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MEMS devices: How do we make them? A mechanism Gear chain Sandia MEMS Hinge Gear within a gear Basic MEMS materials Silicon and its derivatives, mostly • Micro-electronics heritage Si is a good semiconductor, properties can be tuned Si oxide is very robust Si nitride is a good electrical insulator Substrate Cost Metallization Machinability Silicon High Good Very good Plastic Low Poor Fair Ceramic Medium Fair Poor Glass Low Good Poor Surface micromachining http://www.darpa.mil/mto/mems How a cantilever is made: http://mems.sandia.gov/ One can make devices as complex as one wishes using deposition and micromachining processes Any MEMS device is made from the processes of deposition and removal of material e.g. a state-of-the art MEMS electric motor www.cronos.com The History of MEMS Y.C.Tai, Caltech Bulk micromachining • Wet Chemical etching: Masking layer Bulk Si Isotropic Bulk Si Anisotropic Bulk micromachining • Dry etching Ions: Reactive ion etching (RIE), focused ion beams (FIB) Laser drilling: using high powered lasers (CO2/YAG) Electron-beam machining: sequential slow Wet Etching: Isotropic • atomic layer by atomic layer removal possible Isotropic etching: Hydrofluoric + nitric + acetic acids (HNA) Bulk Si Chemical reaction: Si + 6 HNO3+6 HF H2SiF6 + HNO2 + H2O + H2 Principle: HNO3 (Nitric acid) oxidizes Si SiOx HF (Hydrofluoric Acid) dissolves SiOx Acetic acid/water is a diluent Anisotropic etching, due to the Silicon crystal structure - Diamond cubic crystal structure Z Y X Different planes of atoms in a Silicon crystal have different densities of atoms (111) (100) (110) (111) This implies preferential/anisotropic etching is possible Applications: Anisotropic Etching Aligning fibers fiber Inkjet printers Wet etching: Anisotropic Etching (100) Bulk Si (100) Bulk Si Chemical recipes: EDP (Ethylene diamine, pyrocatechol, water) [NH2(CH2)2NH2, C6H4(OH)2] - low SiO2 etch rate, - carcinogenic KOH (Potassium hydroxide), - high <110> / <111> and <100>/ <111> selectivity ( ~ 500) - high SiO2 etching TMAH (Tetra-methyl Ammonium Hydroxide: (CH3)4NOH) - Low SiO2 and SixNy etch rate - smaller <100> / <111> selectivity Comparison of wet chemical etches Etchant Typical etching conditions Anisotropic Etch rate of <100>/<111> masking layers etching ratio 50-115 oC 10-35 20-80 mm/hr KOH 50-90 oC 100-400 10-100 mm/hr TMAH 60-90 oC 10-20 10-60 mm/hr EDP SiO2(2 Å/min) SiN(1 Å/min) SiO2(2 Å/min) SiN(1 Å/min) SiO2(2 Å/min) SiN(1 Å/min) Reference: “Etch rates for Micromachining Processing” - K. R. Williams, IEEE Journal of MEMS, vol. 5, page 256, 1996. Sensors based on (100) preferential etching Honeywell sensor Micro-fluidic channels based on (110) preferential etching MEMS Process Sequence Slide courtesy: Al Pisano Surface micromachining http://www.darpa.mil/mto/mems How a cantilever is made: Sacrificial material: Silicon oxide Structural material: polycrystalline Si (poly-Si) Isolating material (electrical/thermal): Silicon Nitride MEMS Processing Oxidation of Silicon Silicon Oxide (Sacrificial material) Dry Oxidation: flowing pure oxygen over Si @ 850 – 1100 oC (thin oxides 1- 100 nm, high quality of oxide) Uses the Deal-Grove Model: xoxide = (BDGt)1/2 Temperature (oC) 920 1000 1100 BDG (mm2/ hour) 0.0049 0.0117 0.027 MEMS Processing Oxidation of Silicon Silicon Oxide (Sacrificial material) Wet Oxidation: uses steam for thicker oxides (100nm – 1.5 mm, lower quality) Temperature (oC) 920 1000 1100 BDG (mm2/ hour) 0.203 0.287 0.510 Higher thicknesses of oxide: CVD or high pressure steam oxidation Silicon oxide deposition LTO: Low Temperature Oxidation process For deposition at lower temperatures, use Low Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition (LPCVD) SiH4 + O2 425-450 oC 0.2-0.4 Torr SiH4 + O2 SiO2 + 2 H2 : 450 oC Other advantages: Can dope Silicon oxide to create PSG (phospho-silicate glass) SiH4 + 7/2 O2 + 2 PH3 SiO2:P + 5 H2O : 700 oC PSG: higher etch rate, flows easier (better topography) Case study: Poly-silicon growth - SiH4 by Low Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition T: 580-650 oC, P: 0.1-0.4 Torr Crystalline film 620 oC Effect of temperature Amorphous Crystalline: Equi-axed grains: Columnar grains: (110) crystal orientation: (100) crystal orientation: 570 oC 600 oC 625 oC 600 – 650 oC 650 – 700 oC Kamins,T. 1998 Poly-Si for ICs and diplays, 1998 Amorphous film 570 oC Poly-silicon growth Temperature has to be very accurately controlled as grains grow with temperature, increasing surface roughness, causing loss of pattern resolution and stresses in MEMS Mechanisms of grain growth: 1. Strain induced growth - Minimize strain energy due to mechanical deformation, doping … - Grain growth time 2. Grain boundary growth - To reduce surface energy (and grain boundary area) - Grain growth (time)1/2 3. Impurity drag - Can accelerate/prevent grain boundary movement - Grain growth (time)1/3 Grains control properties • Mechanical properties Stress state: Residual compressive stress (500 MPa) - Amorphous/columnar grained structures: Compressive stress - Equiaxed grained structures: Tensile stress - Thick films have less stress than thinner films -ANNEALING CAN REDUCE STRESSES BY A FACTOR OF 10-100 •Thermal and electrical properties Grain boundaries are a barrier for electrons e.g. thermal conductivity could be 5-10 times lower (0.2 W/cm-K) • Optical properties Rough surfaces! Silicon Nitride (for electrical and thermal isolation of devices) r: 1016 W cm, Ebreakdown: 107 kV/cm Is also used for encapsulation and packaging Used as an etch mask, resistant to chemical attack High mechanical strength (260-330 GPa) for SixNy, provides structural integrity (membranes in pressure sensors) Deposited by LPCVD or Plasma –enhanced CVD (PECVD) LPCVD: Less defective Silicon Nitride films PECVD: Stress-free Silicon Nitride films x SiH2Cl2 + y NH3 SixNy + HCl + 3 H2 700 - 900 oC 0.2-0.5 Torr SiH2Cl2 + NH3 Depositing materials PVD (Physical vapor deposition) http://web.kth.se/fakulteter/TFY/cmp/research/sputtering/sputtering.html • Sputtering: DC (conducting films: Silicon nitride) RF (Insulating films: Silicon oxide) Depositing materials PVD (Physical vapor deposition) • Evaporation (electron-beam/thermal) Commercial electron-beam evaporator (ITL, UCSD) Courtesy: Jack Judy Electroplating Issues: e.g. can be used to form porous Silicon, used for sensors due to the large surface to volume ratio •Micro-void formation • Roughness on top surfaces • Uneven deposition speeds Used extensively for LIGA processing Depositing materials –contd.• Spin-on (sol-gel) Dropper Si wafer e.g. Spin-on-Glass (SOG) used as a sacrificial molding material, processing can be done at low temperatures Surface micromachining - Technique and issues - Dry etching (DRIE) Other MEMS fabrication techniques - Micro-molding - LIGA Other materials in MEMS - SiC, diamond, piezo-electrics, magnetic materials, shape memory alloys … MEMS foundry processes - How to make a micro-motor Surface micromachining http://www.darpa.mil/mto/mems Carving of layers put down sequentially on the substrate by using selective etching of sacrificial thin films to form freestanding/completely released thin-film microstructures HF can etch Silicon oxide but does not affect Silicon Release of MEMS structures A difficult step, due to surface tension forces: Surface Tension forces are greater than gravitational forces ( L) ( L)3 Release of MEMS structures To overcome this problem: (1) Use of alcohols/ethers, which sublimate, at release step (2) Surface texturing Cantilever Si substrate (3) Supercritical CO2 drying: avoids the liquid phase 35oC, 1100 psi A comparison of conventional vs. supercritical drying http://www.memsguide.com Reactive Ion Etching (RIE) DRY plasma based etching Deep RIE (DRIE): • Excellent selectivity to mask material (30:1) • Moderate etch rate (1-10 mm/minute) • High aspect ratio (10:1), large etch depths possible Deep Reactive Ion Etching (DRIE) A side effect of a glow discharge polymeric species created Plasma processes: Deposition of polymeric material from plasma vs. removal of material Usual etching processes result in a V-shaped profile Bosch Process Alternate etching (SF6) +Passivation (C4F8) • Bowing: bottom is wider • Lag: uneven formation Gas phase Silicon etching • Room temperature process • No surface tension forces • No charging effects • Isotropic XeF2 BrF3 Developed at IBM (1962) 2 XeF2 + Si 2 Xe + SiF4 Cost: $150 to etch 1 g of Si Developed at Bell labs (1984) 4 BrF3 + 3 Si 2 Br2 + 3 SiF4 $16 for 1 g of Si Etching rate: 1-10 mm/minute Micro-molding C. Keller et al, Solid state sensor & actuator workshop, 1994 -For thick films (> 100 mm) - HEXSIL/PDMS, compatible with Bio-MEMS - loss of feature definition after repeated replication - Thermal and mechanical stability LIGA (LIthographie, Galvanoformung, Abformung) For high aspect ratio structures • Thick resists (> 1 mm) • high –energy x-ray lithography ( > 1 GeV) Millimeter/sub-mm sized objects which require precision Electromagnetic motor Mass spectrometer with hyperbolic arms Technology Comparison Bulk vs. Surface micromachining vs. LIGA Capability Bulk Surface LIGA Max. structural thickness Wafer thickness < 50 mm 500 mm Planar geometry Rectangular Unrestricted Unrestricted Min. planar feature size 2 depth < 1 mm < 3 mm Side-wall features 54.7o slope Limited by dry etch 0.2 mm Surface & edge definitions Excellent Adequate Very good Material properties Very well controlled Adequate Well controlled Integration with electronics Demonstrated Demonstrated Difficult Capital Investment Low Moderate High Published knowledge Very high High Moderate