Chae Hyuck Ahn
Stanford University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Chae Hyuck Ahn.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Shirin Ghaffari; Saurabh A. Chandorkar; Shasha Wang; Eldwin J. Ng; Chae Hyuck Ahn; Vu A. Hong; Yushi Yang; Thomas W. Kenny
Micromechanical resonators are promising replacements for quartz crystals for timing and frequency references owing to potential for compactness, integrability with CMOS fabrication processes, low cost, and low power consumption. To be used in high performance reference application, resonators should obtain a high quality factor. The limit of the quality factor achieved by a resonator is set by the material properties, geometry and operating condition. Some recent resonators properly designed for exploiting bulk-acoustic resonance have been demonstrated to operate close to the quantum mechanical limit for the quality factor and frequency product (Q-f). Here, we describe the physics that gives rise to the quantum limit to the Q-f product, explain design strategies for minimizing other dissipation sources, and present new results from several different resonators that approach the limit.
international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2013
Sarah H. Nitzan; Chae Hyuck Ahn; T.-H. Su; Mo Li; Eldwin J. Ng; Shasha Wang; Z. M. Yang; Gary O'Brien; Bernhard E. Boser; Thomas W. Kenny; David A. Horsley
We present a 0.6 mm diameter, 20 μm thick epitaxially-sealed polysilicon disk resonator gyro (DRG). High Q (50,000) combined with electrostatic mode-matching and closed-loop quadrature null performed by dedicated electrode sets enables a scale-factor of 0.286 mV/(°/s) and Angle Random Walk (ARW) of 0.006 (°/s)/√Hz. Without precise control of temperature, the minimum Allan deviation is 3.29 °/hr.
IEEE\/ASME Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems | 2015
Eldwin J. Ng; Vu A. Hong; Yushi Yang; Chae Hyuck Ahn; Camille L. M. Everhart; Thomas W. Kenny
Resonators fabricated in heavily doped silicon have been noted to have a reduced frequency-temperature dependence compared with lightly doped silicon. The resonant frequency of silicon microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) resonators is largely governed by the materials elastic properties, which are known to depend on doping. In this paper, a suite of different types and orientations of resonators were used to extract the first- and second-order temperature dependences of the elastic constants of p-doped silicon up to 1.7e20 cm-3, and n-doped up to 6.6e19 cm-3 . It is shown that these temperature-dependent elastic constants may be used in finite element analysis to predict the frequency-temperature dependence of similarly doped silicon resonators.
Applied Physics Letters | 1996
Weizhi Wang; Martin M. Fejer; R. H. Hammond; M. R. Beasley; Chae Hyuck Ahn; M. L. Bortz; Timothy Day
A monitor for Al vapor density based on atomic absorption (AA) using a frequency‐doubled external‐cavity‐diode‐laser source at 394 nm has been demonstrated in both evaporation and sputtering processes. Closed loop operation was achieved for electron‐beam evaporated aluminum in a vacuum chamber using the AA signal for feedback. A series of runs in a dc sputtering chamber at the deposition rate of 900 A/min illustrates the system reproducibility and the possibility of controlling the sputtering process and measuring the spatial distribution of the sputtered atoms with the AA monitor. Coherent light in the blue‐UV region (380–430 nm) using quasi‐phase‐matched lithium niobate waveguides was demonstrated with efficiencies of 25–150%/W, a range of wavelengths that covers many technologically important elements in physical vapor deposition processes.
IEEE\/ASME Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems | 2015
Chae Hyuck Ahn; Eldwin J. Ng; Vu A. Hong; Yushi Yang; Brian J. Lee; Ian B. Flader; Thomas W. Kenny
In this paper, we present four design methods to overcome (100) silicon crystalline anisotropy and achieve mode-matching in wineglass-mode disk resonator gyroscope (DRG). These methods were validated through experimental characterization of more than 145 different devices that arose from simulations. With the proposed methods, the frequency split of the 250-kHz DRG wineglass modes in (100) silicon was reduced from >10 kHz to as low as 96 Hz (<;0.04% of 250-kHz resonant frequency) without any electrostatic tuning. Perfect mode-matching is then achieved using electrostatic tuning. Mode-matching was maintained within ±10 Hz over a temperature range from -20 °C to 80 °C. The temperature dependence of quality factor is also discussed in this paper. These results allow for the development of high-performance miniature DRGs tuned for degenerate wineglass mode operation from high-quality crystalline silicon material.
