Structured Design Of Microelectromechanical Systems - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Structured Design Of Microelectromechanical Systems

Tamal Mukherjee and Gary K. Fedder
Conference Paper, Proceedings of 34th Annual Design Automation Conference (DAC '97), pp. 680 - 685, June, 1997

Abstract

In order to efficiently design complex microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) having large numbers of multi-domain components, a hierarchically structured design approach that is compatible with standard IC design is needed. A graphical-based schematic, or structural, view is presented as a geometrically intuitive way to represent MEMS as a set of interconnected lumped-parameter elements. An initial library focuses on suspended-MEMS technology from which inertial sensors and other mechanical mechanisms can be designed. The schematic representation has a simulation interface enabling the designer to simulate the design at the component level. Synthesis of MEMS cells for common topologies provides the system designer with rapid, optimized component layout and associated macro-models. A synthesis module is developed for the popular folded-flexure micromechanical resonator topology. The algorithm minimizes a combination of total layout area and voltage applied to the electro-mechanical actuators. Synthesis results clearly show the design limits of behavioral parameters such as resonant frequency for a fixed process technology.

BibTeX

@conference{Mukherjee-1997-14401,
author = {Tamal Mukherjee and Gary K. Fedder},
title = {Structured Design Of Microelectromechanical Systems},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 34th Annual Design Automation Conference (DAC '97)},
year = {1997},
month = {June},
pages = {680 - 685},
}