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Keywords = Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes

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17 pages, 4455 KiB  
Article
Three-Dimensional Performance Evaluation of Hemispherical Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Mehrdad Mahmoudian, Joel Filho, Rui Melicio, Eduardo Rodrigues, Mojgan Ghanbari and Paulo Gordo
Micromachines 2023, 14(2), 254; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi14020254 - 19 Jan 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2315
Abstract
In this paper, the oscillation patterns and characteristics of gyroscopic reaction to rotation-induced Coriolis force and phase relations are reviewed by examining the main principles of operation of Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes based on the dynamic relations and proposed improvements in performance using parameter [...] Read more.
In this paper, the oscillation patterns and characteristics of gyroscopic reaction to rotation-induced Coriolis force and phase relations are reviewed by examining the main principles of operation of Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes based on the dynamic relations and proposed improvements in performance using parameter changes. Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs) are among the most modern applicable gyroscopes in position detection that have replaced traditional gyroscopes due to some great features of the design of vibrating proof mass and elastic suspension. Given the key characteristics of capacitive versus piezoelectric excitation technologies for determining the vibration type in sensors, their operating principles and equations have completely changed. Therefore, two-dimensional finite element analysis is required to evaluate their optimal performance. Since the sensor space is constantly vibrating, a general equation is presented in this paper to explain the impact of parameters on the frequency of different operating modes. The main purposes of building vibrating gyroscopes are replacing the constant spinning of the rotor with a vibrating structure and utilizing the Coriolis effect, based on which the secondary motion of the sensitive object is generated according to the external angular velocity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue MEMS Sensors: Past, Present and Future)
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13 pages, 2887 KiB  
Article
A High-Precision Method of Stiffness Axes Identification for Axisymmetric Resonator Gyroscopes
by Junhao Xiong, Kaiyong Yang, Tao Xia, Jingyu Li, Yonglei Jia, Yunfeng Tao, Yao Pan and Hui Luo
Micromachines 2022, 13(10), 1793; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi13101793 - 21 Oct 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1978
Abstract
Axisymmetric resonators are key elements of Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs). The performance of a CVG is closely related to the stiffness and damping symmetry of its resonator. The stiffness symmetry of a resonator can be effectively improved by electrostatic tuning or mechanical trimming, [...] Read more.
Axisymmetric resonators are key elements of Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs). The performance of a CVG is closely related to the stiffness and damping symmetry of its resonator. The stiffness symmetry of a resonator can be effectively improved by electrostatic tuning or mechanical trimming, both of which need an accurate knowledge of the azimuth angles of the two stiffness axes of the resonator. Considering that the motion of a non-ideal axisymmetric resonator can be decomposed as two principal oscillations with two different natural frequencies along two orthogonal stiffness axes, this paper introduces a novel high-precision method of stiffness axes identification. The method is based on measurements of the phase difference between the signals detected at two orthogonal sensing electrodes when an axisymmetric resonator is released from all the control forces of the force-to-rebalance mode and from different initial pattern angles. Except for simplicity, our method works with the eight-electrodes configuration, in no need of additional electrodes or detectors. Furthermore, the method is insensitive to the variation of natural frequencies and operates properly in the cases of either large or small frequency splits. The introduced method is tested on a resonator gyroscope, and two stiffness axes azimuth angles are obtained with a resolution better than 0.1°. A comparison of the experimental results and theoretical model simulations confirmed the validity of our method. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue MEMS Inertial Sensors)
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14 pages, 5249 KiB  
Article
Design and Simulation of a Novel Single-Chip Integrated MEMS Accelerometer Gyroscope
by Yang Gao, Lin Meng, Jinwu Tong, Zhihu Ruan and Jia Jia
Electronics 2022, 11(15), 2451; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics11152451 - 6 Aug 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3253
Abstract
This paper presents the design and simulation of a single-chip integrated MEMS accelerometer gyroscope by integrating a Coriolis vibratory ring gyroscope and a differential resonant accelerometer into one single-chip structure, measuring both the acceleration and the angular velocity (or the angle). At the [...] Read more.
