MEMS angular inertial sensor operating in tuning fork mode
US-9574879-B2 · Feb 21, 2017 · US
US9689678B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9689678-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414787998-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 29, 2014 |
| Priority date | Apr 29, 2013 |
| Publication date | Jun 27, 2017 |
| Grant date | Jun 27, 2017 |
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The invention relates to a vibrating MEMS inertial angular sensor including a substrate for supporting at least two mass bodies mounted to bear mobile relative to the substrate and associated with at least one electrostatic actuator and at least one electrostatic detector. The sensor includes first means for suspending the mass bodies relative to the substrate and means for coupling the mass bodies together. The substrate is connected to a stationary rack by second suspension means.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A vibrating inertial angular sensor of the MEMS type comprising a substrate for supporting at least two mass bodies having substantially the same mass, which are mounted to be mobile in a plane of suspension relative to the substrate and which are associated with at least one electrostatic actuator and at least one electrostatic detector, the sensor comprising first means for suspending the mass bodies relative to the substrate and means for coupling the mass bodies together, and the substrate being connected to a stationary rack by second suspension means, so that the mass bodies and the substrate are mobile relative to the stationary rack parallel to the plane of suspension, with the suspension means being isotropic in the plane of suspension. 2. The sensor according to claim 1 , wherein the means for coupling the mass bodies together are so arranged as to provide a strong coupling. 3. The sensor according to claim 2 , wherein the mass bodies are so arranged as to be concentrically mounted one around the other. 4. The sensor according to claim 3 , wherein a frame is mounted between the mass bodies and connected to the mass bodies by third suspension means for providing a mass coupling of the mass bodies together, with the frame being itself connected by fourth means for suspending to the substrate; with the frame, the third suspension means and the fourth suspension means forming the first suspension means; with the frame and the third suspension means forming the coupling means. 5. The sensor according to claim 4 , wherein the stationary rack extends around the substrate and the second suspension means connect a periphery of the substrate to the stationary rack. 6. The sensor according to claim 3 , wherein the substrate comprises a platform and pads projecting from the platform between the mass bodies, with the mass bodies being connected to the pads by the first suspension means and the coupling means comprise suspension means connecting the mass bodies together. 7. The sensor according to claim 6 , wherein the stationary rack extends around the substrate and the second suspension means connect a periphery of the substrate to the stationary rack. 8. The sensor according to claim 1 , wherein the first suspension means comprise a frame which the mass bodies are connected to by third suspension means so as to provide a mass coupling of the mass bodies together and which is itself connected by fourth means for suspending the bodies to the substrate. 9. The sensor according to claim 1 , wherein the means for coupling the mass bodies together comprise fifth suspension means connecting the mass bodies together to provide an elastic coupling of the mass bodies together. 10. The sensor according to claim 1 , wherein at least one unbalance effect detector is mounted between the substrate and the stationary rack and at least one electrostatic spring is positioned between the substrate and one of the mass bodies and is servo-controlled so as to provide a dynamic balancing of the sensor according to a measurement signal from the unbalance effect detector. 11. A method for balancing the sensor according to claim 10 , comprising the steps of measuring and correcting a frequency anisotropy between the mass bodies due to production defects, with the step of measuring being performed by measuring an effect produced by the unbalance of the sensor resulting from the frequency anisotropy and the step of correcting being performed by servo-controlling the electrostatic spring control so as to reduce such effect. 12. The method according to claim 11 , wherein the effect of the measured unbalance is a stress applied by the substrate to the stationary rack. 13. The method according to claim 11 , wherein the effect of the measured unbalance is an acceleration of the substrate relative to the stationary rack. 14. The method according to claim 11 , wherein the effect of the measured unbalance is a speed of the substrate relative to the stationary rack. 15. The method according to claim 11 , wherein the effect of the measured unbalance is a motion of the substrate relative to the stationary rack. 16. The sensor according to claim 1 , wherein the electrostatic actuator and the electrostatic detector are each mounted between one of the mass bodies and the substrate.
each sensing mass being connected to a driving mass, e.g. driving frames · CPC title
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