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Optimal shape design of three-dimensional MEMS with applications to electrostatic comb drives

✍ Scribed by Wenjing Ye; Subrata Mukherjee


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
272 KB
Volume
45
Category
Article
ISSN
0029-5981

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✦ Synopsis


A comb drive is one of the most important microactuators in Microelectromechanical (MEM) systems. In a standard comb drive, the capacitance varies linearly with displacement, resulting in an electrostatic driving force which is independent of the position of the moving ÿngers (relative to the ÿxed ones) except at the ends of the range of travel. It is of interest in some applications to have force proÿles such as linear, quadratic or cubic. Such shaped comb drives could be useful, for example, for electrostatic tuning or to get actuators with longer ranges of travel than those of standard comb drives.

This paper presents a methodology for solving three-dimensional design (inverse) problems in MEM systems. Design of variable shape comb drives (shape motors) is presented as an application of the general methodology. It addresses issues of simulation, sensitivity analysis and then design of three-dimensional comb drives. Direct simulation is carried out by the exterior, indirect boundary element method and shape sensitivities are obtained by the direct di erentiation approach. The inverse problem determines the height proÿle of the moving ÿngers of a comb drive such that the driving force is a desired function of its travel distance. An available optimization code ('E04UCF' from the NAG package) is used to solve the inverse problem. Numerical results are presented for shape motors that produce linear or cubic force proÿles as functions of travel of the moving ÿngers.


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