This paper presents the design and simulation of a single-chip integrated MEMS accelerometer gyroscope by integrating a Coriolis vibratory ring gyroscope and a differential resonant accelerometer into one single-chip structure, measuring both the acceleration and the angular velocity (or the angle). At the same time, it has the advantages of small volume, low cost, and high precision based on the characteristics of a ring gyroscope and resonant accelerometer. The proposed structure consists of a microring gyroscope and a MEMS resonant accelerometer. Tthe accelerometer is located inside the gyroscope and the two structures are concentric. The operating mechanisms of the ring gyroscope and the resonant accelerometer are first introduced. Then, the whole structure of the proposed single-chip integrated accelerometer gyroscope is presented, and the structural components are introduced in detail. Modal analysis shows the resonant frequencies of upper and lower DETFs in resonant accelerometer are 28,944.8 Hz and 28,948.0 Hz, and the resonant frequencies of the ring gyroscope (n=2) are 15,768.5 Hz and 15,770.3 Hz, respectively. The scale factor of the resonant accelerometer is calculated as 83.5 Hz/g by the analysis of the input–output characteristic. Finally, the thermal analysis fully demonstrates that the single-chip integrated accelerometer gyroscope has excellent immunity to temperature change. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Intelligent Transportation Systems)
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17 pages, 4359 KiB  
Article
Online Compensation of Phase Delay Error Based on P-F Characteristic for MEMS Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Xuewen Liu, Zhengcheng Qin and Hongsheng Li
Micromachines 2022, 13(5), 647; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi13050647 - 19 Apr 2022
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 2414
Abstract
In this paper, an online compensation method of phase delay error based on a Phase-Frequency (P-F) characteristic has been proposed for MEMS Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes (CVGs). At first, the influences of phase delay were investigated in the drive and sense mode. The frequency [...] Read more.
In this paper, an online compensation method of phase delay error based on a Phase-Frequency (P-F) characteristic has been proposed for MEMS Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes (CVGs). At first, the influences of phase delay were investigated in the drive and sense mode. The frequency response was acquired in the digital control system by collecting the demodulation value of drive displacement, which verified the existence and influence of the phase delay. In addition, based on the P-F characteristic, that is, when the phase shift of the nonresonant drive force through the resonator is almost 0° or 180°, the phase delay of the gyroscope is measured online by injecting a nonresonant reference signal into the drive-mode dynamics. After that, the phase delay is self-corrected by adjusting the demodulation phase angle without affecting the normal operation of the gyroscopes. The approach was validated with an MEMS dual-mass vibratory gyroscope under double-loop force-to-rebalance (in-phase FTR and quadrature FTR) closed-loop detection mode and implemented with FPGA. The measurement results showed that this scheme can detect and compensate phase delay to effectively eliminate the effect of the quadrature error. This technique reduces the zero rate output (ZRO) from −0.71°/s to −0.21°/s and bias stability (BS) from 23.30°/h to 4.49°/h, respectively. The temperature sensitivity of bias output from −20 °C to 40 °C has reached 0.003 °/s/°C. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section D1: Semiconductor Devices)
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12 pages, 3903 KiB  
Article
Python-Based Open-Source Electro-Mechanical Co-Optimization System for MEMS Inertial Sensors
by Rui Amendoeira Esteves, Chen Wang and Michael Kraft
Micromachines 2022, 13(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi13010001 - 21 Dec 2021
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 4469
Abstract
The surge in fabrication techniques for micro- and nanodevices gave room to rapid growth in these technologies and a never-ending range of possible applications emerged. These new products significantly improve human life, however, the evolution in the design, simulation and optimization process of [...] Read more.
The surge in fabrication techniques for micro- and nanodevices gave room to rapid growth in these technologies and a never-ending range of possible applications emerged. These new products significantly improve human life, however, the evolution in the design, simulation and optimization process of said products did not observe a similarly rapid growth. It became thus clear that the performance of micro- and nanodevices would benefit from significant improvements in this area. This work presents a novel methodology for electro-mechanical co-optimization of micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) inertial sensors. The developed software tool comprises geometry design, finite element method (FEM) analysis, damping calculation, electronic domain simulation, and a genetic algorithm (GA) optimization process. It allows for a facilitated system-level MEMS design flow, in which electrical and mechanical domains communicate with each other to achieve an optimized system performance. To demonstrate the efficacy of the methodology, an open-loop capacitive MEMS accelerometer and an open-loop Coriolis vibratory MEMS gyroscope were simulated and optimized—these devices saw a sensitivity improvement of 193.77% and 420.9%, respectively, in comparison to their original state. Full article
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16 pages, 2572 KiB  
Article
Effects of Structural Dimension Variation on the Vibration of MEMS Ring-Based Gyroscopes
by Zhipeng Ma, Xiaoli Chen, Xiaojun Jin, Yiming Jin, Xudong Zheng and Zhonghe Jin
Micromachines 2021, 12(12), 1483; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi12121483 - 29 Nov 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2326
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of structural dimension variation arising from fabrication imperfections or active structural design on the vibration characteristics of a (100) single crystal silicon (SCS) ring-based Coriolis vibratory gyroscope. A mathematical model considering the geometrical irregularities and the anisotropy of [...] Read more.
