The Response of Electrostatic MEMS Structure under Mechanical Shock and Electrostatic Forces

2013 ◽  
Vol 427-429 ◽  
pp. 120-123
Author(s):  
Xiang Guang Li ◽  
Qin Wen Huang ◽  
Yun Hui Wang ◽  
Yu Bin Jia ◽  
Zhi Bin Wang

For MEMS devices actuated by electrostatic force, unexpected failure modes can be hardly predicted when the electrostatic force coupled with the shock. A response model is established when a micro cantilever subjected to electrostatic force and mechanical shock. First, based on the theory of transverse forced vibration in vibration mechanics, the equation of motion under shock and electrostatic fore is presented. Then the reduced order model is gained after simplifying by mode superposition method. The computing results indicate that: the shock amplitude and duration are the key factors to affect the reliability of the device; the shock load and electrostatic forces make the threshold voltage much lower than the anticipated value. The micro cantilever may collapse to the substrate even at a voltage far lower than the pull-in voltage. This early dynamic pull-in instability may cause some failures such as short circuit, adhesion or collision damage.

2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fadi Alsaleem ◽  
Mohammad I. Younis ◽  
Ronald Miles

We present an investigation into the effect of the motion of a printed circuit board (PCB) on the response of a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) device to shock loads. A two-degrees-of-freedom model is used to model the motion of the PCB and the microstructure, which can be a beam or a plate. The mechanical shock is represented as a single point force impacting the PCB. The effects of the fundamental natural frequency of the PCB, damping, shock pulse duration, electrostatic force, and their interactions are investigated. It is found that neglecting the PCB effect on the modeling of MEMS under shock loads can lead to erroneous predictions of the microstructure motion. Further, contradictory to what is mentioned in literature that a PCB, as a worst-case scenario, transfers the shock pulse to the microstructure without significantly altering its shape or intensity, we show that a poor design of the PCB or the MEMS package may result in severe amplification of the shock effect. This amplification can cause early pull-in instability for MEMS devices employing electrostatic forces.


Author(s):  
Pradeep Lall ◽  
Amrit Abrol ◽  
Lee Simpson ◽  
Jessica Glover

Reliability data on MEMS accelerometers operating in harsh environments is scarce. Micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) are used in a variety of military and automotive applications for sensing acceleration, translation, rotation, pressure and sound. This research work focuses on dual axis MEMS accelerometer reliability in harsh environments. Structurally an accelerometer behaves like a damped mass on a spring. Commercially there are three types of accelerometers namely piezoelectric, piezoresistive and capacitive depending on the components that go into the fabrication of the MEMS device. Previously, majority of concentration was focused on an effective internal design, performance enhancement of CMOS-MEMS accelerometers and packaging techniques Cheng [2002], Qiao [2009], Lou [2005], and Weigold [2001]. Studies have also been conducted to obtain an enhanced inertial mass SOI MEMS process using a high sensitivity accelerometer Jianbing [2013], Chen [2005]. There have been prior test(s) conducted on MEMS accelerometers, Jiang [2004], Cao [2011], Chun-Sun [2009], Lou [2009], Tanner [2000] and Yang [2010] but the availability of data on reliability degradation of such devices in harsh environments Brown [2003] is almost little to none which thereby generates the importance of this work and also makes way for a whole new path involving the reliability assessment techniques for MEMS devices. Concentration of our work is primarily on the reliability of this accelerometer upon sequential exposure to harsh environment(s) and drop-shock. Reliability of accelerometers in high G environments is unknown. The effects of these pre-conditions along with the drop test condition has been studied and analyzed. In this piece of research work, a test vehicle with a MEMS accelerometer, ADXL278 dual axis capacitive accelerometer, has been tested under high/low temperature exposure followed by subjection to high-g and low-g shock loading environments. The test boards have been subjected to mechanical shocks using the method 2002.5, condition G, under the standard MIL-STD-883H test. The stress environment and the test condition used for this paper are 1500g and 70g respectively where 70g is the full scale range output of ADXL278 in the drop direction with pulse duration set to 0.5millisecond. The deterioration of the accelerometer output has been characterized using the techniques of Mahalanobis distance and Confidence intervals. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) has been used to study the different failure modes inside of the accelerometer, which were potted and polished and later de-capped. Furthermore, the non-destructive evaluations of the MEMS accelerometer have been demonstrated through X-rays and micro-CT scans.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 857015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu LiZhong ◽  
Fu XiaoRui

