Design and fabrication of an innovative three-axis Hall sensor

•A new type of 3D Hall sensor for magnetic field measurements was designed and a prototype was fabricated.•The sensor consists of six specially designed and assembled 1D Hall sensors to form a miniature sub-mm active volume.•Ability for precise magnetic field measurements at the same point at the sa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sensors and actuators. A. Physical. 2016-01, Vol.237, p.62-71
Hauptverfasser: Wouters, C., Vranković, V., Rössler, C., Sidorov, S., Ensslin, K., Wegscheider, W., Hierold, C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A new type of 3D Hall sensor for magnetic field measurements was designed and a prototype was fabricated.•The sensor consists of six specially designed and assembled 1D Hall sensors to form a miniature sub-mm active volume.•Ability for precise magnetic field measurements at the same point at the same time.•Planar Hall voltage reduction by more than 35 times. The measurement of all three components of a magnetic field, simultaneously to high precision with Hall sensors, remains a challenge. Given the high precision of state-of-the-art conventional uniaxial Hall sensors, this is disappointing. Currently, three-axis Hall sensors suffer from either, or a combination, of the following: large spatial distribution between active areas; high signal noise; cross-sensitivity between measurement axes due to angular errors or the planar Hall effect; the inability to measure at a single point in space and time. A new type of three-axis Hall sensor is proposed, consisting of three sets of uniaxial Hall sensors in a small active volume. The feasibility of the proposed sensor has been proven in a prototype with an active volume as small as 200μm×200μm×200μm. Due to its unique configuration, the new sensor addresses current three-axis Hall sensor limitations: it provides a high spatial resolution of 30μm×30μm×1μm for each field component; full field vector measurements practically at a single point in space and time; and a reduction of the planar Hall effect by a factor of 35. Angular errors between the individual Hall sensors in the prototype lie between 0.1° and 0.5°, above the tolerable error for non-corrected measurements. However, once understood they can be taken into account. With proper calibration, this type of three-axis Hall sensor has great potential for high-accuracy three-axis magnetic field measurements and is particularly suitable for field mapping of magnets.
ISSN:0924-4247
1873-3069
DOI:10.1016/j.sna.2015.11.022