Login  



advanced search

Melexis Product Menu

Products by Category Products by Application Products by Part Number Knowledge Base Forum

What is the Hall Effect? 

The Hall effect principle is named for physicist Edwin Hall. In 1879 he discovered that when a conductor or semiconductor with current flowing in one direction was introduced perpendicular to a magnetic field a voltage could be measured at right angles to the current path. The Hall voltage can be calculated from:

VHall = Bsens where:

VHall = emf in volts
B = applied field in Gauss
sens = sensitivity in Volts/Gauss
I = bias current

The initial use of this discovery was for the classification of chemical samples. The development of indium arsenide semiconductor compounds in the 1950's led to the first useful Hall effect magnetic instruments. Hall effect sensors allowed the measurement of DC or static magnetic fields with requiring motion of the sensor. In the 1960's the popularization of silicon semiconductors led to the first combinations of Hall elements and integrated amplifiers. This resulted in the now classic digital output Hall switch.

The continuing evolution of Hall transducers technology saw a progression from single element devices to dual orthogonally arranged elements. This was done to minimize offsets at the Hall voltage terminals.
The next progression brought on the quadratic of 4 element transducers. These used 4 elements orthogonally arranged in a bridge configuration. All of these silicon sensors were built from bipolar junction semiconductor processes.
A switch to CMOS processes allowed the implementation of chopper stabilization to the amplifier portion of the circuit. This helped reduce errors by reducing the input offset errors at the op amp. All errors in the circuit non chopper stabilized circuit result in errors of switch point for the digital or offset and gain errors in the linear output sensors.
The current generation of CMOS Hall sensors also include, a scheme that actively switched the direction of current through the Hall elements. This scheme eliminates the offset errors typical of semiconductor Hall elements. It also actively compensates for temperature and strain induced offset errors. The overall effect of active plate switching and chopper stabilization yields Hall effect sensors with an order of magnitude improvement in drift of switch points or gain and offset errors.
Melexis uses the CMOS process exclusively, for best performance and smallest chip size. The developments to Hall effect sensor technology can be credited mostly to the integration of sophisticated signal conditioning circuits to the Hall IC.
Melexis introduced the world's first programmable linear Hall IC, which offered a glimpse of future technology. Future sensors will be programmable and have integrated microcontroller cores to make an even "smarter" sensor.


location: Concord, NH





Prior Revisions

Revision Date  
8/14/2003 12:00:00 AM View Prior Revision



Related Products

Part Number
Description
 
MLX90215 Precision Programmable Linear Hall IC
MLX90217 Cam Sensor
MLX90224 Dual Hall Effect Latch
MLX90248 (New Generation) Micropower & Omnipolar Hall Switch - Very High Sensitivity
MLX92213 Micropower & Low Voltage Hall-Effect Latch with Enable
US1881 Hall Latch – High Sensitivity
US2881 Bipolar Hall Switch - Very High Sensitivity
US2882 Bipolar Hall Switch - Very High Sensitivity
US2884 Bipolar Hall Switch - Very High Sensitivity
US3881 Hall Latch – Low Voltage & High Sensitivity
US4881 Bipolar Hall Switch - Low Voltage & Very High Sensitivity
US5681 Unipolar Hall Switch - High Sensitivity
US5781 Unipolar Hall Switch - Medium Sensitivity
US5782 Unipolar Hall Switch - Medium Sensitivity
US5881 Unipolar Hall Switch - Low Sensitivity
Melexis Semiconductors: Home | Company Profile | Semiconductor /IC Products | FAQ | Careers
Terms Of Use
| Terms Of Sale | Company Data | Privacy Policy
Copyright©1998 - 2009 Melexis Microelectronic Systems All Rights Reserved Certified ISO/ TS 16949, ISO 14001
Melexis Microelectronic Systems Rozendaalstraat 12, B-8900 Ieper, Belgium