Title of Invention

MAGNETIC 3D SENSOR CALIBRATABLE DURING MEASUREMENT OPERATION

Abstract A magnetic field sensor (100) calibratable during measurement operation for detecting first, second, and third spatial components Bz, By and Bx of a magnetic field at a reference point (101), wherein the magnetic field has first, second, and third measurement field components BMz, BMy and BMx, and first, second, and third calibration field components BKz, BKy, and BKx. The magnetic field sensor (100) comprises a first sensor element arrangement (102) for detecting the first magnetic field component Bz having a first measurement field component BMz and a first calibration field component BKz with respect to a first spatial axis z at the reference point (101), a second sensor element arrangement (104) for detecting the second magnetic field component By having a second measurement field component BMy and a second calibration field component BKy with respect to a second spatial axis y at the reference point (101) and a third sensor element arrangement (106) for detecting the third magnetic field component Bx having a third measurement field component BMx and a third calibration field component BKx with respect to a third spatial axis x at the reference point (101). Further, the magnetic field sensor (100) comprises an excitation line (108) arranged such with respect to the first (102), second (104), and third sensor element arrangements (106) that when impressing a predetermined current into the excitation line (108), a first predetermined calibration field component BKz with respect to the first spatial axis x in the first sensor element arrangement (102) is generated, a second predetermined calibration field component BKy with respect to the second spatial axis y in the second sensor element arrangement (104) is generated, and a third predetermined calibration field component BKx with respect to the third spatial axis x in the third element arrangement (106) is generated, wherein the three spatial axes z, y, and x run along linearly independent position vectors.
Full Text MAGNETIC 3D SENSOR CALIBRATABLE DURING MEASUREMENT
OPERATION
Description
The present invention relates to Hall sensors for detecting
spatial components of a magnetic field at a reference
point, as well as to calibration and measurement methods
used therein.
Apart from measuring magnetic fields with regard to amount
and direction, Hall sensor elements based on the Hall-
Effect are frequently used in the art, for contactless
touchless signal generators for wearless detection of the
position of switches or actuators. A further possible field
of application is current measurement, wherein a Hall
sensor element is positioned close to a conductive trace
and measures the current in the conductive trace in a
contactless manner by detecting the magnetic field
generated by the current in the conductive trace. In
practical application, Hall sensor elements have
particularly shown to be useful due to their relatively
strong insensitivity against outside influences, such as
contamination, etc.
In the art, both the so-called horizontal or lateral Hall
sensor elements and vertical sensor elements are known,
wherein Fig. 9a exemplarily shows a horizontal Hall sensor
element and Fig. 9b a vertical Hall sensor element
according to the prior art.
Generally, a Hall sensor element consists of a
semiconductor die having four contact terminals provided
for electrical connection to an external control circuit.
Of the four contact terminals of a Hall sensor element, two
contact terminals are provided for operating current
impression by an active semiconductor region, while the
other two contact terminals are provided for detecting the

Hall voltage. If the operating current-carrying
semiconductor die is exposed to a magnetic field having the
induction/?, a deviation of the current paths results,
which is caused by the "Lorentz force" acting on the moving
charge carriers in the magnetic field. The Hall voltage
results perpendicular to the direction of the current flow
and perpendicular to the applied magnetic field in the
active semiconductor region.
As basically shown in Fig. 9a, a horizontal Hall sensor
element 900 according to the prior art generally consists
of an n-doped semiconductor region 902 on a p-doped
semiconductor substrate 904. A Hall sensor element arranged
in parallel to a chip surface (x-y-Level) is referred to as
horizontal.
The n-doped active region 902 is normally connected to an
external control or evaluation logic, respectively, via
four contact electrodes 906a-d arranged in the active
region 902 in opposing pairs. For reasons of clarity, the
control or evaluation logic, respectively, is not
illustrated in Fig. 9. The four contact electrodes 906a-d
are subdivided into two opposing control current contact
electrodes 906a and 906c, which are provided for generating
a current flow IH through the active region 902, and
further into two opposing voltage tapping contact
electrodes 906b and 906d, which are provided for tapping a
Hall voltage UH, which occurs with an applied magnetic
field B perpendicular to the current flow in the active
region 910 and the applied magnetic field, as a sensor
signal. By impressing the current flow IH between different
contact electrodes and correspondingly tapping the Hall
voltage UH at the other contact electrodes perpendicular to
the current flow, compensation methods can be implemented,
which allow the compensation of tolerances occurring in the
Hall sensors, for example, due to production tolerances,
etc, across several measurement cycles.

As can be seen from the horizontal Hall sensor element 900
illustrated in Fig. 9a, the active region is defined
between the contact terminals 906a-d, such that the active
region has an effective length L and an effective width W.
The horizontal Hall sensor 900 illustrated in Fig. 9a can
be produced relatively easily with conventional CMOS-
processes (CMOS = Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor)
for producing semiconductor structures.
Further, apart from the horizontal Hall sensor elements,
implementations of the so-called vertical Hall sensor
arrangements are known in the prior art, which also allow
the usage of the standard semiconductor production
technologies, for example, CMOS-processes. One example of a
vertical Hall sensor element 920 is basically illustrated
in Fig. 9b, wherein vertical means a level perpendicular to
the level of the chip surface (X-Y-level). In the vertical
Hall sensor element 920 illustrated in Fig. 9b, the
preferably n-doped active semiconductor region 922 extends
in the form of a well in a p-doped semiconductor substrate
924, wherein the active semiconductor region 922 has a
depth T. As illustrated in Fig. 9b, the vertical Hall
sensor element has three contact regions 926a-c, which are
bordering on the main surface of the semiconductor
substrate 924, wherein the contact terminals 926a-c are all
within the active semiconductor region 922. Due to the
three contact regions, this variation of vertical Hall
sensor elements is also called 3-pin sensor.
Thus, the vertical Hall sensor element 920 illustrated in
Fig. 9b has three contact regions 926a-c along the main
surface of the active semiconductor region 922, wherein the
contact region 926a is connected to contact terminal A, the
contact region 926b is connected to contact terminal B, and
wherein the contact region 926c is connected to a contact
terminal C. If a voltage is applied between the two contact
terminals A and C, a current flow IH through the active
semiconductor region 922 results, and a Hall voltage UH,

which is perpendicular to the current flow IH and the
magnetic field B, can be measured at the contact terminal
B. The effective regions of the active semiconductor
regions 922 are predetermined by the depth T of the active
semiconductor region 922 and the length L according to the
distance between the current feeding contact electrodes
926a and 926c.
Horizontal and vertical Hall sensors, as well as the
methods for reducing offsets resulting from device
tolerances, such as contaminations, asymmetries,
piezoelectric effects, aging effects, etc, for example the
spinning current method, are already known in literature,
e.g. R. S. Popovic, „Hall Effect Devices, Magnetic Sensors
and Characterization of Semiconductors", Adam Hilger, 1991,
ISBN 0-7503-0096-5. Vertical sensors operated by spinning-
current frequently consist of two or four individual
sensors, as it is for example described in DE 101 50 955
and DE 101 50 950.
Further, apart from the variation of the 3-pin vertical
Hall sensor elements, there are so-called 5-pin vertical
Hall sensor elements, which are also described in DE 101 50
955 and De 101 50 950. In the 5-pin Hall sensor elements
there is also the possibility of performing a measurement
compensated by tolerances of the individual devices with a
compensation method extending across several measurement
phases, for example, a spinning current method could be
used here as well.
The spinning current technique consists of continuously
cyclically rotating the measurement direction for detecting
the Hall voltage at the Hall sensor element with a certain
clock frequency, for example by 90°, and to sum it across
all measurement signals of a full rotation by 360°. Thus,
in a Hall sensor element having four contact regions, two
of which are arranged in pairs, each of the contact pairs
is used both as control current contact regions for current

