Cargando…

MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN

This work reports a novel construction of a micromachined MEMS magnetometer detecting static magnetic fields of CERN's reference dipole with a custom made capacitive read-out. The magnetic flux density is characterized via vibration modes of the MEMS structure which are sensed capacitively. The...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stifter, Michael, Steiner, Harald, Hortschitz, Wilfried, Sauter, Thilo, Glatzl, Thomas, Dabsch, Alexander, Keplinger, Franz
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ICSENS.2015.7370244
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2310153
_version_ 1780957859140337664
author Stifter, Michael
Steiner, Harald
Hortschitz, Wilfried
Sauter, Thilo
Glatzl, Thomas
Dabsch, Alexander
Keplinger, Franz
author_facet Stifter, Michael
Steiner, Harald
Hortschitz, Wilfried
Sauter, Thilo
Glatzl, Thomas
Dabsch, Alexander
Keplinger, Franz
author_sort Stifter, Michael
collection CERN
description This work reports a novel construction of a micromachined MEMS magnetometer detecting static magnetic fields of CERN's reference dipole with a custom made capacitive read-out. The magnetic flux density is characterized via vibration modes of the MEMS structure which are sensed capacitively. The device consists of a single-crystal silicon clamped-free plate (cantilever) carrying a thin conductor. The cantilever and thin film metal electrodes are separated by a small gap, building a vibrating plate capacitor. Movements of the cantilever are read out conveniently by electronic circuits. A static magnetic field generates a force density acting on the conductor that alternates according to the frequency of the current. By knowing the electrical current, the deflection amplitude of the cantilever is a measure of the component of the magnetic flux density that points perpendicular to the current. The highest vibration amplitudes are expected, of course, in the vicinity of resonance frequencies of the micromachined structure. At ambient pressure the prototype sensor has a measured resonance frequency of 3.8 kHz for the fundamental mode and 20 kHz for the first antisymmetric mode. In experiments, the magnetic flux of the dipole has been characterized between 0.1 and 1 T, with a relative uncertainty of 3·10-4.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1663219
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2016
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16632192019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1109/ICSENS.2015.7370244http://cds.cern.ch/record/2310153engStifter, MichaelSteiner, HaraldHortschitz, WilfriedSauter, ThiloGlatzl, ThomasDabsch, AlexanderKeplinger, FranzMEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERNDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThis work reports a novel construction of a micromachined MEMS magnetometer detecting static magnetic fields of CERN's reference dipole with a custom made capacitive read-out. The magnetic flux density is characterized via vibration modes of the MEMS structure which are sensed capacitively. The device consists of a single-crystal silicon clamped-free plate (cantilever) carrying a thin conductor. The cantilever and thin film metal electrodes are separated by a small gap, building a vibrating plate capacitor. Movements of the cantilever are read out conveniently by electronic circuits. A static magnetic field generates a force density acting on the conductor that alternates according to the frequency of the current. By knowing the electrical current, the deflection amplitude of the cantilever is a measure of the component of the magnetic flux density that points perpendicular to the current. The highest vibration amplitudes are expected, of course, in the vicinity of resonance frequencies of the micromachined structure. At ambient pressure the prototype sensor has a measured resonance frequency of 3.8 kHz for the fundamental mode and 20 kHz for the first antisymmetric mode. In experiments, the magnetic flux of the dipole has been characterized between 0.1 and 1 T, with a relative uncertainty of 3·10-4.oai:inspirehep.net:16632192016
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Stifter, Michael
Steiner, Harald
Hortschitz, Wilfried
Sauter, Thilo
Glatzl, Thomas
Dabsch, Alexander
Keplinger, Franz
MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN
title MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN
title_full MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN
title_fullStr MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN
title_full_unstemmed MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN
title_short MEMS μ-wire magnetic field detection method@CERN
title_sort mems μ-wire magnetic field detection method@cern
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ICSENS.2015.7370244
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2310153
work_keys_str_mv AT stiftermichael memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern
AT steinerharald memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern
AT hortschitzwilfried memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern
AT sauterthilo memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern
AT glatzlthomas memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern
AT dabschalexander memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern
AT keplingerfranz memsmwiremagneticfielddetectionmethodcern