Optomechanical accelerometer
US-2015020590-A1 · Jan 22, 2015 · US
US9927458B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9927458-B2 |
| Application number | US-201615166599-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | May 27, 2016 |
| Priority date | May 29, 2015 |
| Publication date | Mar 27, 2018 |
| Grant date | Mar 27, 2018 |
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The accelerometers disclosed herein provide excellent sensitivity, long-term stability, and low SWaP-C through a combination of photonic integrated circuit technology with standard micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) technology. Examples of these accelerometers use optical transduction to improve the scale factor of traditional MEMS resonant accelerometers by accurately measuring the resonant frequencies of very small (e.g., about 1 μm) tethers attached to a large (e.g., about 1 mm) proof mass. Some examples use ring resonators to measure the tether frequencies and some other examples use linear resonators to measure the tether frequencies. Potential commercial applications span a wide range from seismic measurement systems to automotive stability controls to inertial guidance to any other application where chip-scale accelerometers are currently deployed.
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The invention claimed is: 1. An accelerometer comprising: a proof mass; a first tether mechanically coupled to a first side of the proof mass and characterized by a resonant frequency that changes in response to acceleration of the proof mass; a first ring resonator evanescently coupled to the first tether, wherein vibration of the first tether causes a change of a first resonance condition of the first ring resonator; and a detection system, operably coupled to the first ring resonator, to sense the change of the first resonance condition of the first ring resonator. 2. The accelerometer of claim 1 , wherein the first tether comprises at least one of silicon or silicon nitride. 3. The accelerometer of claim 1 , wherein the first tether has a width substantially equal to or less than 1 μm. 4. The accelerometer of claim 1 , wherein the first tether has an internal tensile stress substantially equal to or greater than 500 MPa. 5. The accelerometer of claim 1 , wherein the vibration of the first tether has a vibration frequency of about 50 KHz to about 1 GHz. 6. The accelerometer of claim 1 , wherein a distance between the first ring resonator and the first tether is about 100 nm to about 300 nm. 7. The accelerometer of claim 1 , wherein the detection system comprises: a waveguide, evanescently coupled to the first ring resonator, to guide light past the first ring resonator so as to couple a portion of the light into the first ring resonator; and a detector, optically coupled to the waveguide, to detect a change in the portion of the light coupled into the first ring resonator caused by the change of the first resonance condition of the first ring resonator. 8. The accelerometer of claim 7 , further comprising: a substrate to support the first ring resonator and the detector; and a semiconductor laser, fabricated in the substrate and optically coupled to the first ring resonator, to provide the light. 9. The accelerometer of claim 7 , wherein the light has a power greater than 0.2 mW so as to cause an opto-mechanical oscillation of the first tether. 10. The accelerometer of claim 1 , further comprising: a second tether mechanically coupled to a second side, opposite the first side, of the proof mass, the second tether being characterized by a second resonant frequency that changes in response to the acceleration of the proof mass; and a second ring resonator, evanescently coupled to the second tether, wherein vibration of the second tether causes a change of a second resonance condition of the second ring resonator, wherein the detection system senses the change of the second resonance condition of the second ring resonator. 11. The accelerometer of claim 1 , further comprising: an opto-mechanical oscillator, operably coupled to the detection system, to monitor a temperature fluctuation of the accelerometer. 12. The accelerometer of claim 1 , further comprising: a heater, thermally coupled to the first tether, to keep the first tether at a constant temperature so as to mitigate thermal drift. 13. A method of sensing acceleration with an accelerometer comprising a proof mass, a first tether mechanically coupled to a first side of the proof mass and characterized by a resonant frequency that changes in response to acceleration of the proof mass, and a first ring resonator evanescently coupled to the first tether, the method comprising: detecting a change of a first resonance condition of the first ring resonator caused by a change of the resonant frequency of the tether due to vibration of the first tether; and estimating the acceleration based at least in part on the change of the first resonance condition of the first ring resonator in response to acceleration of the proof mass. 14. The method of claim 13 , wherein detecting the change of the first resonance condition of the first ring resonator comprises: detecting a change in an amount of light evanescently coupled into the first ring resonator. 15. The method of claim 14 , wherein transmitting the light comprises transmitting the light at a power greater than 0.2 mW so as to cause opto-mechanical oscillation of the first tether in the accelerometer. 16. The method of claim 13 , wherein the accelerometer further comprises a second tether mechanically coupled to a second side, opposite the first side, of the proof mass, a second ring resonator evanescently coupled to the second tether, the method further comprising: detecting a change of a second resonance condition of the second ring resonator caused by vibration of the second tether in response to the acceleration of the proof mass; and estimating the acceleration based at least in part on the change of the first resonance condition of the first ring resonator and the change of the second resonance condition of the second ring resonator. 17. The method of claim 13 , further comprising: monitoring a temperature fluctuation of the accelerometer using an opto-mechanical oscillator. 18. The method of claim 13 , further comprising: maintaining the first tether at a constant temperature so as to mitigate thermal noise in sensing the acceleration.
by vibratory elements · CPC title
by photoelectric pick-up · CPC title
Anchors for ring resonators · CPC title
Ring resonators · CPC title
Suspension means · CPC title
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