This study investigated the effects of structural dimension variation arising from fabrication imperfections or active structural design on the vibration characteristics of a (100) single crystal silicon (SCS) ring-based Coriolis vibratory gyroscope. A mathematical model considering the geometrical irregularities and the anisotropy of Young’s modulus was developed via Lagrange’s equations for simulating the dynamical behavior of an imperfect ring-based gyroscope. The dynamical analyses are focused on the effects on the frequency split between two vibration modes of interest as well as the rotation of the principal axis of the 2θ mode pair, leading to modal coupling and the degradation of gyroscopic sensitivity. While both anisotropic Young’s modulus and nonideal deep trench verticality affect the frequency difference between two vibration modes, they have little contribution to deflecting the principal axis of the 2θ mode pair. However, the 4θ variations in the width of both the ring and the supporting beams cause modal coupling to occur and the degenerate 2θ mode pair to split in frequency. To aid the optimal design of MEMS ring-based gyroscopic sensors that has relatively high robustness to fabrication tolerance, a geometrical compensation based on the developed model is demonstrated to identify the geometries of the ring and the suspension. Full article
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21 pages, 9049 KiB  
Article
Characterization of Modal Frequencies and Orientation of Axisymmetric Resonators in Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Xukai Ding, Han Zhang, Libin Huang, Liye Zhao and Hongsheng Li
Micromachines 2021, 12(10), 1206; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi12101206 - 1 Oct 2021
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2443
Abstract
This paper presents the characterization of the modal frequencies and the modal orientation of the axisymmetric resonators in Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes based on the approaches of the frequency sweep and the ring down. The modal frequencies and the orientation of the stiffness axis [...] Read more.
This paper presents the characterization of the modal frequencies and the modal orientation of the axisymmetric resonators in Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes based on the approaches of the frequency sweep and the ring down. The modal frequencies and the orientation of the stiffness axis are the key parameters for the mechanical correction of the stiffness imperfections. The frequency sweep method utilizes the zero and the poles in the magnitude-frequency responses of the two-dimensional transfer function to extract the modal orientation information within the frequency domain. The ring down method makes use of the peak and the valley values of the beat signals at the readout electrodes to obtain the modal orientation and the coefficient of the nonlinear stiffness directly within the time domain. The proposed approaches were verified via a silicon ring resonator designed for gyroscopic sensing and the modal information from the experiments exhibited a good agreement between the methods of the frequency sweep and the ring down. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section E:Engineering and Technology)
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15 pages, 6014 KiB  
Article
A Novel Method for Estimating and Balancing the Second Harmonic Error of Cylindrical Fused Silica Resonators
by Yunfeng Tao, Yao Pan, Jianping Liu, Yonglei Jia, Kaiyong Yang and Hui Luo
Micromachines 2021, 12(4), 380; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi12040380 - 1 Apr 2021
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 2643
Abstract
The cylindrical resonator gyroscope (CRG) is a type of Coriolis vibratory gyroscope which measures the angular velocity or angle through the precession of the elastic wave of the cylindrical resonator. The cylindrical fused silica resonator is an essential component of the CRG, the [...] Read more.