The electromechanical coupled forced response of the microplate subjected to electrostatic force is investigated. Using electromechanical coupled dynamic equations and the mode superposition method, the forced responses of the microplate to voltage excitation and load excitation are analyzed, respectively. Based on this, the coupled forced responses of the micrplate to voltage and load excitations are obtained. Beat vibration caused by the coupled response is investigated and the condition that the beat vibration occurs is determined.


Author(s):  
Jeong Hoon Ryou ◽  
Kenn Oldham

In micro-scale environment, contact forces such as adhesion and electrostatic forces, which are generally assumed to be negligible in general macro scale devices, affect the motions of MEMS devices significantly. This paper is an initial exploration of how such forces might influence the locomotion of multi-legged micro-robots, by matching the analytical dynamic simulations to the result from experiments on micro devices including a simple micro-cantilever beam and a bulk piezoelectrically-actuated micro-robotic prototype. Results imply that foot-terrain impacts focusing on primary effects related to electrostatic forces, adhesion forces, and an appropriate coefficient of restitution can provide a reasonable model of micro-scale behavior of a robotic foot.


Author(s):  
Pradeep Lall ◽  
Nakul Kothari ◽  
Jessica Glover

MEMS accelerometers have found applications in harsh environments with pressure, temperatures above ambient conditions, high g shock and vibrations. The complex structure of these MEMS devices has made it difficult to understand the failure modes and failure mechanisms of present day MEMS accelerometers. Little work has been done by the researchers in investigating the high g reliability of the MEMS accelerometers by continuous high g drops and quantifying the failure modes. There is little literature addressing the multiphysics finite element modelling of MEMS accelerometers subjected to high g shocks. In defense applications, where these devices are integrated with several other compactly assembled subsystems, lack of knowledge on the physics of failure for the MEMS sensor in harsh environment operation, can be detrimental to the success of the system on the whole. Being able to successfully model inside of an accelerometer, enables the user to better understand the change in parameters like time delay induced in response of successive drops, change in pulse width that indicate failure, reduction in sensed g levels. Some researchers have subjected various accelerometers to repeated drops at their maximum sensing g(not high g) level, and used optical microscopy to detect damaged sensing elements [Beliveau, 1999]. Few researchers have modeled the internal structure of the MEMS device, along with the device packaging under the stresses of operation [Fang 2004, Ghisi 2008, Xiong 2008]. In this paper, a multiphysics model of capacitive and the moving elements of the accelerometer has been developed to model the change in capacitance with respect to stroke and understand the correlation with g-levels, in addition to the transient dynamic response of the accelerometer under high-g shock. This has not been much explored in the past. The accelerometer studied in the paper is the ADXL193, and subjected to repeated drops of 3000g in each 3 axes as per 2002.4 of MIL-STD-883 without preconditioning. A characteristic graph of capacitance vs accelerometer stroke has been obtained from a series of electrostatic simulations and is then used to relate g levels, capacitance, stroke deflection and voltage change using electromechanical transducer elements. The drift in the performance characteristics of the accelerometer have been measured versus the number of shock events. In addition, an attempt has been made to investigate the failure mode in the accelerometer.


