Radio-frequency microelectromechanical system

Fig. 1: (a) A capacitive fixed-fixed beam RF MEMS switch, connected in shunt to a CPW line. (b) An ohmic cantilever RF MEMS switch, connected in series to a microstrip line.

A radio-frequency microelectromechanical system (RF MEMS) is a microelectromechanical system with electronic components comprising moving sub-millimeter-sized parts that provide radio-frequency (RF) functionality.[1] RF functionality can be implemented using a variety of RF technologies. Besides RF MEMS technology, III-V compound semiconductor (GaAs, GaN, InP, InSb), ferrite, ferroelectric, silicon-based semiconductor (RF CMOS, SiC and SiGe), and vacuum tube technology are available to the RF designer. Each of the RF technologies offers a distinct trade-off between cost, frequency, gain, large-scale integration, lifetime, linearity, noise figure, packaging, power handling, power consumption, reliability, ruggedness, size, supply voltage, switching time and weight.

  1. ^ Lucyszyn, S. (2004). "Review of radio frequency microelectromechanical systems technology". IEE Proceedings - Science, Measurement and Technology. 151 (2): 93–103. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.535.8466. doi:10.1049/ip-smt:20040405. ISSN 1350-2344.

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search