Quantitative accelerated life testing of MEMS accelerometers

Journal Article (2007)
Author(s)

Marius Bâzu (National Institute for Research and Development in Biological Sciences)

Lucian Gǎlǎţeanu (National Institute for Research and Development in Biological Sciences)

Virgil Emil Ilian (National Institute for Research and Development in Biological Sciences)

Jérome Loicq (Sart Tilman B52)

Serge Habraken (Sart Tilman B52)

Jean Paul Collette (Sart Tilman B52)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/s7112846
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Publication Year
2007
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
11
Volume number
7
Pages (from-to)
2846-2859

Abstract

Quantitative Accelerated Life Testing (QALT) is a solution for assessing the reliability of Micro Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS). A procedure for QALT is shown in this paper and an attempt to assess the reliability level for a batch of MEMS accelerometers is reported. The testing plan is application-driven and contains combined tests: thermal (high temperature) and mechanical stress. Two variants of mechanical stress are used: vibration (at a fixed frequency) and tilting. Original equipment for testing at tilting and high temperature is used. Tilting is appropriate as application-driven stress, because the tilt movement is a natural environment for devices used for automotive and aerospace applications. Also, tilting is used by MEMS accelerometers for anti-theft systems. The test results demonstrated the excellent reliability of the studied devices, the failure rate in the "worst case" being smaller than 10-7h-1.

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