Tag Archives: CAD

Researchers at the University of Cambridge recently used IntelliSuite to assist with the design of a micromachined electrostatic charge sensor. The group used IntelliSuite to simulate various designs of the device and determine which design would give them the desired resonant frequency. An SEM of the variable capacitor used in the device is shown below.

SEM of variable capacitor

SEM of variable capacitor

The paper, “A Resonant Micromachined Electrostatic Charge Sensor”, is part of the September 2008 edition of the IEEE Sensors Journal and can be downloaded here.

SYNPLE, IntelliSense’s system-level simulator, includes some major upgrades in the latest version of IntelliSuite. The new bus-based auto-wiring feature makes it easy to wire up multiple elements and create schematics from the bottom, up. Users can also import finite element models to develop complex systems from the top, down.

SYNPLE now allows you to visualize your results in 3D, so that you can visualize the system response including the MEMS and  electronics in 3D. Shown below is an animation of a micromirror modeled in SYNPLE.

We’re proud of the fact that SYNPLE is the first schematic tool specifically designed for MEMS, and we’re currently working hard on more upgrades to be included in IntelliSuite v8.6. Watch out for more new features coming soon!

Automeshed structure based on MUMPS template

One powerful new feature in IntelliSuite 8.5 is the automeshing engine that allows users to go from mask layout to meshed structure with one click.  Meshes can be automatically generated based on popular process templates (MUMPS, SUMMiT-V, SCREAM, etc), and users also have the ability to define their own templates.  The self-adapting mesh feature optimizes the mesh size for each part of the structure to ensure accurate simulations and reduce the compute time.

You can use the automeshing feature by selecting “Automesh from mask layout” in the Mesh toolbar in IntelliSuite’s 3DBuilder.

Here is a recent interview that we did with Industrial and Embedded Systems. As the MEMS and Nano

Mirror Array

Mirror Array

 industry matures, the number of components per chip is increasing. While we’ve seen the integration in terms of MEMS mirror arrays for display and telecom switching applications, the trend is spreading to RF-MEMS. There’s some interesting work being done by Clark Nguyen’s group at UC Berkeley. 

 

The design challenges for designing multiple components on a chip are going to be very different from those faced by designing a single component on a chip. The interaction between elements becomes increasingly important. Element cross talk becomes an important factor.. More about this later…

In the meantime here is the interview that we did with IES…  BTW, the image was generated using the latest version of IntelliFAB/FABViewer part of our Clean Room suite of process simulation and visualization tools.