feeding and as measurement contact regions for tapping the
Hall signal depending on the spinning current phase. Thus,
in a spinning current phase or in a spinning current cycle,
respectively, the operating current (control current IH)
flows between two associated contact regions, wherein the
Hall voltage is tapped at the two other contact regions
associated to each other.
In the next cycle, the measurement direction is rotated
further by 90°, so that the contact regions used for
tapping the Hall voltage in the previous cycle are now used
for feeding the control current. By summation across all
four cycles or phases, respectively, offset voltages caused
by production or material approximately cancel each other
out, such that only the actually magnetic field dependent
portions of the signals remain. This process can also be
applied to a larger number of contact pairs, wherein, for
example, with four contact pairs (having eight contact
regions) the spinning current phases are cyclically rotated
by 45°, in order to sum up all measurement signals across a
full rotation by 360°.
In horizontal Hall sensors, four sensors are also
frequently used, wherein, with an appropriate arrangement,
the offset can additionally be heavily reduced by spatial
spinning current operation, see e.g. DE 199 43 128.
If a magnetic field is to be measured for several spatial
directions, mostly separate Hall sensor elements are used.
The usage of separate sensors, for example for detecting
the three spatial directions of a magnetic field, generally
causes the problem that the magnetic field to be measured
is not measured at one point, but at three different
points. Fig. 10 illustrates this aspect, wherein Fig. 10
shows three Hall sensors 1002, 1004, and 1006. The first
Hall sensor 1002 is provided for detecting a y-spatial
component, the second Hall sensor 1004 for detecting a z-
spatial component, and the third Hall sensor 1006 for

detecting an x-spatial component. The individual sensors
1002, 1004, and 1006 measure the corresponding spatial
components of a magnetic field approximately at the
respective centers of the individual sensors.
An individual sensor can again consist of several Hall
sensor elements. Fig. 10 shows exemplarily three individual
sensors having four Hall sensor elements each, wherein in
Fig. 10 exemplarily a horizontal Hall sensor 1004 is
assumed, which detects a z-component of the magnetic field
to be measured, and a vertical Hall sensor 1002 and 1006
each for the y- or x-component of the magnetic field to be
measured. The arrangement for detecting the spatial
magnetic field components, exemplarily illustrated in Fig.
10, has the problem that the magnetic field cannot be
measured at one point, but at the respective centers of the
individual sensors. This inevitably causes a corruption,
since no exact evaluation of the magnetic field is possible
based on the magnetic field components of the magnetic
field sensors detected at different positions.
A further aspect of the detection and evaluation of the
magnetic fields by Hall sensor elements is the calibration
of the individual elements. According to the prior art,
Hall sensor elements are mostly provided with so-called
excitation lines, which allow the generation of a defined
magnetic field at the measurement point of an individual
sensor, for subsequently obtaining calibration of the
sensor by comparing or associating the measured Hall
voltage to the defined magnetic field.
Excitation conductors allow the generation of an artificial
magnetic field at a Hall sensor, which allows a simple
wafer test, i.e. a test directly on the substrate as well
as a self-test and a sensitivity calibration during
operation, see Janez Trontelj, 'Optimization of Integrated
Magnetic Sensor by Mixed Signal Processing, Proceedings of
the 16th IEEE Vol. 1. This is particularly interesting in

detecting an x-spatial component. The individual sensors
1002, 1004, and 1006 measure the corresponding spatial
components of a magnetic field approximately at the
respective centers of the individual sensors.
An individual sensor can again consist of several Hall
sensor elements. Fig. 10 shows exemplarily three individual
sensors having four Hall sensor elements each, wherein in
Fig. 10 exemplarily a horizontal Hall sensor 1004 is
assumed, which detects a z-component of the magnetic field
to be measured, and a vertical Hall sensor 1002 and 1006
each for the y- or x-component of the magnetic field to be
measured. The arrangement for detecting the spatial
magnetic field components, exemplarily illustrated in Fig.
10, has the problem that the magnetic field cannot be
measured at one point, but at the respective centers of the
individual sensors. This inevitably causes a corruption,
since no exact evaluation of the magnetic field is possible
based on the magnetic field components of the magnetic
field sensors detected at different positions.
A further aspect of the detection and evaluation of the
magnetic fields by Hall sensor elements is the calibration
of the individual elements. According to the prior art,
Hall sensor elements are mostly provided with so-called
excitation lines, which allow the generation of a defined
magnetic field at the measurement point of an individual
sensor, for subsequently obtaining calibration of the
sensor by comparing or associating the measured Hall
voltage to the defined magnetic field.
Excitation conductors allow the generation of an artificial
magnetic field at a Hall sensor, which allows a simple
wafer test, i.e. a test directly on the substrate as well
as a self-test and a sensitivity calibration during
operation, see Janez Trontelj, "Optimization of Integrated
Magnetic Sensor by Mixed Signal Processing, Proceedings of
the 16th IEEE Vol. 1. This is particularly interesting in

security critical areas, e.g. in the automobile industry or
also in medical technology, since self-monitoring of the
sensors is possible during operation.
If, for example, several individual sensors are used for
detecting the spatial components of a magnetic field, as
exemplarily shown in Fig. 10, every individual sensor
requires a respective excitation line for calibration, and
the individual sensors are further calibrated individually.
It follows that the calibration effort scales with the
number of individual sensor elements, and, in the case of
spatially detecting three magnetic field components, the
same is increased three times compared to the calibration
effort of an individual sensor.
One approach for allowing an evaluation of a magnetic
field, i.e. a measurement at one point, is a 3D sensor of
the Ecole Polytechnique Federal Lausanne EPFL, cf. C.
Schott, R. S. Popovic, „Integrated 3D Hall Magnetic Field
Sensor", Transducers '99, June 7-10, Sensai, Japan, VOL. 1,
PP. 168-171, 1999. Fig. 11 schematically shows such a Hall
sensor 1100, which is implemented on a semiconductor
substrate 1102. First, the 3D sensor has four contact areas
1104a-d, across which currents can be impressed in the
semiconductor substrate 1102. Further, the 3D sensor has
four measurement contact areas 106a-d, via which the
different magnetic components can be detected. A wiring
1110 is illustrated on the right-hand side of Fig. 11. The
shown wiring composed of four operational amplifiers 1112a-
d evaluates the Hall voltages proportional to the
individual magnetic field components and outputs the
respective components at the terminals 1114a-c in the form
of signals Vx, Vy, and Vz.
The illustrated sensor has the problem that the same can
only be calibrated by a defined externally generated
magnetic field and has no individual excitation line.
Further, due to its structure and its mode of operation,

this sensor cannot be operated with the compensation
method, e.g. spinning current method. Further, another
problem of the structure shown in Fig. 11 is that such a
semiconductor device has offset voltages due to
contamination of the semiconductor material, asymmetries in
contacting, variances in the crystal structure, etc., which
cannot be suppressed by a respective spinning-current
suitable compensation wiring. Thus, the sensor does measure
magnetic field components at the focused point, but has a
high offset and is thus only suitable for precise
measurements in a limited manner. Fig. 12 shows a 3D sensor
suitable for compensation (spinning-current), which detects
spatial magnetic field components at a measurement point,
and which is discussed by Enrico Schurig in ,,Highly
Sensitive Vertical Hall Sensors in CMOS Technology",
Hartung-Gorre Verlag Konstanz, 2005, Reprinted from EPFL
Thesis N° 3134 (2004), ISSN 1438-0609, ISBN 3-86628-023-8
WW 185 ff. The top part of Fig. 12 shows the 3D sensor of
Fig. 10 consisting of three individual sensors. The upper
part of Fig. 12 shows the three separate individual sensors
1002, 1004, and 1006 for detecting the spatial magnetic
field components. The bottom part of Fig. 12 shows an
alternative arrangement of the individual sensors.

In this arrangement, the sensor 1004 remains unaltered,
since the measurement point of the sensor 1004 is in the
center of the arrangement 1200 in Fig. 12, further, the two
individual sensors 1002 and 1006 consist of individual
elements that can be separated. The sensor 1002 is now
subdivided into two sensor parts 1202a and 1202b and
arranged symmetrically around the center of the sensor
element 1004. An analog method is performed with the sensor
1006, such that the same is also divided into two sensor
parts 1206a and 1206b that are arranged symmetrically
around the center of the sensor elements 1004, along the
respective spatial axis. Due to the symmetrical arrangement
of the individual sensor elements, the magnetic field is
detected at one point, which lies in the geometrical center
of the arrangement. One disadvantage of this arrangement is
that the sensor can only be calibrated across several
excitation lines. In the following, the arrangement 1200 in
the bottom part of Fig. 12 will be referred to as pixel
cell without calibration.
Dragana R. Popvic et al. describes in "Three-Axis
Teslameter with Integrated Hall Probe Free from the Planar
Hall Effect" a three-dimensional Hall Sensor integrated in
a semiconductor chip. Further, a wiring of the magnetic
field sensor is described, which allows to compensate
measurement tolerances caused, for example, by temperature
drift.
EP 1 637 898 Al discloses a one-dimensional magnetic field
sensor calibratable via a reference field. Thereby, a
reference field generator generates a magnetic alternating
field differing significantly in frequency from a
measurement field. A downstream signal processing allows a
calibration of the sensor or a compensation of temperature
effects, respectively, by separating the measurement or
reference field components, respectively, in the frequency
domain. A horizontal magnetic field sensor, a so-called
Hall die, is used as magnetic field sensor.

