relaxes to IIP3 < -29.3 dBm (assuming the phase noise specification of the local oscillator is not also relaxed). Given the well known noise and linearity versus power tradeoffs available in LNA design, such a relaxation in IIP3 can result in nearly an order of magnitude reduction in power. In addition, since RF channel selection relaxes the overall receiver linearity requirements, it may become possible to put more gain in the LNA to suppress noise figure (NF) contributions from later stages, while relaxing the required NF of the LNA itself, leading to further power savings.
Turning to oscillator power, if the single tone interferer is attenuated to 40 dB, then reciprocal mixing with the local oscillator is also greatly attenuated, allowing substantial reduction in the phase noise requirement of the local oscillator. Requirement reductions can easily be such that on-chip solutions to realization of the receive path VCO (e.g. , using spiral inductors and pn-diode tunable capacitors) become plausible.
Practical implementations of the switchable filter bank require multiplexing support electronics that must interconnect with each imechanical device. If implemented using a two-chip approach, the number of chip-to-chip bonds required could become quite cumbersome, making a single-chip solution desirable.
In the pursuit of single-chip systems, several technologies that merge micromachining processes with those for integrated circuits have been developed and implemented over the past several years. These technologies can be categorized into three major approaches: mixed circuit and micromechanics, pre-circuits, and post-circuits. These technologies, however, are well known in the art and are not discussed herein.
Switchable Micromechanical Resonator Synthesizer
Although the xmechanical RF channel selector described above with reference to Figures 5, 6 and 7 may make possible the use of existing on-chip technologies to realize the receive path VCO as shown in Figure 3, this approach is not recommended, since it denies the system from achieving much greater power reduction factors that may soon be available through MEMS technology. In particular, given that power and Q can often be interchanged when designing for a given oscillator phase noise specification, a better approach to implementing the VCO would be to use /xmechanical resonators (with orders of magnitude higher Q than any other on-chip tank) to set the VCO frequency. In fact, with Q's as high as achievable via /xmechanics, the basic design methodologies for oscillators must be re-evaluated. For example, in the case where the oscillator and its output buffer contribute phase noise according to Leeson's equation, where the 1/f 2-to-white phase noise corner occurs at (f0/(2Q)), a tank Q> 1,500 is all that would be required to move the 1/f 2-to-white phase noise corner close enough to the carrier that only white phase noise need be considered for CDMA cellular applications, where the phase noise power at frequency offsets from 285 kHz to 1515 kHz is most important. If only white noise is important, then only the output buffer noise need be minimized, and sustaining amplifier noise may not even be an issue. If so, the power requirement in the sustaining amplifier might be dictated solely by loop gain needs (rather than by phase noise needs), which for a /xmechanical resonator-based VCO with RX~40Ω, Lx~84μH, and Cx~0.5fF, might be less than 1 mW.
To implement a tunable local oscillator synthesizer, a switchable bank, similar to that of Figure 7 but using /xmechanical resonators 46, not filters, each corresponding to one of the needed LO frequencies, and each switchable into or out of an oscillator sustaining circuit 48 by transistor switches 49 at their electrodes 51 is illustrated in Figure 11 and is preferred over the tuning-fork- resonator oscillator 50 illustrated in Figure 10. Because imechanical resonators are now used in this implementation, the Q and thermal stability of the oscillator may now be sufficient to operate without the need for locking to a lower frequency crystal reference. The power savings attained upon removing the PLL and prescaler electronics needed in past synthesizers can obviously be quite substantial. In effect, by implementing the synthesizer using /xmechanical resonators, synthesizer power consumption can be reduced from the -90 mW dissipated by present-day implementations using medium-Q L and C components, to something in the range of only 1-4 mW. Again, all this is attained using a circuit topology that would seem absurd if only macroscopic high-β resonators were available, but that becomes plausible in the micromechanical arena.
