Showing posts with label optome-chanical sensor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label optome-chanical sensor. Show all posts

Oct 27, 2020

[paper] Optomechanical Sensor in Verilog-A

Houssein Elmi Dawale, Loïc Sibeud, Sébastien Regord, Guillaume Jourdan, Member, IEEE, Sébastien Hentz, Member, IEEE, and Franck Badets, Senior Member, IEEE
Compact Modeling and Behavioral Simulation of an Optomechanical Sensor in Verilog-A
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, vol. 67, no. 11, pp. 4677-4681, Nov. 2020
DOI: 10.1109/TED.2020.3024477

Abstract: Previous work has shown that optomechanical resonators are particularly well suited to the design of ultrasensitive mass sensors. They present an extremely low noise level, very high optical quality factor (Q>105), excellent integration density and can resonate both in a gaseous and liquid environment. In order to reduce the long measurement time due to their small particle capture area, several such resonators must be integrated onto the same chip. However, bulky laboratory equipment currently used to read a single optomechanical resonator cannot be practically scaled up to a large array of transducers. It is then required to design and eventually integrate a read-out interface that can process tens to thousands of resonators. To ease the design of such a circuit, this article presents a compact analytical model of an electrostatically actuated optomechanical resonator implemented in Verilog-A. The proposed model includes both the optical and mechanical behaviors, as well as optomechanical coupling and thermo-optical effect. It was simulated in commercial simulator and is consistent with the measured results. 
FIG: a) General view of the optomechanical device with electrostatic actuation. 
b) Functional diagram of the device in Verilog-A.