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RF MEMS in mobile phones Sep 1, 2005 12:00 PM By Refugio Jones and Mark Chapman The need for multiband, multimode band switching at low insertion loss while maintaining excellent linearity in mobile phones is driving the need for RF MEMS-based switches. Since this switching problem gets even more acute as new complex waveforms, such as WiMAX are added to this mix, this article looks at the current state of development in RF MEMS switches and discusses its impact on 3G cellular phones.
For the PDF version of this article, click here. Carriers are launching third generation or 3G wireless networks globally. These newer 3G standards provide a variety of services, including data and on-demand video. But as wireless networks advance, so too do challenges for mobile phone designers. In addition, recent developments in wireless communications have resulted in hand-held cellular phones that can use up to seven different wireless standards or bands including DCS, PCS, GSM, EGSM, CDMA, WCDMA, GPS and Wi-Fi. Each standard has its own unique characteristics and constraints and brings with it its own specific challenges. RF micro electromechanical systems (MEMS) may help engineers design phones that meet the challenges of integrating multiple bands while maintaining long battery life and progressively reducing the overall size of the handset, adding new capabilities, while keeping these devices small and affordable. About 75% of the 100 or so components in a mobile phone are “passive” elements such as inductors or variable capacitors. MEMS versions of these components promise to make phones smaller and more power efficient. Cellular phones of today
Most cellular phones on the market today use a transmit/receive (T/R) switch or a band switch, and/or duplexers at the point where the phone's antenna interfaces with the cellular phone's chipset as shown in Figure 1. The use of one or any combination of these depends on the number of different bands employed by each of the major cellular systems operators. Each type of these devices supports the strict performance limits of one standard or the other. For instance, a T/R switch is used with the time division family of standards (TDMA & GSM), which are half-duplex in nature. Code division standards allow for full-duplex use of the frequency band and use a dual or multichannel duplexer device. Multiband phones can use a combination of all three of these devices to provide for full world phone services.
Typical antenna switches have to pass frequencies up to 5 GHz and are supported with silicon-on-insulator (SOI) devices, compound semiconductors such as gallium arsenide (GaAs), or PIN diodes. These switches consume little power (15 µW), have good isolation (up to 35 dB depending on packaging) and low insertion loss (0.8 dB). GaAs and PIN diode solutions have been the perennial favorites because of power handling and flexibility. SOI provides an entry point for new technologies to participate in this competitive marketplace, but SOI vendors are finding that surpassing the 4 GHz mark is difficult unless new design techniques are implemented. Finally, standard CMOS continues to fall behind on servicing this market, but smaller die geometries are making it possible for manufacturers to provide high-frequency products capable of passing up to 2.5 GHz. T/R and band switching
An alternative approach to consider for T/R switching comes in the form of RF MEMS switches. These switches can provide low power consumption, lower insertion loss, higher isolation, and excellent linearity as shown in Table 2 in a side-by-side comparison to GaAs and SOI technologies. The T/R switch had traditionally been the focus of many RF MEMS developers because of the highly compelling benefits of space and power savings. The slowed rate of introduction of RF MEMS switches and the cost-competitive nature of T/R switching has caused the market to move beyond the price range of RF MEMS. But a new switching application has emerged in the form of band switching. Today, the demand for worldwide compatibility of mobile phones has forced phone developers to implement triple and quad-band and multimode solutions. Switching between up to eight different wireless bands complicates the possibility of developing a single all-encompassing world phone. Figure 2 illustrates the potential need for a switch that functions as a superset to the T/R switch. RF MEMS can potentially provide a solid replacement for existing solid-state switches, but the devices have been on the verge of breaking into the high-tech electronics industry for more than 20 years. The main barriers for development fall into the similar categories that were faced when the integrated circuit was on the verge of competing with discrete transistor electronics (cost, manufacturability, reliability and performance). A brief background
MEMS technology dates back to the 1970s when micromachines first began to see use in the automotive industry as pressure sensors. Further developments in the automotive industry led to the creation and implementation of MEMS accelerometers for collision airbags. Today, MEMS-based gyroscopes are being implemented to help fine tune location finding in automotive GPS systems. In the electronics and high-technology industries, the MEMS switch was seen as a hopeful entry into the optical switching market, which significantly slowed in the year 2000. The collapse of this main market driver caused MEMS switch development to stall. But the continual growth of the mobile phone market along with the evolving problems of multiband/multimode phones has spurred a renewed interest in MEMS for switching and other capabilities.
In detail, RF MEMS switch devices resemble a mechanical relay, but the geometries are typically in the submillimeter or hundreds of micrometers in size. The scales of size make these devices attractive because they make it possible to have complex switching solutions that can ideally take up 1 mm In theory, RF MEMS technology is capable of surpassing the performance of high-speed semiconductors with devices that can route and control well up to 50 GHz signals. The reality is that there are many factors that have limited the viability of RF MEMS in mobile phone applications. Such factors include fabrication processes, packaging (hermetic isolation and parasitics), control voltages, long-term switching life cycles (contact point stiction), switching speed, RoHS compliance (reflow temperatures), and manufacturing costs. An RF MEMS switch is not much different than an optical MEMS switch, but because of the power-handling requirements of RF, slightly different design techniques have to be employed to limit and reduce the impact of current and the resultant heat on the contact points of the switch. A typical switch is built up with a cantilever (a suspended beam anchored at one point) and is actuated either electrostatically or electromagnetically. A contact head rests at the “floating” end of each cantilever and is comprised of conducting metals not typically used in semiconductor fabrication. Problems and solutions
In addition, the switching speed of a T/R in GSM/GPRS phones needs to be in the tens of nanoseconds in order to make for a seamless transition between transmit and receive. The mobile phone user should not notice any difference in the quality of the call when talking or listening. RF MEMS devices switch in the tens of microseconds, which makes them far too slow for the T/R switch application. On the other hand, as a band switch, an RF MEMS device has both the qualities of switching speed and hot switching lifespan to make it an appropriate fit for the application. Band switches need not switch as fast or as many times as a T/R switch. Once a band is selected, the switch stays connected to the corresponding throw until another band is detected or required. In a typical multiband application a band switch is used along with duplexers and/or T/R switches. The band switch serves as a routing device that enables other components to do the needed functions of filtering and bandpassing. Since a band switch is an additional component in the signal path, it must have as little impact on the overall performance of each band and this makes RF MEMS switches ideal candidates because of the low power consumption, small overall size, low insertion loss, and high isolation as previously shown in Table 2. In conclusion, the availability, cost and performance of RF MEMS switches for mobile phones will continue to improve. First, applications have evolved to such a point as to mandate an alternative to semiconductor solutions. Second, new fabrication and packaging techniques will enable the mass production of the devices and accelerate their market acceptance. The fabrication techniques that have evolved to support low-cost solutions complete a virtuous cycle of product definition where volume drives cost and cost drives applications. ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Refugio Jones is a product manager at WiSpry Inc., developer of low-cost, high-performance RF-MEMS tunable radio frequency (RF) components and modules for the wireless industry. He is a 10-year veteran of the analog and linear semiconductor industry and holds a B.S.E.E. degree from the University of Arizona in Tucson, AZ. Mark Chapman is vice president of business development for WiSpry Inc. His past experience includes serving as the president and CEO of Ditrans Corp., and executive level positions for Comarco Wireless Technologies and Rockwell Semiconductor (now Conexant).
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