Figure 11 presents the basic topology of the LO synthesizer. Here, rather than tune a single medium Q resonator such as done in present-day VCO's, a bank of numerous switchable high-β (Q > 5,000) micromechanical resonators is utilized, where each resonator corresponds to one of the needed frequencies in a given communications network. In this scheme, no phase-locking circuit is required, since the local oscillator merely switches the appropriate resonator into the oscillator feedback loop to generate the needed output frequency. Because the Q of the micromechanical resonators are orders of magnitude higher than before (β-5,000, as opposed to 40),the phase noise performance of this oscillator should be orders of magmtude better than present-day VCO's. In fact, with such a high Q, the l/ 2-to- white noise corner frequency of the standard phase noise vs. frequency plot may be so close to the carrier, that llf2 noise may no longer be a major consideration, and only white noise is present at the important frequency offsets. In this case, power could be traded for Q to such an extent that it may become possible to operate the oscillator with less than 1 mW of power consumption. Combined with the fact that phase-locking is no longer required in the scheme of Figure 11, this constitutes more than 90 mW of power savings, while improving the performance of the oscillator.
It should be emphasized that the oscillator scheme of Figure 11 would be difficult to practically realize without MEMS technology — in particular, without its ability to attain Q's > 5,000 in such a tiny size. Specifically, present-day LO synthesizers are constrained to use low-Q tanks in their VCO's because such tanks are much more tunable than then high-β counterparts; i.e. , high-<2 generally implies low tunability. Thus, to attain tunability using high-<2 resonators, many resonators are required, one for each frequency to be generated. This, of course, would require an absurdly large volume if macroscopic high-Q components are utilized. With /xmechanical high-Q elements, however, hundreds or even thousands of resonators can fit within a 0.5 x 0.5 cm2 area, so the synthesizer architecture of Figure 11 becomes plausible.
A single-chip LO synthesizer, using the architecture of Figure 11 can achieve impressive phase noise performance at UHF frequencies (-800 MHz). By using higher-mode, free-free beam resonator designs previously described, UHF (and possibly S-Band or higher) frequency synthesizers are feasible. K- or Ka-Band applications are not unreasonable, and should benefit from the architecture of Figure 11 either directly as shown, or indirectly, since a UHF high-Q reference oscillator should greatly improve the stability of K- or Ka-band synthesizers.
Micromechanical Mixer-Filter
The use of a imechanical mixer-filter in the receive path as illustrated in Figure 9 eliminates the DC power consumption associated with the active mixer normally used in present-day receive architectures. The mixer-filter-gain stage includes a pair of n-type resonators 21 ,23 coupled together by a p-type or undoped beam or spring 19 similar to filters of Figures 5a and 6.
This corresponds to a power savings on the order of 10-20- mW. In addition, if multiple input electrodes (one for RF, one for matching) are used for the mixer-filter, the RF input can be made to appear purely capacitive to the LNA (i.e. , at the RF frequency), and the LNA would no longer require a driver stage to match a certain impedance. Rather, an inductive load can be used to resonate the capacitance, allowing power savings similar to that previously discussed in association with impedance matching. A direct down-converting receiver architecture, without the need for a front-end filter or channel selector, is also possible wherein the signal received by the antenna goes directly into the mixer-filter.
The resulting micromechanical mixer-filter may be termed a "quadrature mixer-filter" or "image-reject mixer-filter" that rejects the "image" while mixing, then filters. The "image" is rejected in the mechanical domain.
An AU-MEMS RF Front-End Receiver Architecture
In the above MEMS-based architecture, if /xmechanical filters and mixer-filters can post insertion losses consistent with their high-Q characteristics, then an LNA is not really required at RF frequencies, as illustrated by phantom lines for the LNA in Figure 12. Figure 13 depicts a receive path comprised of a relatively wideband image reject /xmechanical RF filter followed immediately by a narrowband IF mixer-filter that then feeds subsequent IF electronics. The only active electronics operating at RF in this system are those associated with the local oscillator, which if it uses a bank of xmechanical resonators as previously described, may be able to operate at less than 1 mW. The architecture of Figure 13 clearly presents enormous power advantages, eliminating completely the power consumption of the LNA and active mixer of Figure 3 — a total power savings on the order of 40 mW — and together with the 90 mW of power savings from the micromechanical LO, substantially increasing mobile phone standby times.
An RF Transmitter Architecture Using MEMS
Due to a lack of sufficient in-band power handling capability, very little consideration has been given to date to the possibility of using μmechanical resonators in the transmit path.
