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A μGal MOEMS gravimeter designed with free-form anti-springs

  • Shuang Wu
  • , Wenhui Yan
  • , Xiaoxu Wang
  • , Qingxiong Xiao
  • , Zhenshan Wang
  • , Jiaxin Sun
  • , Xinlong Yu
  • , Yaoxian Yang
  • , Qixuan Zhu
  • , Guantai Yang
  • , Zhongyang Yao
  • , Pengfei Li
  • , Chao Jiang
  • , Wei Huang
  • , Qianbo Lu
  • Northwestern Polytechnical University Xian
  • Hunan University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gravimeter measures gravitational acceleration, which is valuable for geophysical applications such as hazard forecasting and prospecting. Gravimeters have historically been large and expensive instruments. Micro-Electro-Mechanical-System gravimeters feature small size and low cost through scaling and integration, which may allow large-scale deployment. However, current Micro-Electro-Mechanical-System gravimeters face challenges in achieving ultra-high sensitivity under fabrication tolerance and limited size. Here, we demonstrate a μGal-level Micro-Opto-Electro-Mechanical-System gravimeter by combining a freeform anti-spring design and an optical readout. A multi-stage algorithmic design approach is proposed to achieve high acceleration sensitivity without making high-aspect ratio springs. An optical grating-based readout is integrated, offering pm-level displacement sensitivity. Measurements reveal that the chip-scale sensing unit achieves a resonant frequency of 1.71 Hz and acceleration-displacement sensitivity of over 95 μm/Gal with an etching aspect ratio of smaller than 400:30. The benchmark with a commercial gravimeter PET demonstrates a self-noise of 1.1 μGal Hz−1/2 at 0.5 Hz, sub-1 μGal Hz−1/2 at 0.45 Hz, and a drift rate down to 153 μGal/day. The high performance and small size of the Micro-Opto-Electro-Mechanical-System gravimeter suggest potential applications in industrial, defense, and geophysics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1786
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

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