This object is solved by a magnetic field sensor
calibratable during measurement operation according to
claim 1 and a method for calibrating a magnetic field
sensor during a measurement operation according to claim
11.
The present invention provides a magnetic field sensor
calibratable during a measurement operation for detecting
first, second, and third spatial components Bz, By, and Bx
of a magnetic field at a reference point, wherein the
magnetic field has first, second, and third measurement
field components BM2, BMy, BMx and first, second and third
calibration field components BKz, BKy, and BKx, comprising a
first sensor element arrangement for detecting the first
magnetic field component Bz having a first measurement
field component BMz and a first calibration field component
BKz with respect to a first spatial axis z at the reference
point. Further, the magnetic field sensor comprises a
second sensor element arrangement for detecting the second
magnetic field component By having a second measurement
field component BMy and a second calibration field
component BKy, with respect to a second spatial axis y at

reference point, and a third sensor element arrangement for
detecting the third magnetic field component Bx, having a
third measurement field component BMx and a third
calibration field component BKx, with respect to a third
spatial axis x at the reference point. Further, the
magnetic field sensor has an excitation line, which is
arranged such with respect to the first, second and third
sensor element arrangements, that when impressing a
predetermined current into the excitation line, a first
predetermined calibration field component BKz with respect
to the first spatial axis z in the first sensor element
arrangement is generated, a second predetermined
calibration field component BKy with respect to the second
spatial axis y in the second sensor element arrangement is
generated, and a third predetermined calibration field
component BKx with respect to the third spatial axis x in
the third sensor element arrangement is generated, wherein
the three spatial axes z, y, x run along linearly
independent position vectors.
The object is further solved by a method for calibrating a
magnetic field sensor during measurement operation by
detecting first, second, and third spatial components Bz,
By, and Bx of a magnetic field at a reference point,
wherein the magnetic field has first, second, and third
measurement field components BMz, BMy, and BMx and a first,
second, and a third calibration field component BKz, BKy,
and BKx, comprising a step of detecting the first magnetic
field component Bx having a first measurement field
component BMz and a first calibration field component BKz,
with respect to the first spatial axis z at the reference
point, and of detecting the second magnetic field component
By, having a second measurement field component BMy and a
second calibration field component BKy, with respect to the
second spatial axis y at the reference point. The method
further comprises a step of detecting the third magnetic
field component Bx, having a third measurement field
component BMx and a third calibration field component BKx,

with respect to the third spatial axis x at the referent
point, and a step of generating the first, second, and
third calibration field components Bkz, BKy, and BKx with
respect to the first, second and third spatial axes z, y,
and x, wherein the first, second and third spatial axes
runs along linearly independent position vectors.
The present invention is based on the knowledge that a
spatial arrangement of different magnetic field sensors,
preferably symmetrically in pairs, which detect the
components of a magnetic field at one point, and which can
be operated with a compensation method, such as the
spinning-current-method, offers the possibility to
calibrate the same during operation by applying a
calibration field caused by a single excitation line. The
inventive magnetic field sensor can be simultaneously in a
measurement field and a calibration field, and can be
operated in a measurement method consisting of several
measurement phases, preferably spinning-current.
A first combination of the measurement results of the
individual phases allows the extraction of a measurement
component originating from the magnetic field to be
measured, and in which both components originating from the
calibration field and components originating from device
tolerances are substantially eliminated. Further, a second
combination of the measurement results of the individual
measurement phases allows the extraction of a measurement
component originating from the calibration field and in
which components of the magnetic field to be measured are
substantially eliminated.
The inventive magnetic field sensor and the inventive
method have the advantage that no additional measurement
phases are required for calibration when using conventional
compensation methods, such as the spinning current method.

An excitation line, which generates calibration field
components in all spatial directions due to its geometry is
powered, i.e. the calibration field is directed such that
the two combinations of the measurement results from the
individual measurement phases are enabled in the described
way. Thus, generation and direction of the calibration
field is adapted to the measurement phases of the
compensation method or integrated in the same,
respectively. This has the advantage that the arrangement
needs only a single excitation line, which results in the
inventive magnetic field sensor providing simple and
uncomplicated test options. The excitation lines of several
inventive magnetic field sensors can, for example, be
cascaded and thus be tested together in an on-wafer-test.
It is a further advantage of the inventive magnetic field
sensor and method that the magnetic field sensor can be
calibrated during operation and that no additional hardware
or time effort is required. For example, the measurement
results of the individual measurement phases can be
combined or evaluated, respectively, by a micro-controller
or a processor, so that the additional effort is limited to
one additional computation operation. The measurement field
components and the calibration field components can each be
provided simultaneously and in a compensated manner. This
is particularly advantageous in security critical
applications, for example, such as in the automobile
industry or medical technology, since the magnetic field
sensor can be continuously calibrated or adjusted,
respectively, and its functionality can simultaneously be
monitored without having to make compromises with regard to
the quality or quantity of a measurement.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be discussed
below with reference to the accompanying drawings. They
show:

Fig. 1 a schematic arrangement of Hall sensor elements
according to an embodiment of the magnetic field
sensor calibratable during measurement operation
according to the present invention;
Fig. 2 a sectional view with schematic magnetic field
lines for illustrating the calibration method in
the embodiment of the inventive magnetic field
sensor;
Fig. 3 a schematic arrangement of Hall sensor elements
according to a further inventive embodiment;
Fig. 4a-d schematic wirings and equivalent diagrams of Hall
sensor elements in an embodiment for illustrating
the inventive compensation method;
Fig. 5 an alternative arrangement of the Hall sensor
elements according to a further embodiment of the
inventive magnetic field sensor;
Fig. 6 a schematic arrangement of the Hall sensor
elements according to a further embodiment for
illustrating the calibration method;
Fig. 7 a schematic arrangement for illustrating the
calibration method according to a further
embodiment;
Fig. 8 an embodiment of an arrangement of several sensor
elements for detecting a spatial magnetic field
component;
Fig. 9a the schematic structure of a horizontal Hall
sensor element according to the prior art;
Fig. 9b the schematic structure of a vertical Hall sensor
element according to the prior art;

Fig. 10 a schematic arrangement of individual sensors for
spatially detecting magnetic field components
according to the prior art;
Fig. 11 an alternative 3D sensor for detecting the spatial
components of a magnetic field according to the
prior art; and
Fig. 12 a schematic arrangement of individual Hall sensor
elements for detecting a spatial magnetic field at
one point.
With regard to the following discussion, it should be
considered that equal or similar functional elements in the
different embodiments have the same reference numbers and
are thus interchangeable in the different embodiments
illustrated below.
The inventive structure of a magnetic field sensor 100
calibratable during operation according to a first
embodiment will be discussed with reference to Fig. 1. Fig.
1 shows an embodiment of an inventive magnetic field sensor
100 for detecting a magnetic field at a reference point
101. Further, Fig. 1 shows a first sensor element
arrangement 102, a second sensor element arrangement 104,
and a third sensor element arrangement 106. Further, an
excitation line 108 is illustrated in Fig. 1.
The magnetic field sensor can, for example, be implemented
on a substrate whose main surface runs parallel to the x-y-
level of the arrangement, wherein the z-component runs
perpendicular thereto. Correspondingly, the magnetic field
is divided into three components Bz, By and Bx, each
composed of a measurement field component BMz, BMy and BMk,
and a calibration field component BKz, BKy and BKx.