Figure 14 depicts one rendition, in which an RF channel selector is placed after the power amplifier (PA) in the transmit path. This channel selector uses a similar circuit as that of Figure 7, but using /xmechanical resonators with sufficient power handling capability. This transmit topology provides enormous power savings. In particular, the high-β, high-power filter with less than 1 dB of insertion loss follows the PA, cleaning all spurious outputs, including those arising from spectral regrowth. Consequently, more efficient PA designs can be utilized, despite their non-linearity. For example, a PA previously restricted by linearity considerations to 30% efficiency in present-day transmitter architectures, may now be operable closer to its maximum efficiency, perhaps 50% . For a typical transmit power of 600 mW, this efficiency increase corresponds to 800 mW of power savings. If a more efficient PA topology could be used, such as Class E, with theoretical efficiencies approaching 100% , the power savings could be much larger.
In addition to the MEMS-based channel-select RF filter bank, the architecture of Figure 14 also features a micromechanical upconverter that uses a mixer-filter device, such as previously described, to upconvert and filter the information signal before directing it to the power amplifier.
There are two preferred methods for using the structure of the upper part of Figure 9 as an upconverting device. In the first method, the baseband signal at frequency ωIF to be upconverted is applied to the input electrode 20 and the upconverting carrier signal at frequency ωL0 is applied to the input resonator device 21. Upconversion occurs through mixing around the nonlinear capacitive transducer between the input electrode 20 and the resonator 21. Specifically, the electrical baseband information signal at frequency ωIF is upconverted to a force at frequency ωL0IF. This force is then filtered by the filter structure of Figure 9, which is now designed to have a passband around ωL0IF. If this passband is made small enough, channel selection to the point of removing not only distortion harmonics, but also spectrally regrown components, is possible. By placing a dc-bias Vp on the output resonator 23, the displacement of this resonator is converted to an electrical output voltage or current, depending upon the output load. It should be noted, also, that gain is possible in upconverting the baseband signal to the RF signal, so this stage also serves as a gain stage, as well. The second method for upconversion, involves filtering the based band signal first, then upconverting. In this method, the baseband signal is again applied to the input electrode 20, but the dc-bias is applied to the input resonator, and the carrier signal to the output resonator. This way, the baseband signal is first filtered by the structure, then upconverted at the output via electromechanical amplitude modulation. Again, gain is possible in this configuration.
High power handling micromechanical resonators may use alternative geometries (e.g. , no longer flexural mode) and the use of alternative transduction (e.g. , piezoelectric, magnetostrictive).
Summary
Vibrating imechanical resonators constitute the building blocks for a new integrated mechanical circuit technology in which high Q serves as a principal design parameter that enables more complex circuits. By combining the strengths of integrated /xmechanical and transistor circuits, using both in massive quantities, previously unachievable functions become possible that enable transceiver architectures with projections for orders of magnitude performance gains. In particular, with the addition of high-β imechanical circuits, paradigm-shifting transceiver architectures that trade power for selectivity (i.e. , Q) become possible, with the potential for substantial power savings and multi-band reconfigurability.
While the best mode for carrying out the invention has been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention as defined by the following claims.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A method for processing signals in an RF subsystem to eliminate the need for a low noise amplifier therein, the method comprising: providing a plurality of intercoupled micromechanical devices; and vibrating the micromechanical devices to initially pass a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range and then to convert and filter the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the low noise amplifier is an RF low noise amplifier.
3. An RF receiver subsystem which eliminates the need for a low noise amplifier therein, the subsystem comprising: an image-reject vibrating micromechanical filter for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range; and a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the filter and adapted to be coupled to electronics for converting and filtering the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
4. The subsystem as claimed in claim 3 wherein the low noise amplifier is an RF low noise amplifier.
5. The subsystem as claimed in claim 3 wherein the filter is a relatively wide band filter and the mixer-filter is a narrow band mixer-filter.
6. An RF receiver subsystem which eliminates the need for a low noise amplifier, the subsystem comprising: a vibrating micromechanical frequency range selector for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range; and a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the selector and adapted to be connected to electronics for converting and filtering the desired frequency range of signals without the need for the low noise amplifier.
