RF MEMS Devices Posed to Revolutionise Communications10 February 2006
Microelectromechanical system (MEMS) technology is attracting tremendous interest across the world and research efforts are constantly growing. This technology has made exceptional advances in recent years and is now poised to transform radio frequency (RF). RF MEMS devices have a huge number of potential applications including wireless communications, military, space and instrumentation. "The interest in MEMS technology for RF and wireless applications can be attributed to its flexibility, which can be exploited to overcome the limitations exhibited by integrated RF devices and enable circuits with new levels of performance not achievable otherwise," says Technical Insights (http://technicalinsights.frost.com) Research Analyst Rajesh Kannan. "Thus, the ultimate goal in applying RF MEMS is to propagate the device-level benefits all the way up to the system level." Components based on MEMS technology not only deliver superior RF performance and tunability, but do so over a much broader range of operating frequencies. For instance, an RF MEMS switch concurrently provides improved insertion loss, isolation and linearity. RF MEMS devices can potentially be used as microswitches to build impedance networks in front of power amplifiers and to decrease the number of components in multistandard mobile phones. They can also be used as MEMS inductors and tunable capacitors for integrated voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs) in global positioning systems (GPSs). Since this technology enables superior passive devices, it is ideally suited for numerous wireless appliances operating in the home/ground, mobile, and space spheres such as handsets, base stations, and satellites. In fact, with RF MEMS' characteristic properties of low power consumption and reconfigurability, ubiquitous wireless connectivity may no longer be a distant possibility. Current research efforts are aimed at developing a single-chip RF circuit in response to wireless system manufacturers' need for lower weight, volume, cost and increased functionality. With companies looking to integrate MEMS devices directly on the RF chip, numerous discrete components could be replaced, thereby offering enhanced performance and reliability along with significant cost savings. "The industry is only now beginning to see the advantages of such integrated devices," says Kannan. "Over time, this integration can lead to the replacement of all passive RF chips with on-chip devices, offering considerable benefits such as smaller form factors for cell phones and added functionalities including Internet connectivity." As telecom systems grow increasingly sophisticated, researchers continuously attempt to improve RF MEMS devices in terms of size and performance. An interesting way of achieving this is to introduce new materials in their fabrication. However, such materials will not only have to possess advanced electrical and mechanical properties, their elaboration process must also be fully compatible with all other steps involved in microfabrication. The pulsed laser deposition (PLD) method has shown significant potential in depositing thin-films with different properties of various materials even at room temperature. Researchers at the University of Limoges in France are now exploring the electro-mechanical properties of aluminium oxide and tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C) thin-films deposited at room temperature using PLD. Their research has yielded several examples illustrating the integration of such materials in RF MEMS device fabrication. Researchers believe that such devices have numerous promising applications. Aluminium oxide as dielectric in MEMS capacitive switches is one such application. They are also exploring the possibility of small-sized MEMS switches that could reduce switching time and ease the integration of this component above complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) circuitry. In other interesting developments, a research team at the University of Dortmund has developed a concept for a completely CMOS-compatible integrated surface RF MEMS switch using the electrostatic actuating principle. Typically, MEMS integration in the CMOS process takes place pre-CMOS, intermediate-CMOS or post-CMOS. This concept is based on the monolithic integration of a microelectromechanical switch by method of the intermediate-CMOS fabrication. Researchers say that only minor modifications of the CMOS process are required to integrate the MEMS switch in the process flow. Since all additional process steps are taken from the CMOS technology, the entire process remains CMOS-compatible. "Since almost exclusively CMOS-process steps are deployed and no additional equipment is needed for the fabrication, this makes it easy to transfer the process to every other CMOS-technology-line," says Kannan. "Researchers hope that further integration with already published integrated optical and mechanical processes will allow the realisation of very complex systems." Advances in RF MEMS Technology is part of the Industrial Automation vertical subscription service, and provides a detailed analysis of emerging RF MEMS technologies and their major potential applications. It discusses important technology developments and trends worldwide in the RF MEMS domain, and provides a breakdown of critical ongoing research by region. Executive summaries and analyst interviews are available to the press. If you are interested in an analysis providing manufacturers, end users and other industry participants with an overview, summary, challenges and latest coverage of Advances in RF MEMS Technology, send an e-mail to Magdalena Oberland, Corporate Communications, at magdalena.oberland@frost.com containing the following information: your full name, company name, title, contact telephone number, contact fax number, e-mail address and source of information. Upon receipt of the above information, an overview will be e-mailed to you. Technical Insights is an international technology analysis business that produces a variety of technical news alerts, newsletters and research services. Frost & Sullivan, an international growth consultancy, has been supporting clients' expansion for more than four decades. Our market expertise covers a broad spectrum of industries, while our portfolio of advisory competencies includes custom strategic consulting, market intelligence and management training. Our mission is to forge partnerships with our clients' management teams to deliver market insights and to create value and drive growth through innovative approaches. Frost & Sullivan's network of consultants, industry experts, corporate trainers and support staff spans the globe with offices in every major country. Contact: Magdalena Oberland Corporate Communications - Europe P: +44-(0)20-7915-7876 F: +44-(0)20-7730-3343 E: magdalena.oberland@frost.com Tori Foster Corporate Communications - North America P: +1-210-477-8448 F: +1-210-348-1003 E: tori.foster@frost.com Pramila Gurtoo Corporate Communications - Asia Pacific DID: +603-6204-5811 Gen: +603-6204-5800 Fax: +603-6201-7402 E: pgurtoo@frost.com http://www.frost.com http://www.technicalinsights.frost.com List of Keywords in this Release: RF MEMS, wireless communications, microelectromechanical system, MEMS, radio frequency, insertion loss, isolation, linearity, MEMS inductors, tunable capacitors, integrated voltage-controlled oscillators, VCOs, global positioning system, GPS, single-chip RF circuit, on-chip devices, pulsed laser deposition, PLD, aluminium oxide and tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C) thin-films, microfabrication, MEMS capacitive switches, complementary metal-oxide semiconductor, CMOS, electrostatic actuating principle List of Key Industry Participants: Companies Acreo AB, Applied MEMS, Inc., Boston MicroSystems, Capres, Inc., Colibrys SA, Discera, Inc., EENa Corp., Epcos AG, GP NanoTechnology Group Ltd., IceMos Technology Ltd., IBM Research GmbH, LG Electronics, Inc., MEMS Solution, Inc., MEMSCAP, Inc., Memscap, S.A., Micralyne, Inc., Microfabrica, Inc., Microlab, Inc., Motorola, Inc., Nanotech Partners Ltd., Omron Electronic Components Europe BV, Silicon Microstructures, Inc., TeraVicta Technologies, Inc., Toyota Central R&D Laboratories, Inc., Toyota Central Research & Development Labs, TRONIC'S Microsystems, WiSpry, Inc., XCOM Wireless, Inc. Universities & Company Research Berkeley Sensor and Actuator Center, IceMos Technology Ltd., Institute of Microelectronics, Motorola, National Cheng Kung University, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Sandia National Laboratories, Shanghai JiaoTong University, SPCTS UMR CNRS, The University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, University of Arkansas, University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Dortmund, University of Glasgow, University of Maryland, VTT Information Technology, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
Source: prnewswire
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