SENSOR COMPONENT INCLUDING A MICROELECTROMECHANICAL Z INERTIAL SENSOR AND METHOD FOR ASCERTAINING AN ACCELERATION WITH THE AID OF THE MICROELECTROMECHANICAL Z INERTIAL SENSOR
20220091155 ยท 2022-03-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01P21/00
PHYSICS
B81B2207/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01P2015/0837
PHYSICS
G01P2015/0831
PHYSICS
International classification
B81B7/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A sensor component. The sensor component includes a microelectromechanical z inertial sensor, including two sensor elements situated on a substrate and each designed in the form of a z rocker. The sensor elements each includes a seismic mass structure, elastically deflectable with respect to the substrate with the aid of a torsion spring, which has a heavy side and an oppositely situated light side with regard to the torsion springs. The seismic mass structure of the two sensor elements have different perforations on its heavy and/or light side(s), which effectuate a different sensitivity of the two sensor elements to a temperature gradient running in the z direction. The sensor component also includes an evaluation circuit designed to ascertain an acceleration in the z direction by evaluating the deflection of the seismic mass structure of the two sensor elements.
Claims
1. A sensor component, comprising: a microelectromechanical z inertial sensor, which includes two sensor elements situated on a substrate, each of the sensor elements being in the form of a z rocker, the sensor elements each include a seismic mass structure, elastically deflectable with respect to the substrate with the aid of a torsion spring, which has a heavy side and an oppositely situated light side with regard to the torsion spring, the seismic mass structure of the two sensor elements have different perforations on their heavy and/or light sides, which effectuate a different sensitivity of the two sensor elements to a temperature gradient running in a z direction; and an evaluation circuit configured to ascertain an acceleration in the z direction by evaluating the deflection of the seismic mass structure of the two sensor elements.
2. The sensor component as recited in claim 1, wherein the evaluation circuit is configured to determine a temperature gradient running in the z direction, based on a deviation of the deflection of the seismic mass structure of the two sensor elements and to use the temperature gradient to correct the ascertained acceleration in the z direction.
3. The sensor component as recited in claim 1, wherein the different perforations their heavy and/or light sides of the two seismic mass structures are due to holes having a different size and/or different shape and/or different number and/or different arrangement.
4. The sensor component as recited claim 1, wherein the seismic mass structure of a first sensor element of the sensor elements has a perforation formed by holes having a shape deviating from the square on at least one side, while the seismic mass structure of a second sensor element of the sensor elements has a perforation formed by square holes on a side corresponding to the at least one side of the first sensor element.
5. The sensor component as recited in claim 4, wherein the seismic mass structure of the second sensor element has a perforation formed by linear holes on the corresponding side.
6. The sensor component as recited in claim 1, wherein the two sensor elements are provided with the same design with regard to mass and mass distribution of their seismic mass structures, a stiffness of their torsion springs and arrangement of corresponding electrodes for capacitive detection of a deflection, so that the two sensor elements have the same sensitivity to an acceleration in the z direction.
7. The sensor component as recited in claim 1, wherein the two sensor elements are situated in parallel to each other, so that the heavy sides of their seismic mass structures are each situated on the same side of the torsion springs.
8. The sensor component as recited in claim 1, wherein the two sensor elements are situated anti-parallel to each other, so that the heavy sides of their seismic mass structures are each situated on opposite sides of the torsion springs.
9. The sensor component as recited in claim 1, wherein the two sensor elements are situated in a shared cavity or are each situated in a separate cavity.
10. A microelectromechanical z inertial sensor for a microelectromechanical sensor component, the micromechanical z intertial sensor including two sensor elements situated on a substrate, each of the sensor elements being in the form of a z rocker, the sensor elements each include a seismic mass structure, elastically deflectable with respect to the substrate with the aid of a torsion spring, which has a heavy side and an oppositely situated light side with regard to the torsion spring, the seismic mass structure of the two sensor elements have different perforations on their heavy and/or light sides, which effectuate a different sensitivity of the two sensor elements to a temperature gradient running in a z direction.