7. The subsystem as claimed in claim 6 wherein the low noise amplifier is an RF low noise amplifier.
8. An RF transceiver subsystem which substantially reduces the need for RF front-end power, the subsystem comprising: a vibrating micromechanical frequency range selector for passing a desired frequency range of signals while substantially attenuating signals outside the desired frequency range; and a vibrating micromechanical mixer-filter coupled to the selector and adapted to be connected to electronics for converting and filtering signals wherein the need for RF front-end power is substantially reduced.
9. In an RF receiver subsystem, a micromechanical mixer-filter apparatus for converting and filtering an information signal having a frequency without the need for a front end filter, the apparatus comprising: a mixing micromechanical transducer having a first port for receiving the information signal, a second port for receiving an AC signal having a desired frequency and an output port; and a micromechanical resonator coupled to the transducer wherein the apparatus converts the frequency of the information signal based on the desired frequency and filters the information signal without the need for a front end filter.
10. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9 wherein the apparatus also adds gain to the information signal.
11. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9 wherein the transducer and the resonator are intercoupled by a non-conductive part to isolate the first and second ports.
12. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9 further comprising means for isolating each of the ports from each of the other ports.
13. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9 wherein the resonator is switchable and tunable.
14. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9 wherein the apparatus is an image-reject mixer filter that initially rejects an image while mixing and then filters.
15. In an RF receiver subsystem, a method for converting and filtering an information signal having a frequency without the need for a front end filter, the method comprising: providing a micromechanical device having a first port for receiving the information signal, a second port for receiving an AC signal having a desired frequency and an output port; and vibrating the micromechanical device so that the micromechanical device converts the frequency of the information signal based on the desired frequency and filters the information signal.
16. The method of claim 15 further comprising isolating the first port from the second port.
17. The method of claim 15 further comprising isolating each of the ports from each of the other ports.
18. The method of claim 15 wherein the micromechanical device is vibrated to also add gain to the information signal.
19. The method of claim 15 wherein the device is switchable and tunable.
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EP01929080A Ceased EP1285491A2 (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Method and apparatus for generating a signal having at least one desired output frequency utilizing a bank of vibrating micromechanical devices
EP01931148A Ceased EP1277277A2 (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Method and subsystem for processing signals utilizing a plurality of vibrating micromechanical devices
EP01929079A Ceased EP1290788A2 (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Method and apparatus for selecting at least one desired channel utilizing a bank of vibrating micromechanical apparatus
EP01929082A Ceased EP1275201A2 (en) 2000-04-20 2001-04-20 Method and apparatus for filtering signals in a subsystem including a power amplifier utilizing a bank of vibrating micromechanical apparatus

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AU2001255868A1 (en) 2001-11-07
CA2406543A1 (en) 2001-11-01
WO2001082467A2 (en) 2001-11-01
AU2001255867A1 (en) 2001-11-07
JP2003532323A (en) 2003-10-28
CA2406223A1 (en) 2001-11-01
JP2003532320A (en) 2003-10-28
WO2001082475A2 (en) 2001-11-01
JP2003532322A (en) 2003-10-28
WO2001082467A3 (en) 2002-04-11
WO2001082479A3 (en) 2002-04-11
CA2406518A1 (en) 2001-11-01
WO2001082479A2 (en) 2001-11-01
WO2001082477A2 (en) 2001-11-01
AU2001255865A1 (en) 2001-11-07
AU2001261036A1 (en) 2001-11-07
EP1290788A2 (en) 2003-03-12
JP2004515089A (en) 2004-05-20
EP1285491A2 (en) 2003-02-26
CA2406176A1 (en) 2001-11-01
WO2001082478A3 (en) 2002-04-11
WO2001082477A3 (en) 2002-04-11
AU2001255866A1 (en) 2001-11-07
WO2001082476A3 (en) 2002-08-15
AU2001257612A1 (en) 2001-11-07
EP1275201A2 (en) 2003-01-15
WO2001082478A2 (en) 2001-11-01
WO2001082475A3 (en) 2002-02-21
WO2001082476A2 (en) 2001-11-01

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