international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2014
Doruk Senkal; Sina Askari; Mohammed Jalal Ahamed; Eldwin J. Ng; Vu A. Hong; Yushi Yang; Chae Hyuck Ahn; Thomas W. Kenny; Andrei M. Shkel
This paper reports a new type of degenerate mode gyroscope with measured Q-factor of > 100,000 on both modes at a compact size of 1760 μm diameter. The toroidal ring gyroscope consists of an outer anchor ring, concentric rings nested inside the anchor ring and an electrode assembly at the inner core. Current implementation uses n = 3 wineglass mode, which is inherently robust to fabrication asymmetries. Devices were fabricated using high-temperature, ultra-clean epitaxial silicon encapsulation (EpiSeal) process. Over the 4 devices tested, lowest as fabricated frequency split was found to be 8.5 Hz (122 ppm) with a mean of 21 Hz (Δf/f = 300 ppm). Further electrostatic tuning brought the frequency split below 100 mHz (<; 2 ppm). Whole angle mechanization and pattern angle was demonstrated using a high speed DSP control system. Characterization of the gyro performance using force-rebalance mechanization revealed ARW of 0.047°/√hr and an in-run bias stability of 0.65 deg/hr. Due to the high Q-factor and robust support structure, the device can potentially be instrumented in whole angle mechanization for applications which require high rate sensitivity and robustness to g-forces.
IEEE Sensors Journal | 2013
Eldwin J. Ng; Hyung Kyu Lee; Chae Hyuck Ahn; Renata Melamud; Thomas W. Kenny
The frequency stability of single-crystal silicon microelectromechanical systems resonators encapsulated with epitaxial polysilicon (epi-seal) is investigated. As silicon resonators have significant temperature dependence, the inherent frequency stability of the resonators is masked by temperature-induced noise. Using two resonators side-by-side and assuming identical temperatures and fluctuations, temperature effects are eliminated, resulting in the two resonators tracking each other within ±10 ppb, or 3 × 10-4 °C, over a month. Power and thermal cycling the resonators produced no observable effects on the resonant frequency. This result indicates that silicon resonators make excellent on-chip thermometers, or high stability timing references if temperature is compensated well.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Sarah H. Nitzan; Valentina Zega; Mo Li; Chae Hyuck Ahn; Alberto Corigliano; Thomas W. Kenny; David A. Horsley
Parametric amplification, resulting from intentionally varying a parameter in a resonator at twice its resonant frequency, has been successfully employed to increase the sensitivity of many micro- and nano-scale sensors. Here, we introduce the concept of self-induced parametric amplification, which arises naturally from nonlinear elastic coupling between the degenerate vibration modes in a micromechanical disk-resonator, and is not externally applied. The device functions as a gyroscope wherein angular rotation is detected from Coriolis coupling of elastic vibration energy from a driven vibration mode into a second degenerate sensing mode. While nonlinear elasticity in silicon resonators is extremely weak, in this high quality-factor device, ppm-level nonlinear elastic effects result in an order-of-magnitude increase in the observed sensitivity to Coriolis force relative to linear theory. Perfect degeneracy of the primary and secondary vibration modes is achieved through electrostatic frequency tuning, which also enables the phase and frequency of the parametric coupling to be varied, and we show that the resulting phase and frequency dependence of the amplification follow the theory of parametric resonance. We expect that this phenomenon will be useful for both fundamental studies of dynamic systems with low dissipation and for increasing signal-to-noise ratio in practical applications such as gyroscopes.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Chae Hyuck Ahn; Sarah H. Nitzan; Eldwin J. Ng; Vu A. Hong; Yushi Yang; T.S. Kimbrell; David A. Horsley; Thomas W. Kenny
In this paper, we explore the effects of electrostatic parametric amplification on a high quality factor (Q > 100 000) encapsulated disk resonator gyroscope (DRG), fabricated in 〈100〉 silicon. The DRG was operated in the n = 2 degenerate wineglass mode at 235 kHz, and electrostatically tuned so that the frequency split between the two degenerate modes was less than 100 mHz. A parametric pump at twice the resonant frequency is applied to the sense axis of the DRG, resulting in a maximum scale factor of 156.6 μV/(°/s), an 8.8× improvement over the non-amplified performance. When operated with a parametric gain of 5.4, a minimum angle random walk of 0.034°/√h and bias instability of 1.15°/h are achieved, representing an improvement by a factor of 4.3× and 1.5×, respectively.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Mo Li; Eldwin J. Ng; Vu A. Hong; Chae Hyuck Ahn; Yushi Yang; Thomas W. Kenny; David A. Horsley
This paper presents a Lorentz force magnetometer employing a micromechanical oscillator. The oscillator, actuated by both electrostatic force and Lorentz force, is based on a 370 μm by 230 μm silicon micromechanical resonator with quality factor (Q) of 13 000. This field-sensitive micromechanical oscillator eliminates the need for an external electronic oscillator and improves magnetometers stability over temperature. The resonator uses no magnetic materials and is encapsulated using an epitaxial polysilicon layer in a process that is fully compatible with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor manufacturing. The sensor has a magnetic field resolution of 128 nT/rt-Hz with 2.1 mA bias current.