Abstract

The disk resonator gyroscope is an attractive candidate for high-performance MEMS gyroscopes. This gyroscope consists of a sensor and readout electronics, and the characteristics of the sensor directly determine the performance. For the sensor, a high-quality factor and long decaying time constant are the most important characteristics required to achieve high performance. We report a disk resonator gyroscope with a measured quality factor of 510 k and decaying time constant of 74.9 s, which is a record for MEMS silicon disk resonator gyroscopes, to the best of our knowledge. To improve the quality factor of the DRG, the quality factor improvement mechanism is first analyzed, and based on this mechanism two stiffness-mass decoupled methods, i.e., spoke length distribution optimization and lumped mass configuration design, are proposed and demonstrated. A disk resonator gyroscope prototype is fabricated based on these design strategies, and the sensor itself shows an angle random walk as low as 0.001°/√h, demonstrating true potential to achieve navigation-grade performance. The gyroscope with readout electronics shows an angle random walk of 0.01°/√h and a bias instability of 0.04°/h at room temperature without compensation, revealing that the performance of the gyroscope is severely limited by the readout electronics, which should be further improved. We expect that the quality factor improvement methods can be used in the design of other MEMS gyroscopes and that the newly designed DRG can be further improved to achieve navigation-grade performances for high-end industrial, transportation, aerospace, and automotive applications.

Highlights

  • High-performance microelectromechanical system (MEMS) gyroscopes are in wide demand in high-end industrial, transportation, aerospace, and automotive applications

  • Considerable research has been conducted on MEMS Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs), such as disk[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13], bulk acoustic wave[14], quad mass[15], and microscale 3D wineglass gyroscopes[16,17]

  • It can be observed that the ring width and outer radius are the main factors affecting the QTED in the disk resonator gyroscope (DRG), whereas the ring number and anchor radius to outer radius ratio (AOR) have slight influences

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Summary

Introduction

High-performance microelectromechanical system (MEMS) gyroscopes are in wide demand in high-end industrial, transportation, aerospace, and automotive applications. Considerable research has been conducted on MEMS Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs), such as disk[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13], bulk acoustic wave[14], quad mass[15], and microscale 3D wineglass gyroscopes[16,17]. The disk resonator gyroscope (DRG) is an attractive candidate for high-performance MEMS gyroscopes due to its inherent mode matching, high thermal stability, low anchor loss, and abundant electrodes. In MEMS CVGs, a quad mass gyroscope (QMG) with a Q value >1.7 million and τ longer than 328 s, has been reported[15].

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