As illustrated in Fig. 1, for detecting the first, second,
and third spatial components Bz, By and Bx of a magnetic
field with the flow density B at a reference point 101,
the magnetic field sensor 100 comprises the first sensor
element arrangement 102 for detecting the first magnetic
field component Bz having the first measurement field
component BMz and a first calibration field component BKz
with respect to a first spatial axis z at the reference
point 101. In one embodiment, the sensor element
arrangement 102 is preferably realized by a horizontal Hall
sensor element whose measurement point is at the reference
point 101.
Further, the magnetic field sensor 100 comprises the second
sensor element arrangement 104 for detecting the second
magnetic field component By having the second measurement
field component BMy and the second calibration field
component BKy with respect to the second spatial axis y at
the reference point 101. In one embodiment, the sensor
element arrangement 104 is preferably realized by an
arrangement of several vertical Hall sensor elements that
are arranged in pairs symmetrical to the reference point
101. Further, the magnetic field sensor 100 comprises the
third sensor element arrangement 106 for detecting the
third magnetic field component Bx having the third
measurement field component BMx and the third calibration
field component BKx with respect to the third spatial axis
x at the reference point 101. In one embodiment, the sensor
element arrangement 106 is preferably realized by an
arrangement of several vertical Hall sensor elements that
are arranged in pairs symmetrical to the reference point
101.
The excitation line 108 of the magnetic field sensor 100 is
preferably arranged with respect to the first 102, second
104, and third 106 sensor arrangements such that when
impressing a predetermined current into the excitation line
108, the first predetermined calibration field component

BKz with respect to the first spatial axis z in the first
sensor element arrangement 102 is generated, the second
predetermined calibration field component BKy with respect
to the second spatial axis y in the second sensor element
arrangement 104 is generated, and the third predetermined
calibration field component BKx with respect to the third
spatial axis x in the third sensor element arrangement 106
is generated, wherein the three spatial axes z, y, and x
run along linearly independent position vectors.
In the embodiment of Fig. 1, the position vectors of the
three spatial axes z, y, and x run orthogonally, and the
three sensor element arrangements detect the magnetic field
according to its orthogonal components Bz=BMz + BKz, By=BMy+BKy
und Bx=BMx+BKx. For simplicity reasons, it is assumed here
and in the following description that the magnetic field is
detected by orthogonally arranged sensor element
arrangements according to its components Bz, By, and Bx. In
other embodiments of the present invention, the sensor
elements can be basically arranged in any direction, as
long as they can fully detect the spatial components of the
measurement field.
For illustrating the generation of the calibration field
components BKz, BKy, and BKx, Fig. 2 shows a cross-section of
the magnetic field sensor 100. In the cross-section
illustrated in Fig. 2, the first sensor element arrangement
102 can be seen in the center, as well as a cross-section
through the second sensor element arrangement 106, the
cross-sections of which can each be seen to the left and
right of the first sensor element arrangement 102. Above
the second sensor element arrangement 106, with respect to
the main surface (x-y-level) of the substrate, runs the
excitation line 108. The geometry of the excitation line
108, i.e. its length and dimensions, are selected such that
due to a known impressed current, a predetermined magnetic
calibration flow density BKz, BKy, and BKx is present that
can be attributed to the excitation line 108. The

calibration flow density can be adjusted in a defined
manner by the current IE and the geometry or the
properties, respectively, of the excitation line 108, i.e.
its height, width, thickness, material, relative position,
etc., and the sensor element arrangement can be calibrated
by determining and associating the associated Hall voltage.
With the known magnetic calibration flow densities, the
Hall voltages generated thereby can be associated and thus
the magnetic field sensor can become calibratable.
In the illustrated embodiment, it is assumed that a current
It flows through the excitation line, wherein in the cross-
section illustrated in Fig. 2, the current is to flow into
the arrangement through the right excitation line 108, and
is to flow out again on the left side through the
excitation line 108. The current flowing through the
excitation line 108 generates a magnetic field, whose field
lines are indicated by concentric circles 200 around the
excitation line 108 in Fig. 2. It can be seen that the
sensor element arrangement 102 is interspersed by all
magnetic field lines 200 in the same direction. Further, it
can be seen that the cross-sections of the sensor element
arrangement illustrated in Fig. 2 are interspersed in the
opposite sense by the magnetic field lines 200.
Analogously, this applies for the third sensor element
arrangement 104, which is not shown in Fig. 2 for clarity
reasons, whose constellation is equivalent to the sensor
element arrangement 106. The pattern of the field lines
200, as well as the orientation of the field lines 200 by
which they intersperse the individual sensor element
arrangements, illustrates that a calibration of the sensor
element arrangement 102 is possible with the magnetic field
generated by the excitation line 108, while the calibration
of the second and third sensor element arrangements 104 and
106 requires compensation of the oppositely acting field
lines.

It can be seen from Fig. 2 that calibration of the magnetic
field sensor and detection of the measurement field can
take place in different operating phases, during which the
excitation current can assume different polarities
(directions) and the sensor element arrangements
alternately provide Hall voltages. The first 102, second
104, and third sensor element arrangements 106 can be
operated in different operating phases, wherein in every
operating phase each of the first 102, second 104, and
third sensor element arrangements 106 provides a
measurement signal attributed to the operating phase,
wherein the measurement signals attributed to the operating
phases can be combined to a first total measurement value
by a first linear combination, such that the influence of
the measurement field components is reduced in the first
total measurement value, or the measurement signals
attributed to the operating phase can be combined to a
second total measurement value by a second linear
combination, such that the influence of the calibration
field component is reduced in the second total measurement
value. The influence of the measurement field component or
the calibration field component, respectively, in the first
or second total measurement value, respectively, can be
less than 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of the first or second total
measurement value. The operating phases and the detection
of the different calibration field or measurement field
components, respectively, will be discussed below with
reference to a further preferred embodiment and with
reference to Figs. 3 and 4.
For this reason, a further preferred embodiment of the
present invention is illustrated in Fig. 3. Fig. 3 shows a
preferred embodiment of the inventive magnetic field sensor
100. Analogously, the magnetic field sensor 100 comprises a
first sensor element arrangement 102 around a reference
point 101, a second sensor element arrangement 104, and a
third sensor element arrangement 106. Further, the magnetic
field sensor 100 comprises an excitation line 108. In the

arrangement shown in Fig. 3, the sensor element
arrangements 104 and 106 each have four individual sensor
elements that are each arranged in pairs 104ab and 104cd,
or 106ab and 106cd, respectively, symmetrical with respect
to the reference point 101.
In the embodiment illustrated in Fig. 3, the sensor element
arrangements 104 and 106 can be realized, for example, by
an arrangement of vertical Hall sensor elements. The second
sensor element arrangement 104 in the embodiment in Fig. 3
is composed of four individual sensor elements 104a-d. In
the same manner, the third sensor element arrangement 106
is composed of four preferably equal sensor elements 106a-
d. The usage of individual sensor elements, such as 104a-d
and 106a-d allows wiring the individual elements in a
compensation wiring.
Fig. 4 illustrates an inventive wiring of the vertical
individual elements and discusses the principle of a
compensation concept. Fig. 4aI shows the wiring of four
vertical Hall sensor elements, for example, in the second
sensor element arrangement 104 with elements 104a-d. In the
arrangement shown in Fig. 4aI, vertical 3-pin hole sensor
elements are used, which are preferably wired on one axis
according to Fig. 3. Fig. 4aI shows two vertical Hall
sensors element pairs 104ab and 104cd, wherein the two
sensor elements 104a and 104b form the sensor element pair
104ab, and the two sensor elements 104c and 104d form the
sensor element pair 104cd. In the considered embodiment,
one vertical Hall sensor element pair each forms a sensor
for detecting a magnetic field component that is arranged
symmetrically around the reference point 101 according to
Fig. 3. The sensor element pair 104ab and 104cd detects,
for example, the By component of the magnetic field.
The two vertical Hall sensor element pairs 104ab and 104cd
are identically structured such that that the structure can
be discussed below based on the vertical Hall sensor

