4.5 Article

Engineering Efficient Acoustic Power Transfer in HBARs and Other Composite Resonators

Journal

JOURNAL OF MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 1014-1019

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JMEMS.2020.3009516

Keywords

Acoustics; Resonators; Substrates; Transducers; Impedance; Epitaxial growth; Electrodes; Acoustic materials; acoustic propagation; acoustic transducers; cavity resonators; energy efficiency; epitaxial layers; gallium nitride; impedance matching; mechanical power transmission; microelectromechanical devices; piezoelectric transducers; niobium alloys; scandium; silicon carbide

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research
  2. National Research Council of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Mathematics

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We present analytic and experimental evidence highlighting the importance of acoustic impedance matching for efficient power transfer in RF-MEMS composite resonators such as high-overtone bulk acoustic mode resonators (HBARs) and thin-film piezoelectric on substrate (TPoS) resonators. We show that materials used for the piezoelectric film and the bottom metal electrode in a composite resonator can be chosen or tailored for specific low-loss substrates, resulting in efficient acoustic power transmission across the interfaces of the acoustic source (piezoelectric transducer), intermediate layers including the bottom electrode, and into the acoustic cavity (substrate). We find that a composite resonator with good interfacial acoustic matching exhibits characteristic free spectral range (FSR) variations that are not well modeled in the literature, clearly differentiating it from resonators with poor acoustic matching. We verify this model by comparing the FSR spectra of the first experimentally demonstrated epitaxially grown Sc0.18Al0.82N/AlN/TaN/SiC HBARs (with a mismatched TaN bottom electrode) with epitaxial GaN/AlN/NbN/SiC HBARs where all constituent layers are acoustically matched to the substrate. Historically, the choice and quality of materials used for composite resonators has been limited by process constraints, but advances in epitaxial growth and heterogeneous integration techniques allow us to integrate multiple high quality, acoustically matched layers to form multi-functional composite resonators. [2020-0247]

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