2010 ◽  
Vol 160-162 ◽  
pp. 1420-1424
Author(s):  
Mei Qin Chen ◽  
Ji Long Su

In order to determine and actively design the vibration characteristics of micro-cantilever in the MEMS devices, it is highly necessary to research on the modal analysis of micro-cantilever which is driven by electrostatic force. This paper analyzes the coupling of mechanical and electrical coupling beam based on the direct coupling method, applies ANSYS software into creating the model of the micro-cantilever to simulation of electromechanical coupling, and establishes the quantitative impact analysis model between natural frequency of vibration and the thickness of a micro-beam with Trans126 transducer element, through directly embedding intrinsic characteristic length of micro-cantilever beam to the scale effect of vibration mode. The main conclusion is that when the thickness of micro-beam is close to the characteristics size of the materials, the natural frequency will show a significant scale effect phenomenon.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 118
Author(s):  
Feng Zhu ◽  
Runzhou Zhou ◽  
David J. Sypeck

In this work, a computational study was carried out to simulate crushing tests on lithium-ion vehicle battery modules. The tests were performed on commercial battery modules subject to wedge cutting at low speeds. Based on loading and boundary conditions in the tests, finite element (FE) models were developed using explicit FEA code LS-DYNA. The model predictions demonstrated a good agreement in terms of structural failure modes and force–displacement responses at both cell and module levels. The model was extended to study additional loading conditions such as indentation by a cylinder and a rectangular block. The effect of other module components such as the cover and cooling plates was analyzed, and the results have the potential for improving battery module safety design. Based on the detailed FE model, to reduce its computational cost, a simplified model was developed by representing the battery module with a homogeneous material law. Then, all three scenarios were simulated, and the results show that this simplified model can reasonably predict the short circuit initiation of the battery module.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 4068
Author(s):  
Wenjun An ◽  
Guquan Song

Given the possible separation problem caused by the double-span continuous beam bridge under the action of the vertical earthquake, considering the wave effect, the transient wave characteristic function method and the indirect mode superposition method are used to solve the response theory of the bridge structure during the earthquake. Through the example analysis, the pier bending moment changes under different vertical excitation periods and excitation amplitudes are calculated. Calculations prove that: (1) When the seismic excitation period is close to the vertical natural vibration period of the bridge, the main girder and the bridge pier may be separated; (2) When the pier has a high height, the separation has a more significant impact on the longitudinal displacement of the bridge, but the maximum relative displacement caused by the separation is random; (3) Large-scale vertical excitation will increase the number of partitions of the structure, and at the same time increase the vertical collision force between the main girder and the pier, but the effect on the longitudinal displacement of the form is uncertain; (4) When V/H exceeds a specific value, the pier will not only be damaged by bending, but will also be damaged by axial compression.


2013 ◽  
Vol 300-301 ◽  
pp. 1309-1312
Author(s):  
Ji Long Su ◽  
Yan Jiao Zhang ◽  
Xing Feng Lian

The Ansys simulate software is utilized to analyze pull-in voltages and stresses of the fixed end of micro- cantilever beam with different thicknesses respectively. Based on the analysis of the electrostatic force at the pull-in voltage, the stress of fixed end of micro-beam and the maximum deflection are obtained. The relationship between the stress of fixed end and thickness is established. The results show that the mutation thickness of the stress and the pull-in voltage are at and respectively , it is consistent with the intrinsic size of the polycrystalline copper micro-beam.


Author(s):  
Nadine Aubry ◽  
Pushpendra Singh

The objective of this paper is to study the dependence of the electrostatic force that act on a particle within the interface between two immiscible fluids on the parameters such as the dielectric properties of the fluids and particles, the particle’s position within the interface, and the electric field strength. It is shown that the component of electrostatic force normal to the interface varies as a2, where a is the particle radius, and since in equilibrium it is balanced by the vertical capillary force, the interfacial deformation caused by the particle changes when an external electric field is applied. In addition, there are lateral electrostatic forces among the particles due to the dipole-dipole interactions which, when the distance between two particles is O(a), vary as a2, and remain significant for submicron sized particles.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document