element pair 104ab. The same applies for the Hall sensor
element pairs 106ab and 106cd that then detect, for
example, the Bx component of the magnetic field. The
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104ab consists of two
vertical Hall sensor elements 104a and 104b. Preferably,
every vertical Hall sensor element has three contact areas,
wherein in the arrangement of the embodiment considered
here, the external contacts 115 and 116, as well as the
internal contacts 117 and 118 are electrically coupled to
each other, and the contacts 19 and 120 are implemented for
detecting the Hall voltage. Overall, as shown in Fig. 4aI,
four contact terminals T0-T3 result, by which the two
sensor element arrangements 104ab and 104cd are connected
in parallel. If a current IH is impressed between the
contact terminals TO and T2, a Hall voltage UH can be
measured between the contact terminals T1 and T3 when a
magnetic field with the respective components is present,
as illustrated in Fig. 4aI.
The structure of the second vertical Hall sensor element
pair 104cd is identical. Only the contact terminals T0-T3
are shifted by one position with respect to the vertical
Hall sensor element pair 104ab, i.e. contacts 115 and 116
are coupled to the terminal T1, contacts 117 and 118 are
coupled to terminal T3, contact 119 is coupled to terminal
T2, and contact 120 is coupled to terminal T4.
If a current is impressed between the contact terminals TO
and T2 in the vertical Hall sensor element pair 104cd, the
arrangement functions as voltage divider and no Hall
voltage can be measured between the terminals T1 and T3. A
bridge voltage is only measureable between T1 and T3 when
device tolerances or inhomogenities, etc. occur. The same
applies for the sensor element pair 106ab and 106cd.
Fig. 4aII shows an electrical equivalent diagram of the
Hall sensor element pair arrangement of Fig. 4aI. In Fig.
4aI, for illustrative purposes, the respective ohmic

resistances between the individual contact terminals TO and
T3 are shown by dotted lines. With regard to the first
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104ab, a resistance of
R11 results between the contact area 115 and the contact
area 119 connected to the contact terminal T1, a resistance
of R12 between the contact terminal Tl and the contact area
117, a resistance of R13 between the contact area 118 and
the contact area connected to the contact terminal T3, and
a resistance of R14 between the contact area connected to
the contact area T3 and the contact area 116. Analogously,
the equivalent resistors for the vertical Hall sensor
element pair 104cd are designated by R2i, R22, R23, and R24.
Fig. 4aII shows the electric equivalent diagram with a
parallel connection of the respective terminals T0-T3 of
the sensor element pairs 104ab and 104cd, which corresponds
to a Wheatstone-bridge. According to the wiring illustrated
in Fig. 4aI and with the assumption that no magnetic field
is present and a voltage U is applied between the contact
terminals TO and T2, so that a current I is impressed, a
voltage of

results between the contact terminals Tl and T3 during a
first measurement phase, the measurement phase 0.
Fig. 4bI shows the wiring of the two vertical Hall sensor
element pairs 104ab and 104cd during measurement phase 1. A
current is impressed between the contact terminals Tl and
T3 across the voltage U, such that the vertical Hall sensor
element pair 104ab now functions as a voltage divider,
while the vertical Hall sensor element pair 104cd provides
a Hall voltage at the terminals t0, T2.

Fig. 4bII shows the electrical equivalent diagram of the
sensor element arrangement during the measurement phase 1
assuming that no magnetic field is present. For the
measurement phase 1, the following results between the
terminals TO and T2

Analogously, Fig. 4cI shows the arrangement during the
measurement phase 2. A current I is impressed across the
voltage U between the terminals T2 and TO, such that the
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104cd functions as
voltage divider during measurement phase 2, and the
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104ab is operated in
reverse polarity direction with respect to the measurement
phase 0.
Fig. 4cII shows the electrical equivalent diagram, again
assuming that no magnetic field exists. The following
results for this case between the terminals T1 and T3

Fig. 4d1 shows the arrangement of the two vertical Hall
sensor element pairs 104ab and 104a during the measurement
phase 3. During the measurement phase 3, a current I is
impressed between the contact terminals T3 and Tl, such
that the vertical Hall sensor element pair 104ab functions
as voltage divider. Compared to the measurement phase 1,
the vertical Hall sensor element pair 104cd is operated in
reverse polarity direction. Fig. 4dII shows the electrical
equivalent diagram wherein the following results between
the terminals T0 and T2


this means that by adding the measured voltages from the
individual mass measurement phases possible offset voltages
can be compensated. This is also referred to as spinning
current, since the current feeding rotates across the
contact terminals. Thus, with the described method,
deviations resulting from device tolerances, such as
contaminations, asymmetries, piezoelectric effects, aging,
etc. can be compensated. The equations 1 to 6 show that
this is possible for any resistance values, since no
assumptions have been made about specific resistance values
in the sensor elements.
Further, Fig. 4a-d are to illustrate that only one vertical
Hall sensor element pair each is active during one
measurement phase, while the other is switched as voltage
divider. With reference to Fig. 2, this means that during
the individual measurement phases, only one side of the
sensor element arrangement 106 reacts to the magnetic field
lines 200, while the other one functions as voltage divider
independent of the currently applied magnetic field.
Thus, in the embodiment according to Fig. 3, preferably,
vertical 3-pin-Hall sensor element pairs are used for
implementing the second sensor element arrangement 104 and
the third sensor element arrangement 106. The measurement
phases described based on Fig. 4a-d can be performed
independent of the spatial direction of a Hall sensor
element. For using the spinning current method when using
vertical 3-pin sensors, i.e. for operating vertical 3-pin

sensors with a compensation method, two primitive elements
have to be used during operation.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, which
is illustrated in Fig. 3, two vertical 3-pin-Hall sensor
element pairs can be connected in parallel. The same are
always connected such that two of the same provide the Hall-
voltage as a sensor, while the other two function as
voltage dividers and reduce the offset. For example, a
control voltage is applied between the contact terminals TO
and T2 in the measurement phase 0, with reference to Fig.
4aI, this causes the formation of the Hall voltage UH
between the contact terminals T1 and T3 in the vertical
Hall sensor element pair 104ab. The vertical Hall sensor
element pair 104cd whose contacts are shifted by one phase,
operates merely as voltage divider, and makes no
contribution to the Hall voltage. The signal of the
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104cd is only used for
reducing the offset.
During the measurement phase 1, the control voltage is
applied between the contact terminal T1 and T3. This has
the effect that the Hall voltage is now formed at the
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104cd and the vertical
Hall sensor element pair 104ab only function as voltage
divider. The measurement phase 2 is the equivalent of
measurement phase 0, wherein the control voltage is then
applied between the contact terminals T2 and TO. The
vertical Hall sensor element pair 104ab then generates the
Hall voltage, whereas the sensor 2 functions again as
voltage divider. Analogously, the measurement phase 3 is
the equivalent of the measurement phase 1, the control
voltage is applied between the contact terminals T3 and Tl.
Then, the vertical Hall sensor element pair 104ab functions
as voltage divider and the vertical Hall sensor element
pair 104cd generates the Hall voltage.

Preferably, 3-pin-Hall sensors are used for sensors within
the invention. Basically, any other vertical Hall sensors,
e.g. 4-pin, 5-pin, 6-pin, etc. individual sensor elements
implemented as vertical Hall sensors can be used within the
invention. It is only critical that the same can be
operated with different sensitivities in operating phases,
or that the different sensitivities can be generated by
respective modes of operation. Here, both symmetrically
arranged individual sensor elements and symmetrically
arranged wirings of individual sensor elements, as has been
explained exemplarily with regard to the embodiments of:
Fig. 4, are possible. For example, in one embodiment of the
present invention, 5-pin sensors could be used, wherein one
5-pin individual element each realizes an inventive sensor
element arrangement, since 5-pin individual sensor elements
can already be operated both in the spinning current mode
and with different sensitivities. In this embodiment, the
symmetrically arranged 5-pin individual sensor elements are
operated simultaneously with different sensitivity, so that
the oppositely orientated calibration field components do
not fully compensate each other and a calibration field
component and/or a measurement field component can be
extracted. According to the invention, two symmetrically
arranged sensor elements are also suitable for detecting
both a measurement field component and a calibration field
component in different operating phases that can then be
extracted from the individual operating phases by
respective combinations of the measurement amounts. Thus,
such a sensor can also be calibrated during operation.
For simplifying the description of the inventive concept
for detecting spatial components of a magnetic field at a
reference point, as well as the calibration and measurement
method, the present description refers to a realization of
a magnetic field sensor based on vertical 3-pin sensor
elements for detecting the y- and x- components of the
calibration or measurement field, respectively, and to
horizontal sensor elements for detecting the respective z-

