Good vibrations: Trine team researches key electronics component
August 19, 2025
Share
Trine University student Jenna Wilson works in the foreground while, from left, James
Miller, Ph.D., and students Maranda Padfield, Nicholas Ewing and Nathan Stefanski
work on the MEMS resonator project, funded by the National Science Foundation. (Photo
by Dean Orewiler)
Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) may be microscopic, but they keep our modern
world going.
MEMS resonators, strands of silicon narrower than a human hair, are found in everything
from computers to cell phones, vibrating to allow devices to keep time and sense movement.
Funded by $200,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, a Trine University
faculty member and students are researching how to make them better.
Doing the math
James Miller, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Wade Department of Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering, said MEMS resonators are like a guitar string, and the research
seeks to determine if increasing tension on them — similar to tightening a guitar
string to tune it — will make their frequencies more stable.
Tension is applied using a shuttle structure made up of capacitors that reduce in
gap size in response to applied voltage.
“This mechanical tension increases the resonance frequency, which we mathematically
showed can improve the frequency stability,” he said.
Mechanical engineering majors Maranda Padfield of Kokomo, Indiana, Janna Wilson of
Kokomo, Indiana, Nicholas Ewing of Wabash, Indiana, and Nathan Stefanski of Almont,
Michigan, are assisting with the research.
Ewing, who first heard of the opportunity when discussing the possibility of graduate
school, said he was attracted to the project by its interdisciplinary nature.
“I liked the idea of being able to stay close to software, since that is a big passion
of mine, while also doing mechanical engineering,” he said. “I felt like I would really
enjoy it even if I didn’t end up pursuing graduate school after finishing my degree.”
Padfield was intrigued by the ubiquity of MEMS.
“They’re in almost all the technology that is used in the modern day, and yet, most
people, me included, know little about them,” she said. “It also opens a completely
new door into more research later down the line in grad school or the corporate world.”
Stefanski said he has been interested in research since childhood, and the opportunity
to conduct research has solidified for him that it’s a career part he wants to follow.
“There's a great deal of intellectual freedom involved, but it seems like a job that
never gets boring,” he said. “That's the kind of future I envision.”
Noise reduction
The team began researching devices that apply increased tension earlier this summer,
with the students taking measurements and running simulations to confirm the shuttle
structure works as intended. The next step is to investigate the effects of increasing
tension on the frequency stability.
“The students are helping to show whether the real world conforms to the theoretical
predictions I made,” Dr. Miller said.
The team also has investigated techniques to reduce noise in MEMS resonator devices,
which will improve their resonance frequency stability.
Ewing said he and Stefanski have been researching methods of reducing the noise by
adjusting the stiffness of the resonator to amplify or suppress motion.
“I’ve primarily worked on the code side of things because I’m more comfortable in
that area due to my professional experience,” he said. “This includes creating, modifying
and debugging code to take measurements on our devices, and also creating code to
compile measurement data into figures for (the group’s) paper.”
Through the research, Dr. Miller said the students learn about semiconductor devices,
microelectronics, mathematical modeling and computer programming, which provides valuable
skills for technology sector jobs and engineering graduate school.
Stefanski said the project has also allowed the team to meet and interact with professionals
at weekly "lab lunches" hosted by Dr. Miller.
“Many of them began as mechanical engineering students but have since transitioned
into roles focused on health, fitness or computer science — all still connected to
MEMS,” Stefanski said. “One of the biggest lessons I've taken away is the value of
having a wide skill set and diverse experiences.”
Formative research opportunities
The team is already preparing a journal article about its research to be published
as well as individual abstracts to be presented at a MEMS conference next year.
Dr. Miller said he hopes to secure additional funding after the current grant concludes
in August 2026.
“I hope to continue to provide formative research opportunities to Trine University
undergraduate students through follow-up research projects,” he said.
Padfield said conducting the research has been “an incredible learning experience
for me.”
“I have learned so much about analyzing these devices, coding in MATLAB, and a few
modeling programs that I had never used before, such as COMSOL,” she said. “We’ve
had the amazing opportunity to hear from Dr. Miller as well as many speakers in this
field, and each one has had so much helpful advice for this field and life in general.”
“As a mechanical engineering student, my software and electrical skills have grown
leaps and bounds,” said Wilson. “This has been a great first summer of collaborating
with Dr. Miller and my co-workers, and I am looking forward to continuing to learn
and discover.”
Trine University will welcome a record incoming class of more than 760 new students this fall, reflecting continued demand for the university’s career-focused academic offerings, affordability and close-knit community.
Trine University will continue to move forward as its faculty and staff work together to carry out its mission and vision, employees heard Tuesday, Aug. 12, during the university’s annual kickoff celebration for the fall semester.
Trine University has hosted more than 30,000 school-age students during the past three years in programs supported by Lilly Endowment Inc., a new report from the university shows.