Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

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Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson
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Transcript of Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Page 1: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Chapter 14:Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems

Jon MahEric Wilson

Page 2: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

14.1 What are MEMS?

Micro-electro-mechanical systemsExamplesBenefitsNeed for fabrication technologies

Page 3: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

What are Sensors and Actuators?

Sensors Physical input Weak Signal

Actuator Output or

processing Some physical

change

Page 4: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

14.2 What are MEMS Applications?

NOW Accelerometer Pressure and

chemical flow analysis

Inkjet print heads mm-μm

FURURE Medical

diagnostics Drug delivery

(No more Medellin cartel!!!)

(Just kidding, different drugs)

μm-nm

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Fundamentals of MEMS Devices

Silicon Already in use Manipulatable conductivity Allows for integration

Thin-Film Materials Silicon dioxide Silicon nitride

Page 6: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Micromachining Fabrication

Thin Films Layers (μm) put on

Si Photomask

Positive or negative

Wet Etching Isotropic Anisotropic KOH

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Micromachining Fabrication II

Dry Etching RIE DRIE

Rate-Modified Etching Cover with Boron Wet etch with KOH

Page 8: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Lift-Off ProcessLift-off process Noble metals For unetchable

materials Acetone

Excimer laser technique Burn with UV

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Surface MicromachiningGrow silicon dioxideApply photoresistExpose and developEtch silicon dioxideRemove photoresistDeposit polysiliconRemove silicon dioxide

Bulk micromachining Same, except not

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LIGA Technique

Lithographie, Galvanoformung, and Abformung Or, lithography,

plating and molding

High aspect ratioMany materialsX-Rays

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MEMS PackagingWafer stack thicknessWafer dicing concerns Before After

Thermal managementUnique considerationsProtective coating

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Hermetic Packaging andDie Attach Process

Hermetic packaging Prevents diffusion of water Materials No organics of plastics

Die Attach Process Thermal considerations Cracking or creep

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Wiring and Interconnects and Flip Chip

Wiring and interconnects Gold > Aluminum Thermocompression Bonding Thermosonic Gold Bonding

Flip Chip Intimate attachments Cram everything together

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MEMS PackagingPurposes Reduce EMI Dissipate Heat Minimize CTE Deliver Required Power Survive Environment

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Types of MEMS Packages

Ceramic Packaging Hermetic when sealed High Young’s Modulus Flip Chip or

Wirebonding

Plastic Packaging Not Hermetic Postmolding Premolding

Metal Packaging Hermetic when sealed Easy to assemble Low Pin Count

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Typical MEMS Devices

Sensors Pressure Sensors Accelerometers

Actuators Gyroscopes High Aspect Ratio Electrostatic

Resonators Thermal Actuators Magnetic Actuators Comb-drives

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Pressure Sensors

Gauge Pressure SensorsDifferential Pressure SensorsAbsolute Pressure Sensors

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AccelerometersApplications: Air bag crash sensors Active suspension

systems Antilock brake

systems Ride control systems

Units of mV/g

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ActuatorsHigh aspect ratio electrostatic resonatorPiezoelectric crystalsThermal actuatorsComb-drivesMagnetic actuators

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Failure Mechanisms

Failure by Stiction and Wear Cause of most MEMS failures Microscopic adhesion Corrosion

Delamination Due to bonding between dissimilar materials

Environmentally Induced Failures Thermal cycle, shock, vibration, humidity, radiation

Cyclic Mechanical Fatigue Critical for comb and membrane MEMS Causes changes in elasticity

Mechanical Dampening Effect Moving parts at resonance

Loss of Hermeticity

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MEMS Accelerometer

Mass, Spring, Damper Model

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MEMS Accelerometer (cont’d)

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MEMS Accelerometer (cont’d)

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MEMS Gyroscopes

Typically Vibratory Gyroscopes Utilize Coriolis Acceleration (“fictional force”) Due to rotating reference frame

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Types of Vibratory Gyroscopes

Vibrating Beam, Vibrating Disk, Vibrating Shell

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Vibrating Ring GyroscopeCapacitive drive and sense uses perturbations to the resonance of the ring structure to measure rate

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Vibrating Ring Gyroscope (cont’d)

qsense – amplitude of secondary flexural modeAg – angular gain of ring structureQ – quality factor of the structureω0 – angular flexural resonance frequencyqdrive – vibration amplitude of the primary flexural mode

Ωz – rotation rate around the normal axis

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Flexural Modes of Vibrating Ring Gyro

First Mode Second Mode

Page 29: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Polysilicon Ring Gyro

80μm thick, 1mm wide with 1.2μm gapcapacitance changes on order of 10-18F!

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Fabrication of HARPSS

High Aspect ratio combined poly- and single-crystal siliconUtilizes Deep RIE of Si

Page 31: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Interface and Control Electronics for Vibrating Ring Gyro

Open Loop gyros have bandwidth of a few hertzClosed Loop gyros bandwidth limited by readout and control electronics

Page 32: Chapter 14: Fundamentals of Microelectromechanical Systems Jon Mah Eric Wilson.

Brownian Noise

Due to Brownian motion of ring structure Random movement caused by

molecular collisions Fundamental limit on resolution

Microstructures with large mass and high resonance frequencies reduce Brownian noise in vibratory gyros

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Summary and Future Trends

Current MEMS devices are used most in automotive, medical, consumer, industrial and aerospace applicationsBulk micromachining, microfabrication, and surface micromachining technologies drive MEMS size and shapesPackaging requires design for environment (i.e. pressure sensors in oil)Mechanical fatigue, stiction, and hermeticity are main failure mechanismsVibrating ring gyro case study (fabrication, operation, control electronics, and Brownian noise)