components. Basically, the inventive magnetic field sensor
and the inventive method are also possible by other
combinations of different individual sensor elements.
Fig. 5 shows a further embodiment of a magnetic field
sensor 100 according to an alternative embodiment of the
present invention. In Fig. 5, the first sensor element
arrangement 102, the second sensor element arrangement 104
and the third sensor element arrangement 106 are indicated
as dotted lines. Further, Fig. 5 shows the excitation line
108. As has already been discussed with respect to the
previous embodiment, individual elements are connected for
realizing the three sensor element arrangements 102, 104
and 106. Thus, the second sensor element arrangement 104
and the third sensor element arrangement 106 are realized,
for example, by the 3-pin vertical Hall sensor elements and
Hall sensor element pairs discussed with regard to Figs.
4a-d. In Fig. 5, the second sensor element arrangement 104
is realized by the four vertical Hall sensor elements 104a-
d, the third sensor element arrangement 106 by the vertical
Hall sensor elements 106a-d.
The first sensor element arrangement 102, which has so far
been illustrated as realized by a horizontal Hall sensor,
has four individual elements 102a-d in the embodiment
according to Fig. 5. Thus, the magnetic field sensor 100
illustrated in Fig. 5 is a combination of four horizontal
Hall sensors 102a-d and eight preferably vertical 3-pin
Hall sensors 104a-d and 106a-d. In a preferred embodiment,
the measurement levels measured by the respective sensors
are orthogonal to each other, wherein generally the
assumption suffices that the measurement levels of the
individual sensors run along linearly independent position
vectors, so that all spatial magnetic field components can
be detected.
In one embodiment in Fig. 4, four vertical 3-pin-Hall
sensor elements 104a-d and 106a-d are used for every axis

running tangentially to the surface of Fig. 5, wherein all
sensors are arranged symmetrically around a center or
reference point 101. It is assumed that the vertical Hall
sensor elements are connected corresponding to the above
description and that the sensors are operated in a spinning
current operation according to the above described
measurement phases 0 to 3. For explaining the inventive
calibratable magnetic field sensors and the calibration
method in more detail, the excitation line 108 is also
provided with current during the measurement phases.
Fig. 6 again shows the embodiment of a magnetic field
sensor 100 of Fig. 5, wherein, for clarity reasons, only
the reference numbers relevant for discussing the mode of
operation are indicated. In Fig. 6 current flows through
the excitation line 108, and thus a calibration field is
generated. In Fig. 6, an arrow indicating the direction of
the field lines of the calibration field is next to every
vertical Hall sensor element. Further, it is assumed that
two of the vertical 3-pin-Hall sensors within one Hall
sensor element pair, such as the Hall sensor element pair
106c-d in Fig. 6, are operated in a spinning current mode.
Fig. 7 illustrates again the pattern of the magnetic field
lines 200 with regard to the sensor elements 106b, 106d,
102c, and 102d. Excitation with one excitation line does
not seem possible at first, since the generated field acts
on the vertical Hall sensor elements 106b and 106d in a
positive direction at one time, and in a negative direction
at another time. Considering the mode of operation of the
vertical 3-pin Hall sensor element 106a-d and 104a-d in the
spinning current operation, i.e. during the measurement
phases 0 to 3, it becomes clear that during one measurement
phase, one Hall sensor element pair each functions as
voltage divider, and thus detects no magnetic field
component.

Since the two vertical Hall sensor element pairs operated
in spinning current operation are only active alternately
within one sensor element arrangement, it is possible to
use a single excitation line 108. The current in the
excitation line is switched between the individual
measurement phases such that its excitation direction
changes and thus excites the Hall sensor element pairs in
the same direction in the respectively active state. For
the horizontal sensors 102c and 102d, this means that they
are excited in a positive direction in one measurement
phase and in a negative direction in the other measurement
phase. Thus, it is required to consider all four phases of
the spinning current operation such that the complete
sensor becomes operable.
The following table illustrates the control of the
inventive arrangement, wherein in the column control
voltage the terminals of the control current impression are
indicated, in the column Hall tapping the terminals where
the Hall voltage is tapped, in the column excitation the
polarity of the excitation current, in the column Hall
voltage the sign of the Hall voltage, and in the last two
columns the polarities of the calibration field components
of the calibration field:

The excitation line 108 is fed with a positive current in
the measurement phase 0, with a negative current in the
measurement phases 1 and 2 and again with a positive

current in the measurement phase 3. This has the effect
that a Hall voltage can be measured during a running
calibration. For the vertical Hall sensor elements 104a-d
and 106a-d, a change of sign of the excitation line 108
takes place between the measurement phases 0 and 1, such
that the calibration field is applied at the respectively
active vertical Hall sensor elements in the same direction.
Further, with regard to the vertical Hall sensor elements
104a-d and 106a-d, a change of sign of the calibration
field takes place from the measurement phases 0 to 1 to the
measurement phases 2 and 3, which results in the
calibration field components canceling each other out when
adding all four spinning current phases. Since in the case
of adding the four measured Hall voltages UH during the
four measurement phases, the actual Hall voltages are added
in a sign-correct manner, in this process only the portion
that can be attributed to the measurement field remains.
With regard to the horizontal Hall sensor elements 102a-d,
the calibration field is applied to all horizontal Hall
sensor elements in the same direction. This means that with
every change of sign of the current in the excitation line
1208, a change of sign of the respective calibration field
components and the attributed measured voltage takes place.
This again has the effect that during adding all
measurement signals measured in the four spinning current
phases, the portions of the calibration field just cancel
each other out, whereas the portions of the measurement
field overlay in a constructive manner and are thus, in the
ideal case, adjusted for the calibration field. In
practice, a reduction of the calibration field components
to tolerance ranges in the order of less than 10%, 1%, or
0.1% of the total measurement value is possible.
In order to be able to perform calibration during a running
measurement, i.e. when the magnetic field sensor is in a
magnetic field, the same process is applied. With regard to
the vertical Hall sensor elements 104a-d and 106a-d, the

calibration field is applied in a positive direction in the
measurement phases 0 and 1, whereas the calibration field
is applied in a negative direction to the active vertical
Hall sensor elements in the measurement phases 2 and 3. The
calibration Hall voltage can now be obtained by adding the
measurement signals from the first two phases and
subtracting the measurement signals of the last two
measurement phases. This results in the actual signals to
be measured, which means measurement signals attributed to
the measurement field, just canceling each other out,
whereas only those measurement signals attributable to the
calibration field overlap in a constructive manner. With a
respective combination of the measurement signals from the
individual measurement phases, a calibration field
component can be extracted, even when at the same time a
further magnetic field to be measured is present.
With regard to the horizontal Hall sensor elements 102a-d,
the calibration field is applied in a positive direction in
the measurement phases 0 and 3, and in a negative direction
in the measurement phases 1 and 2. The calibration Hall
voltage attributable to the calibration field can now be
obtained by adding the measurement signals of the
measurement phases 0 and 3 and subtracting the measurement
signals of the measurement phases 1 and 2. In this case, by
respectively combining, a measurement signal, which is
merely attributable to the calibration field, can be
extracted since in the ideal case, the measurement field
components cancel each other out completely. In practice, a
reduction of the measurement field components to tolerance
ranges in the order of less than 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of the
total measurement value is possible.
The measurement signal attributable to the measurement
field component results in all these Hall sensors by adding
measurement signals measured in the four spinning current
measurement phases.

Maximum Hall voltage = sum of the signals of the individual
measurement phases 0 to 3.
For extracting the calibration field component, the
measurement signals from the four measurement phases or
spinning current phases, respectively, are added as
follows:
Calibration field component of the vertical sensors
measurement phase 0 + measurement phase 1 - measurement
phase 2 - measurement phase 3.
Calibration field component of the horizontal sensors =
measurement phase 0- measurement phase 1 - measurement
phase 2 + measurement phase 3.
In principle, it is possible to provide other combination
options by reversing the polarity of the excitation current
and exchanging the measurement phases. According to the
invention, it is generally possible to extract the
measurement field component with reduced calibration field
component, or the calibration field component with reduced
measurement field component, respectively, by different
combinations of the measurement signals. It can be seen
that the measurement signal component attributable to the
measurement field is theoretically eliminated by this
linear combination, and only one calibration field
component remains. In a practical application, the
influence of a measurement field can be significantly
reduced by a linear combination of the described type for
extracting a calibration field component. By another linear
combination, it is possible to mostly suppress the
calibration field component for extracting an offset-
compensated measurement field component. In practice, a
suppression to portions in the order of less than 10%, 1%,
or 0.1% of the total measurement value is possible.

