Abstract
This paper reports a drive and detection method for Micro-Electro-Mechanical System (MEMS)-based Lorentz-force resonance magnetometers. Based on the proposed MEMS magnetometer, a drive and detection method was developed by using self-oscillation to adjust the mismatch between the mechanical resonance frequency and the coil drive frequency as affected by temperature fluctuations and vibration amplitude changes. Not only was the signal-to-noise ratio enhanced by the proposed method compared to the traditional method, but the test system automatically reached resonance frequency very rapidly when powered on. Moreover, the linearity and the measurement range were improved by the magnetic feedback generated by the coil. Test results indicated that the sensitivity of the proposed magnetometer is 59.6 mV/μT and its noise level is 0.25 μT. When operating in ±65 μT, its nonlinearity is 2.5‰—only one-tenth of the former prototype. Its power consumption is only about 250 mW and its size is only 28 mm × 28 mm × 10 mm, or about one-eighth of the original sensor; further, unlike the former device, it can distinguish both positive and negative magnetic fields. The proposed method can also be applied in other MEMS sensors such as gyroscopes and micromirrors to enhance their frequency tracking ability.
Highlights
Magnetometers are widely used in navigation, attitude determination, mining, and other applications
Compared to Micro-Electro-Mechanical System (MEMS) resonance magnetometers, flux gate magnetometers are larger in size and consume more power
The self-oscillation drive circuit is similar to a Wien bridge circuit
Summary
Magnetometers are widely used in navigation, attitude determination, mining, and other applications. Li proposed a novel quadrature-frequency modulation to improve consumption by combining the MEMS sensor with the AISC circuit [8]. Limethod proposed a novel the bandwidth of the sensor [9], and Sonmezoglu presented force-rebalanced operation with enhanced quadrature-frequency modulation method to improve the bandwidth of the sensor [9], and scale-factor and bandwidth [10]. Circuit to previous the Lorentz-force magnetic sensor currently are temperature drift of mechanical resonance frequency models via a new generating algorithm [11]. The research focus onresonance performance optimization [12,13,14,15,16,17], magnetic sensor currently temperature drifttrends of mechanical frequency and bandwidth.
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