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RF MEMS Switches Deliver High Power In A Compact Package

March 10, 2014
An RF MEMS switch technology that maintains high power capability with low resistance and high reliability could help enable the integration of medium power range RF systems. A research group in California has demonstrated such a switch technology with SPST and SP4T variants.
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Thanks to recent technology advances, some microelectromechanical-systems (MEMS) switches now outperform micro-relays or solid-state switches. In fact, MEMS technology has the potential to overtake conventional technologies in terms of linearity, power consumption, and insertion loss. Yet challenges must be overcome to implement viable RF MEMS switches—particularly in the handling of significant power levels and reliability. In order to find design topologies that could offer these benefits, an RF MEMS switch using radial cantilevers in an SPST and SP4T configuration was designed by Hosein Zareie and Gabriel M. Rebeiz of the University of California at San Diego.

The sliding and fixed anchor points on the radial MEMS switch are designed to maximize the contact force and switching time.

Overcoming drawbacks of certain material properties is critical in the implementation of MEMS devices. To solve the high contact-resistance issues surrounding reliable and hard metals like ruthenium, for example, these switches are designed with multiple contact points and high contact force. The SPST is fabricated with a gap of 0.9 μm and a 5-μm gold beam. The cantilever sections are connected to form an eight-contact design. A sliding anchor is used to limit displacement to a single axis (see figure).

The SP4T typology is created in a manner similar to the SPST typology. It boasts four independent actuation electrodes at the output ports of each quadrant. For fabrication of a 500-μm high-resistivity silicon substrate, the UCSD process is used. According to results from an experiment, the SPST typology is capable of handling power levels beyond 2 W while the SP4T typology can handle upwards of 10 W over 100 million cycles. See “Compact High-Power SPST and SP4T RF MEMS Metal-Contact Switches,” IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Feb. 2014, p. 297.

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