Fig. 8 shows a further embodiment of the first sensor
element arrangement 102. Fig. 8 shows an alternative
embodiment wherein two horizontal Hall sensor element pairs
each are placed in a square, wherein the individual
horizontal Hall sensor element pairs are arranged
diagonally to the reference point 101. Here, the first
sensor element arrangement 102 consists overall of four
horizontal Hall sensor elements 102a-d. Further, every Hall
sensor element 102a-d has four contact electrodes K1-K4. In
the embodiment shown in Fig. 8, the contact electrodes K1,
the contact electrodes K2, the contact electrodes K3, and
the contact electrodes K4 of the individual Hall sensor
elements 102a-d are connected in parallel and hardwired to
each other without interposed switches. In the present
illustration, the contact electrodes K1 and the contact
electrodes K3 of the Hall sensor elements 102a-d form the
current impression contacts, whereas the contact electrodes
K2 and the contact electrodes K4 of the Hall sensor
elements 102a-d provide the measurement terminals for
detecting a Hall voltage. The contact electrodes for
supplying an operating current and the contact electrodes
for detecting a Hall voltage are arranged in the individual
Hall sensor elements, such that the current direction of
the impressed operating current is respectively
perpendicular to the direction of the tapped Hall voltage.
In the present arrangement, the operating current
directions in the two Hall sensor elements of every Hall
sensor element pair, which means 102a and 102d or 102b and
102c, respectively, are each rotated by 90° to each other.
The current directions of the second Hall sensor element
pair are offset at an angle of 45° with regard to the
current directions of the first Hall sensor element pair.
In the practical implementation of the inventive Halls
sensor arrangement, the angle by which the operating
current directions in the two Hall sensor elements of every
pair are rotated to each other can deviate from the ideal

value of 90°, and can be, for example, in a range of, e.g.,
between 80° and 100°, wherein the angles in this range can
be considered as angles of substantially 90°in terras of the
present embodiment. The hardwired contact electrodes K1,
K2, K3, and K4 of the Hall sensor elements 102a-d are
connected to switches S1, S2, S3 and S4 that can each be
switched between four positions, i.e. between the contact
electrodes K1, K2, K3, and K4. With the switches S1 to S4,
the contact electrodes Kl to K4 can be switched together as
supply terminals for supplying an operating current IB, or
as measurement terminals for detecting a Hall voltage UH in
the individual measurement phases of the Hall sensor
arrangement. Thus, switching the switches makes a spinning
current method within the first sensor element arrangement
102 possible.
In principle, further embodiments are possible as well. A
further embodiment of a Hall sensor arrangement that is not
explicitly illustrated here can, for example, be that more
than two pairs of Hall sensor elements are used. This
applies as well with regard to the vertical Hall sensor
element arrangements that are generally also not limited to
the usage of two or four Hall sensor elements. Even in the
case that more Hall sensors are used, the current
directions in the two Hall sensor elements of every pair
can each be substantially offset to each other by 90° as it
is also the case in the embodiment of Fig. 8. Here, the two
Hall sensor elements of one pair also have to be
geometrically egual and closely adjacent with regard to the
dimension of the Hall sensor elements and can be arranged
below, next to, or diagonally to each other in the overall
sensor arrangement. With regard to the geometry of the
arrangement, a measure of symmetry around the reference
point to be measured is required within certain tolerance
ranges. The current directions of the at least two Hall
sensor element pairs are each rotated to each other and by
an angle of 90°/n, wherein n is the number of all used Hall
sensor element pairs, wherein n ≥ 2. If, for example, three

Hall sensor elements are used, the current directions in
the individual Hall sensor element pairs will be offset by
an angle of substantially 30°. The sensor element pairs of
the sensor arrangement are arranged either next to each
other, or in the secondary diagonal, wherein the Hall
sensor elements are in pairs as close as possible to each
other.
In summary, it can be stated with regard to the inventive
concept of the magnetic 3D point sensor calibratable during
measurement operation that magnetic sensors according to
the embodiments of the present invention also require only
a single excitation conductor. They offer the advantage
that all three field components can be measured in very
good approximation at one point, wherein offsets are
caused, for example, by device tolerances, contaminations
in the semiconductor material, structure inhomogeneties in
the semiconductor material, etc., can be compensated, for
example, by the spinning current principle, and that the
measurement values can then be provided with little offset.
By using the excitation loop that can have an arbitrary
number of windings, a simple wafer-test, which means an on-
chip-test of all three sensors becomes possible. Further,
by combining the measurement signals from the individual
measurement phases, it is possible to allow a self-test
during the running measurement operation, since both
measurement signal portions attributable to the measurement
field components and measurement signal portions
attributable to calibration field components can be
significantly reduced. Thus, it is possible to perform
sensitivity calibration at such a magnetic field sensor
during operation. The excitation loop itself can also be
tested, since a failure of all three sensors with separate
evaluation electronic is very unlikely.
Further, it should be noted that the present invention has
been explained using the example of vertical 3-pin-Hall
sensors, but the same is generally not limited to these.

For example, 5-pin-Hall sensors (see, e.g., DE 101 50 955
and DE 101 50 950) or generally any sensors can be used,
wherein circular or circular-segment shaped arrangements
are also possible. With regard to the geometry of the
magnetic field sensor, the used sensor element arrangements
should each detect the magnetic field at a common reference
point, which can substantially be obtained by symmetrical
arrangements in pairs around the reference point
analogously to the above specification. The measurement
method, which means the compensation method and the
calibration method is then to be adapted to the respective
Hall sensors and their geometry.
It should particularly be noted that depending on the
circumstances, the inventive scheme can also be implemented
in software. The implementation can be performed on digital
memory media, particularly a disc, or a CD with
electronically-readable control signals that can cooperate
with a programmable computer system and/or micro-controller
such that the respective method is performed. Generally,
the invention also consists of a computer program product
with a program code for performing the inventive method
stored on a machine-readable carrier when the computer
program product runs on a computer and/or micro-controller.
In other words, the invention can also be realized as a
computer program with a program code for performing the
method, when the computer program runs on a computer and/or
micro-controller.

Claims
1. A magnetic field sensor (100) calibratable during
measurement operation for detecting first, second,
and third spatial components Bz, By and Bx of a
magnetic field at a reference point (101), wherein
the magnetic field has first, second, and third
measurement field components BMz, BMy and BMx, and/or
first, second, and third calibration field
components BKz, BKy and BKx, comprising:
a first sensor element arrangement (102) for
detecting the first magnetic field component Bz
having a first measurement field component BMz and/or
a first calibration field component BKz, with respect
to a first spatial axis z at the reference point
(101);
a second sensor element arrangement (104) for
detecting the second magnetic field component By
having a second measurement field component BMy
and/or a second calibration field component BKy, with
respect to a second spatial axis y at the reference
point (101);
a third sensor element arrangement (106) for
detecting the third magnetic field component Bx
having a third measurement field component BMx and/or
a third calibration field component BKx, with respect
to a third spatial axis x at the reference point
(101); and
an excitation line (108) arranged such with respect
to the first (102), second (104), and third sensor
element arrangements (106) that when impressing a
predetermined current into the excitation line
(108), a first predetermined calibration field
component BKz with respect to the first spatial axis

