TY - JOUR
T1 - Active Frequency Control and Orthogonal Compensation for Temperature-Drift Suppression in MEMS Ring Gyroscopes
AU - Cui, Ke
AU - Sheng, Ke
AU - Hu, Xinyu
AU - An, Daren
AU - Wang, Xiaolei
AU - Ding, Xukai
AU - Shen, Chong
AU - Yang, Yunchun
AU - Cao, Huiliang
AU - Xie, Huikai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1963-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - This paper presents an dual-mode active frequency control (DM-AFC) technique utilizing dynamic stiffness compensation to address temperature-induced zero bias drift and scale factor instability in MEMS ring gyroscopes. Unlike conventional temperature compensation methods that often add system complexity, the proposed approach enables real-time quadrature error estimation and compensation, significantly suppressing thermal drift via demodulation phase correction. Simultaneously, the operating frequency is accurately stabilized through electrostatic stiffness tuning, decoupling the scale factor from temperature variations. Additionally, mechanical sensitivity is enhanced by reducing the frequency split between drive and sense modes, yielding a 4.3-fold increase in sensitivity and a 12.6dB improvement in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The demodulation phase error was reduced from 0.0518° to 0.00188°, leading to a 37-fold reduction in temperature drift coefficient. Experimental results demonstrate a scale factor nonlinearity of only 0.00542% over -40°C to 80°C—a 96.86% improvement—and a bias instability of 0.3755°/h. The method provides Strong temperature robustness solution for navigation-grade MEMS gyroscopes, without imposing significant system overhead.
AB - This paper presents an dual-mode active frequency control (DM-AFC) technique utilizing dynamic stiffness compensation to address temperature-induced zero bias drift and scale factor instability in MEMS ring gyroscopes. Unlike conventional temperature compensation methods that often add system complexity, the proposed approach enables real-time quadrature error estimation and compensation, significantly suppressing thermal drift via demodulation phase correction. Simultaneously, the operating frequency is accurately stabilized through electrostatic stiffness tuning, decoupling the scale factor from temperature variations. Additionally, mechanical sensitivity is enhanced by reducing the frequency split between drive and sense modes, yielding a 4.3-fold increase in sensitivity and a 12.6dB improvement in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The demodulation phase error was reduced from 0.0518° to 0.00188°, leading to a 37-fold reduction in temperature drift coefficient. Experimental results demonstrate a scale factor nonlinearity of only 0.00542% over -40°C to 80°C—a 96.86% improvement—and a bias instability of 0.3755°/h. The method provides Strong temperature robustness solution for navigation-grade MEMS gyroscopes, without imposing significant system overhead.
KW - Active Frequency Control
KW - Circular Gyroscope
KW - Scale Factor Temperature Stability
KW - Temperature Drift
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105028301148
U2 - 10.1109/TIM.2026.3654731
DO - 10.1109/TIM.2026.3654731
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105028301148
SN - 0018-9456
JO - IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement
JF - IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement
ER -