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MEMS Sensor Technology Introduction: What are MEMS? 23 April 2012 Alissa M. Fitzgerald, Ph.D AMFitzgerald & Associates, LLC Start Finish Technology Silicon process technology • Developed to make transistors and integrated circuits Silicon wafer Material deposition Lithographic patterning Material etch back Repeat for multiple layers Images from: http://www.intel.com/education/chips/index.htm Pentium chip Birth of MEMS • 1970’s: using silicon processing to make mechanical devices, not transistors – Accelerometers – Pressure sensors – Inkjet nozzles • 1982: Petersen’s “Silicon as a Mechanical Material” Popular Science, June 1984 Micro Electro Mechanical Systems • Electrical sensing/actuation – Capacitive – Piezoelectric – Piezoresistive • Mechanical devices with a third dimension • Systems AMFitzgerald AMFitzgerald – Multiple functions on one piece of silicon IMD Two basic MEMS process architectures Bulk Micromachining Surface Micromachining • • • • • • Application of mask Etching into the bulk of the wafer • Deposition of functional layer Application of mask Etching into the deposited material Similarities to CMOS metallization processes In some cases, can be co-processed with CMOS Many shapes and functions possible in MEMS TI Digital Display Chip Cantilevers for atomic force microscopy the diameter of a human hair ~ 100 um 2 um 15 um E. Chow, Stanford Univ. Microfluidics on glass MIT Microengine the length of an ant ~ 3 mm 4mm U. of Washington Digging deep into silicon 1990’s: The Bosch DRIE process enabled a new generation of MEMS devices and through silicon vias (TSV) Mask F + ions SiF4 SF6 Plasma Si -CF2AMFitzgerald C4F8 Plasma Passivation Si Scalloping SF6 Plasma Tegal Corp. Tegal Corp. Tegal Corp. MEMS is a miniaturization technology Airbag sensors (1980) Source: Ed Phillips Airbag sensors (2005) MEMS belong where miniaturization is needed • Applications using MEMS devices: – Automotive: pressure, motion, sound, light, heat – Consumer: motion, sound, pressure, compass – RF: filters, resonators, switches, inductors – Optical: network components, displays, switches, mirrors – Medical devices: needles, cell scaffolds, ultrasound, implantables – Printing: inkjet, large format nozzles – Biotech: lab-on-chip microfluidics – Industrial: Atomic force microscopy, chemical sensors MEMS aren’t just made from silicon! Silicon Glass Sensors X RF X Optical X X Medical X X Power X Microfluidics Metal SiC Polymers X X X X X X X Why MEMS are exciting for so many applications • Smaller, better, cheaper – But not always all three! • Sophisticated capabilities in small form factor: – – – – MEMS sensor Integrated Pressure Sensor Source: IMD Multiple sensors Signal processing and analysis Telemetry capability Stacked MEMS Low power and ASIC chips, wirebonded Source: Chipworks/Kionix Explosion of MEMS in consumer devices • Sophisticated capability in small form factor enabling new functions – Motion sensing -> gesture input, navigation – Microphone arrays -> noise cancellation – Pressure sensing -> height detection • At the right price! – MEMS took off when chip price <$3 MEMS enable exciting new products MEMS are not like ICs • Yes, both are made on silicon wafers • No building block technology, i.e. no transistor – Moore’s law does not apply – No standardization of design, processes, or materials – Each MEMS is custom-crafted • “One product, one process, one package” MEMS are not like ICs • Production volumes are much smaller – 12” vs. 6”/8” wafers – $500B+ vs. $8B market • Fragile mechanical devices – More difficult to produce, test, package – Sensitive to temperature and package stress What this implies • MEMS prices will not decrease as fast as IC chips did • MEMS sensor performance will not improve as fast as microprocessors, memory chips did • Chip packaging usually critical to MEMS performance • System integration can be more challenging Summary • Brief introduction to MEMS • Next: Overview of Applications for MEMS Sensimed Pixel