x in the first sensor element arrangement (102) is
generated, a second predetermined calibration field
component BKy with respect to the second spatial axis
y in the second sensor element arrangement (104) is
generated, and a third predetermined calibration
field component BKx with respect to the third spatial
axis x in the third sensor element arrangement (106)
is generated, wherein the three spatial axes z, y,
and x run along linearly independent position
vectors.
2. The magnetic field sensor according to claim 1,
wherein the first (102), second (104) and third
sensor element arrangements (106) can be operated in
a plurality of operating phases, wherein each of the
first (102), second (104), and third sensor element
arrangements (106) is implemented to provide, in
every operating phase, a measurement signal
attributable to the operating phase.
3. The magnetic field sensor according to claim 2,
wherein each of the first (102), second (104) and
third sensor element arrangements (106) is
implemented to provide the measurement signals
attributed to the operating phases, wherein the
measurement signals attributed to the operating
phases can be combined to a first total measurement
value by a first linear combination, such that the
influence of the measurement field component in the
first total measurement value is reduced, or the
measurement signals attributed to the operating
phases can be combined to a second total measurement
value by a second linear combination, such that the
influence of the calibration field component in the
second total measurement value is reduced.
4. The magnetic field sensor according to claim 3,
wherein the measurement signals attributed to the

operating phases can be combined to a first total
measurement value by a first linear combination,
such that the influence of the measurement field
component in the first total measurement value is
reduced to less than 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of the first
total measurement value.
5. The magnetic field sensor according to claim 3,
wherein the measurement signals attributed to the
operating phases can be combined to a second total
measurement value by a second linear combination,
such that the portion of the calibration field
component in the second total measurement value is
reduced to less than 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of the second
total measurement value.
6. The magnetic field sensor according to one of claims
1 to 5, wherein the first sensor element arrangement
(102) has a Hall sensor element horizontal with
respect to a main surface of the magnetic field
sensor.
7. The magnetic field sensor according to one of claims
1 to 6, wherein the first sensor element arrangement
(102) has a plurality of Hall sensor elements
horizontal with respect to a main surface of the
magnetic field sensor, wherein the geometrical
arrangement of the plurality of horizontal Hall
sensor elements is symmetrical in pairs with respect
to the reference point (101) and the Hall sensor
elements are coupled to each other such that the
magnetic field component can be detected in an
offset-compensated manner.
8. The magnetic field sensor according to one of claims
1 to 7, wherein the second sensor element
arrangement (104) has at least two Hall sensor
elements vertical with respect to a main surface of

the magnetic field sensor, wherein the geometrical
arrangement of the at least two vertical Hall sensor
elements is symmetrical in pairs with respect to the
reference point (101), and that are coupled to each
other such that the magnetic field component can be
detected in an offset-compensated manner.
9. The magnetic field sensor according to one of claims
1 to 8, wherein the third sensor element arrangement
(106) has at least two Hall sensor elements vertical
with respect to a main surface of the magnetic field
sensor, wherein the geometrical arrangement of the
at least two vertical Hall sensor elements is
symmetrical in pairs with respect to the reference
point (101), and that are coupled to each other such
that the magnetic field component can be detected in
an offset-compensated manner.
10. The magnetic field sensor according to one of claims
1 to 9, wherein the first (102), second (104) and
third sensor element arrangements (106) can be
operated in the spinning current mode.
11. A method for calibrating a magnetic field sensor
during measurement operation by detecting first,
second, and third spatial components Bz, By and Bx of
a magnetic field at a reference point (102), wherein
the magnetic field has first, second, and third
measurement field components BMz, BMy, BMx and/or
first, second, and third calibration field
components BKz, BKy and BKx, comprising:
detecting the first magnetic field component Bz
having a first measurement field component BMz and/or
a first calibration field component BKz with respect
to the first spatial axis z at the reference point;

detecting the second magnetic field component By
having a second measurement field component BMy
and/or a second calibration field component BKy with
respect to the second spatial axis y at the
reference point;
detecting the third magnetic field component Bx
having a third measurement field component BMy and/or
a third calibration field component BKx with respect
to the third spatial axis x at the reference point;
and
generating the first, second, and third calibration
field components BKz, BKy and BKx with respect to the
first, second, and third spatial axes z, y and x,
wherein the first, second, and third spatial axes
run along a linearly independent position vector.
12. The method according to claim 11, wherein the steps
of detecting are repeated during a plurality of
operating phases, wherein measurement signals
attributed to the first magnetic field component B2,
to the second magnetic field component By, and to the
third magnetic field component Bx in the operating
phases are detected.
13. The method according to claims 11 or 12, further
comprising a step of first linearly combining the
measurement signals of a magnetic field component
attributed to the operating phases to a first total
measurement value, such that the influence of the
measurement field component in the first total
measurement value is reduced, or a step of second
linearly combining the measurement signals of a
magnetic field component attributed to the operating
phases to a second total measurement value, such
that the influence of the measurement field

component in the second total measurement value is
reduced.
14. The method according to claim 13, wherein the step
of first linearly combining the measurement signals
of a magnetic field component attributed to the
operating phases to a first total measurement value
is performed such that a portion of the measurement
field component in the first total measurement value
is reduced to less than 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of the
first total measurement value.
15. The method according to claim 13, wherein the step
of second combining the measurement signals of a
magnetic field component attributed to the operating
phases to a second total measurement value is
performed such that the portion of the calibration
field component in the second total measurement
value is reduced to less than 10%, 1%, or 0.1% of
the second total measurement value.
16. The method according to one of claims 11 to 15,
further comprising a step of combining the
measurement signals of a magnetic field component
attributed to the operating phases, such that the
magnetic field component can be detected in an
offset-compensated manner.
17. The method according to one of claims 11 to 16,
wherein the operating phases are implemented
according to a spinning current method.
18. The method according to one of claims 11 to 17,
further comprising:
storing excitation current strengths, measurement
field components, or calibration field components
for calibration;

attributing the excitation current strength to the
calibration field components or magnetic field
strengths, respectively; and
providing value pairs of measurement field
components and magnetic field strengths.
19. A computer program having a program code for
performing the method according to claim 11, when
the program code runs on a computer.

A magnetic field sensor (100) calibratable during
measurement operation for detecting first, second, and third spatial components Bz, By and Bx of a magnetic field at a reference point (101), wherein the magnetic field has
first, second, and third measurement field components BMz, BMy and BMx, and first, second, and third calibration field components BKz, BKy, and BKx. The magnetic field sensor (100)
comprises a first sensor element arrangement (102) for detecting the first magnetic field component Bz having a first measurement field component BMz and a first calibration field component BKz with respect to a first
spatial axis z at the reference point (101), a second sensor element arrangement (104) for detecting the second magnetic field component By having a second measurement field component BMy and a second calibration field component BKy with respect to a second spatial axis y at the
reference point (101) and a third sensor element
arrangement (106) for detecting the third magnetic field component Bx having a third measurement field component BMx and a third calibration field component BKx with respect to
a third spatial axis x at the reference point (101). Further, the magnetic field sensor (100) comprises an excitation line (108) arranged such with respect to the first (102), second (104), and third sensor element arrangements (106) that when impressing a predetermined current into the excitation line (108), a first predetermined calibration field component BKz with respect
to the first spatial axis x in the first sensor element arrangement (102) is generated, a second predetermined calibration field component BKy with respect to the second spatial axis y in the second sensor element arrangement
(104) is generated, and a third predetermined calibration field component BKx with respect to the third spatial axis x in the third element arrangement (106) is generated, wherein the three spatial axes z, y, and x run along
linearly independent position vectors.

Documents:

http://ipindiaonline.gov.in/patentsearch/GrantedSearch/viewdoc.aspx?id=O80B5hFL9muWrzzzX7A+rA==&loc=wDBSZCsAt7zoiVrqcFJsRw==


Patent Number 270172
Indian Patent Application Number 794/KOLNP/2009
PG Journal Number 49/2015
Publication Date 04-Dec-2015
Grant Date 30-Nov-2015
Date of Filing 02-Mar-2009
Name of Patentee FRAUNHOFER-GESELLSCHAFT ZUR FOERDERUNG DER ANGEWANDTEN FORSCHUNG E.V.
Applicant Address HANSASTRASSE 27C, 80686, MUNICH
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 HANS-PETER HOHE BURGGRUB 28 91332 HEILIGENSTEDT
2 MARKUS STAHL-OFFERGELD HAUPTSTR. 117 91054 ERLANGEN
3 MICHAEL HACKNER JAHNSTR. 14E 92331 PARSBERG
PCT International Classification Number G01R 33/02
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2007/005690
PCT International Filing date 2007-06-27
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10 2006 037 226.3 2006-06-09 Germany