The cylindrical resonator gyroscope (CRG) is a type of Coriolis vibratory gyroscope which measures the angular velocity or angle through the precession of the elastic wave of the cylindrical resonator. The cylindrical fused silica resonator is an essential component of the CRG, the symmetry of which determines the bias drift and vibration stability of the gyroscope. The manufacturing errors breaking the symmetry of the resonator are usually described by Fourier series, and most studies are only focusing on analyzing and reducing the fourth harmonic error, the main error source of bias drift. The second harmonic error also is one of the obstacles for CRG towards high precision. Therefore, this paper provides a chemical method to evaluate and balance the second harmonic error of cylindrical fused silica resonators. The relation between the frequency split of the n = 1 mode and the second harmonic error of the resonator is obtained. Simulations are performed to analyze the effects of the first three harmonic errors on the frequency splits. The relation between the location of the low-frequency axis of n = 1 mode and the heavy axis of the second harmonic error is also analyzed by simulation. Chemical balancing experiments on two fused silica resonators demonstrate the feasibility of this balancing procedure, and show good consistency with theoretical and simulation analysis. The second harmonic error of the two resonators is reduced by 86.6% and 79.8%, respectively. Full article
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9 pages, 995 KiB  
Article
Solving the Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscope Motion Equations by Means of the Angular Rate B-Spline Approximation
by Mikhail Basarab and Boris Lunin
Mathematics 2021, 9(3), 292; https://doi.org/10.3390/math9030292 - 2 Feb 2021
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3035
Abstract
The exact solution of the movement equation of the Coriolis vibratory gyroscope (CVG) with a linear law of variation of the angular rate of rotation of the base is given. The solution is expressed in terms of the Weber functions (the parabolic cylinder [...] Read more.
The exact solution of the movement equation of the Coriolis vibratory gyroscope (CVG) with a linear law of variation of the angular rate of rotation of the base is given. The solution is expressed in terms of the Weber functions (the parabolic cylinder functions) and their asymptotic representations. On the basis of the obtained solution, an analytical solution to the equation of the ring dynamics in the case of piecewise linear approximation of an arbitrary angular velocity profile on a time grid is derived. The piecewise linear solution is compared with the more rough piecewise constant solution and the dependence of the error of such approximations on the sampling step in time is estimated numerically. The results obtained make it possible to significantly reduce the number of operations when it is necessary to study long-range dynamics of oscillations of the system, as well as quantitatively and qualitatively control the convergence of finite-difference schemes for solving the movement equations of the Coriolis vibratory gyroscope. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Approximation Theory and Methods 2020)
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15 pages, 20310 KiB  
Article
Damping Asymmetry Trimming Based on the Resistance Heat Dissipation for Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscope in Whole-Angle Mode
by Kechen Guo, Yulie Wu, Yongmeng Zhang, Jiangkun Sun, Dingbang Xiao and Xuezhong Wu
Micromachines 2020, 11(10), 945; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi11100945 - 19 Oct 2020
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 2982
Abstract
Damping asymmetry is one of the most important factors that determines the performance of Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscope. In this paper, a novel damping tuning method for the resonator with parallel plate capacitors is presented. This damping tuning method is based on resistance heat [...] Read more.
Damping asymmetry is one of the most important factors that determines the performance of Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscope. In this paper, a novel damping tuning method for the resonator with parallel plate capacitors is presented. This damping tuning method is based on resistance heat dissipation and the tuning effect is characterized by the control force in Whole-Angle mode. As the damping tuning and stiffness tuning in the resonator with parallel plate capacitors are coupled with each other, a corresponding tuning system is designed. To verify the tuning effects, experiments are conducted on a hemispherical resonator gyroscope with Whole-Angle mode. The damping tuning theories is demonstrated by the testing results and 87% of the damping asymmetry is reduced by this tuning method with a cost of 3% decaying time. Furthermore, the angle-dependent drift in rate measurement after tuning is only 15.6% of the one without tuning and the scale factor nonlinearity decreases from 5.49 ppm to 2.66 ppm. The method can be further applied on the damping tuning in other resonators with symmetrical structure. Full article
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21 pages, 4771 KiB  
Article
A Digital Interface ASIC for Triple-Axis MEMS Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Risheng Lv, Qiang Fu, Weiping Chen, Liang Yin, Xiaowei Liu and Yufeng Zhang
Sensors 2020, 20(19), 5460; https://doi.org/10.3390/s20195460 - 23 Sep 2020
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3975
Abstract
This paper proposes a solution for sensing spatial angular velocity. A high-performance digital interface application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for triple-axis micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) vibratory gyroscopes is presented. The technique of time multiplexing is employed for synergetic stable drive control and precise angular [...] Read more.