11. A method for ascertaining an acceleration in a z direction using a microelectromechanical z inertial sensor, which includes two sensor elements which are each in the form of a z rocker, each of the sensor elements including a seismic mass structure which is elastically deflectable using a torsion spring, the two sensor elements having an identical sensitivity to an acceleration in a z direction and a different sensitivity to a temperature gradient running in the z direction, the method comprising the following steps: separately detecting deflections of the seismic mass structures of the two sensor elements; and ascertaining an acceleration in the z direction by evaluating the deflections of the seismic mass structures of the two sensor elements; wherein a temperature gradient running in the z direction is ascertained, based on a deviation between the deflections of the seismic mass structures of the two sensor elements and is used to correct the ascertained acceleration in the z direction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0022]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
[0026]
[0027] As is further apparent from
[0028]
[0029] In contrast to their electrical sensitivity, the two sensor elements 110, 130 have, however, different sensitivities to a vertical temperature gradient in cavity 121. To achieve this, the two sensor elements 110, 130 are equipped with differently shaped seismic mass structures 111, 131, the different shaping preferably being achieved by different perforations of at least one side of the two seismic mass structures 111, 131. A different geometry, size and/or number of holes 114, 134 in seismic masses 111, 131 thus typically result in a different response or sensitivity of the two sensor elements 110, 130 to vertical temperature gradients. Changes of the vertical temperature gradient are influenced, among other things, by openings 114, 117, 134, 137 in seismic mass structure 111, 131, which must be present for manufacturing reasons during the gas phase etching. The exact geometry (slit, square, rectangle, circle, ellipsis, etc.) and arrangement of these openings 114, 117, 134, 137 influence the intensity of the deflection of a z rocker in the presence of a vertical temperature gradient. The two sensor elements 110, 130 are therefore designed in such a way that holes 114, 117, 134, 137 on their seismic mass structures 111, 131 have different geometries. The influences of a vertical temperature gradient on the two z rockers 100, 130 are of different intensities. In the exemplary embodiment shown here, mass structures 111, 131 each have the same perforation 116, 136 on their light sides 115, 135 in the form of a matrix-shaped arrangement of square-shaped holes 117, 137. In contrast, heavy sides 112, 132 of the two mass structures 111, 131 each have different perforations 113, 133, heavy side 112 of first sensor element 110 having a total of four linear holes 114, while heavy side 132 of second sensor element 130 has a matrix-shaped arrangement of square holes 134.
[0030] A modified variant of z inertial sensor 100 from
[0031] A further variant of z inertial sensor 100 shown in
[0032]
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[0035]
[0036] In an alternative design variant, instead of two sensor elements 110, 130 having the same electrical sensitivity to z accelerations, two sensor elements 110, 130 may also be used, which have different electrical sensitivities to z accelerations as well as different sensitivities to vertical temperature gradients. An evaluation of the signals and differentiation between a z acceleration and a vertical temperature gradient may be calculated in the particular evaluation circuit of the individual z rockers by stored tables, functions or models, which depict the sensitivity to a z acceleration and to a vertical temperature gradient. Two arbitrary rocker-shaped sensor elements may thus be used, whose signals are each conducted separately to an evaluation circuit (ASIC), the acceleration being calculated from the effect of a vertical temperature gradient with the aid of a suitable model. The model for the calculation is simpler, the smaller the difference of the electrical sensitivity and the greater the difference of the sensitivity to vertical temperature gradients of the two sensor elements is. For this reason, the z inertial sensor described in greater detail above, in which the two sensor elements 110, 130 have the same electrical sensitivity to z accelerations, is a particularly advantageous specific embodiment.
[0037] The perforation of the z rockers may be formed by different geometric shapes or different combinations of these geometric shapes (e.g., squares, rectangles, lines, circles, ellipses, polygons, etc.). The configuration with the aid of the different geometries of the perforation should, however, preferably take place in such a way that the electrical sensitivity between the two rocker-shaped sensor elements 110, 130 remains as uniform as possible, and different sensitivities to vertical temperature gradients are achieved at the same time.
[0038] Although the present invention was illustrated and described in greater detail by the preferred exemplary embodiments, the present invention is not limited by the described examples. Instead, other variations may be derived therefrom by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of protection of the present invention.