This paper proposes a solution for sensing spatial angular velocity. A high-performance digital interface application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for triple-axis micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) vibratory gyroscopes is presented. The technique of time multiplexing is employed for synergetic stable drive control and precise angular velocity measurement in three separate degrees of freedom (DOF). Self-excited digital closed loop drives the proof mass in sensing elements at its inherent resonant frequency for Coriolis force generation during angular rotation. The analog front ends in both drive and sense loops are comprised of low-noise charge-voltage (C/V) converters and multi-channel incremental zoom analog-to-digital converters (ADC), so that capacitance variation between combs induced by mechanical motion is transformed into digital voltage signals. Other circuitry elements, such as loop controlling and accurate demodulation modules, are all implemented in digital logics. Automatic amplitude stabilization is mainly realized by peak detection and proportion-integration (PI) control. Nonlinear digital gain adjustment is designed for rapid establishment of resonance oscillation and linearity improvement. Manufactured in a standard 0.35-μm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology, this design achieves a bias instability of 2.1°/h and a nonlinearity of 0.012% over full-scale range. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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13 pages, 3285 KiB  
Article
Influence of Temperature Variation on the Vibrational Characteristics of Fused Silica Cylindrical Resonators for Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Pengbo Xiao, Zhinan Qiu, Yiming Luo, Yao Pan, Tianliang Qu, Kaiyong Yang, Hui Luo and Shiqiao Qin
Sensors 2020, 20(4), 1032; https://doi.org/10.3390/s20041032 - 14 Feb 2020
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 3656
Abstract
The fused silica cylindrical resonator is a type of axisymmetric resonator that can be used for Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes. Although the resonant frequency, frequency mismatch, and Q factor are natural properties of the resonator, they can change with temperature. Therefore, the temperature drift [...] Read more.
The fused silica cylindrical resonator is a type of axisymmetric resonator that can be used for Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes. Although the resonant frequency, frequency mismatch, and Q factor are natural properties of the resonator, they can change with temperature. Therefore, the temperature drift severely limits the detection accuracy and bias stability of the gyroscope. In this paper, the influence of temperature variation on the vibrational characteristics of fused silica cylindrical resonators was investigated. Experiments were performed on a fused silica cylindrical resonator coated with Cr/Au films. It was shown that at the temperature range from 253.15 K to 353.15 K, the resonant frequency linearly increased with temperature, the frequency mismatch remained unchanged, and the Q factor gradually increased till about 333.15 K, when it began to decrease. Meanwhile, the change of thermoelastic damping with temperature may dominate the variation of Q factor at the temperature range from 253.15 K to 353.15 K. This phenomenon was theoretically analyzed and the variation trends of results were consistent with the theoretical analysis. This study indicates that, for the fused silica cylindrical resonator, to discover the influence of temperature variation on the resonant frequency, frequency mismatch, and Q factor, there are certain rules to follow and repeat. The relationship between temperature and frequency can be established, which provides the feasibility of using self-calibration based on temperature characteristics of the resonator for temperature drift compensations. Additionally, there is an optimum temperature that may improve the performance of the Coriolis vibratory gyroscope with the fused silica cylindrical resonator. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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17 pages, 4730 KiB  
Article
Influence of Electrostatic Forces on the Vibrational Characteristics of Resonators for Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Pengbo Xiao, Zhinan Qiu, Yao Pan, Shaoliang Li, Tianliang Qu, Zhongqi Tan, Jianping Liu, Kaiyong Yang, Wanliang Zhao, Hui Luo and Shiqiao Qin
Sensors 2020, 20(1), 295; https://doi.org/10.3390/s20010295 - 5 Jan 2020
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3828
Abstract
The Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes are a type of sensors that measure angular velocities through the Coriolis effect. The resonator is the critical component of the CVGs, the vibrational characteristics of which, including the resonant frequency, frequency mismatch, Q factor, and Q factor asymmetry, [...] Read more.
The Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes are a type of sensors that measure angular velocities through the Coriolis effect. The resonator is the critical component of the CVGs, the vibrational characteristics of which, including the resonant frequency, frequency mismatch, Q factor, and Q factor asymmetry, have a great influence on the performance of CVG. The frequency mismatch and Q factor of the resonator, in particular, directly determine the precision and drift characteristics of the gyroscope. Although the frequency mismatch and Q factor are natural properties of the resonator, they can change with external conditions, such as temperature, pressure, and external forces. In this paper, the influence of electrostatic forces on the vibrational characteristics of the fused silica cylindrical resonator is investigated. Experiments were performed on a fused silica cylindrical resonator coated with Cr/Au films. It was shown that the resonant frequency, frequency mismatch, and the decay time slightly decreased with electrostatic forces, while the decay time split increased. Lower capacitive gaps and larger applied voltages resulted in lower frequency mismatch and lower decay time. This phenomenon was theoretically analyzed, and the variation trends of results were consistent with the theoretical analysis. This study indicates that, for fused silica cylindrical resonator with electrostatic transduction, the electrostatic influence on the Q factor and frequency, although small, should be considered when designing the capacitive gap and choosing bias voltages. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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21 pages, 19724 KiB  
Article
A Lumped Mass Model for Circular Micro-Resonators in Coriolis Vibratory Gyroscopes
by Xukai Ding, Jia JIA, Zhengcheng Qin, Zhihu Ruan, Liye Zhao and Hongsheng Li
Micromachines 2019, 10(6), 378; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10060378 - 6 Jun 2019
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3989
Abstract
Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs) with circular micro-resonators, such as hemispherical, ring, and disk resonators, exhibit excellent performances and have extraordinary potential. This paper discusses a generalized lumped mass model for both 3D and planar circular micro-resonators, establishing the relationship between the modal effective [...] Read more.
Coriolis vibratory gyroscopes (CVGs) with circular micro-resonators, such as hemispherical, ring, and disk resonators, exhibit excellent performances and have extraordinary potential. This paper discusses a generalized lumped mass model for both 3D and planar circular micro-resonators, establishing the relationship between the modal effective mass, the modal equivalent force, and the point displacement of the resonator. The point displacement description of a continuous circular resonator’s motion is defined from the view of capacitance measurement. The modal effective mass is, consequently, determined by the kinetic and the potential energy of the structure and is computed with numerical simulations. Moreover, the modal equivalent force, which can be theoretically calculated for any configuration of discrete electrodes, is deduced by using the concept of force density and the force distribution function. By utilizing the lumped mass model in this paper, the stiffness softening, the mode tuning, and the quadrature correction of the micro-resonators are investigated in detail. The theoretical model is verified by both the finite element method (FEM) and the experiments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section A:Physics)
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16 pages, 5700 KiB  
Article
Effect of Uneven Electrostatic Forces on the Dynamic Characteristics of Capacitive Hemispherical Resonator Gyroscopes
by Zeyuan Xu, Guoxing Yi, Meng Joo Er and Chao Huang
Sensors 2019, 19(6), 1291; https://doi.org/10.3390/s19061291 - 14 Mar 2019
Cited by 24 | Viewed by 4989
Abstract
The hemispherical resonator gyroscope (HRG) is a typical capacitive Coriolis vibratory gyroscope whose performance is inevitably influenced by the uneven electrostatic forces caused by the uneven excitation capacitance gap between the resonator and outer base. First, the mechanism of uneven electrostatic forces due [...] Read more.
The hemispherical resonator gyroscope (HRG) is a typical capacitive Coriolis vibratory gyroscope whose performance is inevitably influenced by the uneven electrostatic forces caused by the uneven excitation capacitance gap between the resonator and outer base. First, the mechanism of uneven electrostatic forces due to the significantly uneven capacitance gap in that the non-uniformity of the electrostatic forces can cause irregular deformation of the resonator and further affect the performance and precision of the HRG, was analyzed. According to the analyzed influence mechanism, the dynamic output error model of the HRG was established. In this work, the effect of the first four harmonics of the uneven capacitance gap on the HRG was investigated. It turns out that the zero bias and output error, caused by the first harmonic that dominates mainly the amplitude of the uneven capacitance gap, increase approximately linearly with the increase of the amplitude, and periodically vary with the increase of the phase. The effect of the other three harmonics follows the same law, but their amplitudes are one order of magnitude smaller than that of the first one, thus their effects on the HRG can be neglected. The effect of uneven electrostatic forces caused by the first harmonic on the scale factor is that its nonlinearity increases approximately linearly with the increase of the harmonic amplitude, which was analyzed in depth. Considering comprehensively the zero bias, the modification rate of output error, and scale factor nonlinearity, the tolerance towards the uneven excitation capacitance gap was obtained. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Resonator Sensors 2018)
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