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MEMS:
SILICON CHIP introduced you to tiny MEMS devices in the Digital
Spirit Level project back in August 2011, which used a MEMS 3-axis
accelerometer. Then in May this year, we described MEMS speakers
which measure just 6.7 x 4.7mm. MEMS devices are microscopic and
are typically fabricated from silicon, similarly to integrated circuits,
combining mechanical and electronic elements in the same tiny package.
Their mechanical components are precisely formed at micrometre scales!
by Dr David Maddison
M
EMS devices can provide many different func- clopedia Britannica could be fitted on the head of a pin.
tions. These include: accelerometers and gyro- That was achieved in 1985.
In the lecture, Feynman also speculated about “swallowscopes as used in smartphones and airbag systems, display projection systems, in-wheel tyre pressure ing the doctor”, the concept of a miniature surgical robot.
That goal too has more recently been partly achieved;
sensors, biosensors such as blood pressure monitoring
devices or ‘labs on a chip’, inkjet printer heads and many see the SILICON CHIP article in August 2018 on ‘pill cams’
and related devices.
more that you would likely use in everyday life.
The size of the devices formed may be measured in microns (one-thousandth of a millimetre), up to millimetres. Types of MEMS devices
MEMS devices are typically sensors or actuators, or
MEMS extends techniques used by the semiconductor industry to fabricate mechanical components such as multiple combinations thereof. Examples of MEMS sengears, beams, levers, diaphragms, springs and combs, all at sors are:
a much smaller scale than traditional devices. Electronic • mechanical (force, pressure, velocity, position, acceleration etc)
components can also be incorporated within the device,
• thermal (temperature, heat
often on the same piece of silicon.
flow etc)
MEMS technology was initial• chemical (composition etc)
ly developed in the early 1960s,
• radiant energy (wavelength, inbut it wasn’t known by that name
tensity, polarisation, optical
at the time. The term microelecswitching, laser etc)
tromechanical systems was first
• magnetic (field intensity, flux
used in a US DARPA (Defense
density, direction etc)
Advanced Research Projects
• electrical phenomena (electric
Agency) report in 1986.
field sensor, charge, voltage refOne of the first times that the
erence etc)
miniaturisation of machines was
Other devices include oscillarecognised as a desirable objectors, displays, printers, motors and
tive was in 1959, when the faswitches.
mous Caltech physicist Richard
In this article, we will describe
Feynman gave a speech entitled
as many of these various types of
“There’s Plenty of Room at the
MEMS devices as we have space
Bottom: An Invitation to Enter a
to fit.
New Field of Physics”.
In this speech, he issued two
Uses for MEMS devices
Fig.1: Bill McLellan’s 1960 answer to Richard
challenges:
Some common applications of
One was to build a tiny elec- Feynman’s challenge: an electric motor smaller
MEMS devices are:
tric motor, which was achieved than the head of a pin. It is less than 0.36mm
• Automotive and aerospace: senin 1960, but without the break- per side, even smaller than specified. Feynman
sors for airbag actuation; fluid
through technology that Feyn- had hoped for a breakthrough in technology;
however, this was made with conventional
level and pressure sensors; navman had hoped for (see Fig.1). techniques very cleverly applied. It still won
igation; motion sensors for susThe second was to shrink let- Feynman’s US$1000 prize (about AU$12,000 in
pension, active suspension and
ters such that the entire Ency- today’s money). Source: Caltech Archives.
14
Silicon Chip
Australia’s electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Micro
icroEElectro
lectroM
Mechanical Systems
•
•
•
•
•
•
stability control; brake force sensor for anti-lock brakes;
tyre pressure and temperature sensor; various avionics sensors.
Chemical: various types of chemical analysis.
Communications: mobile phones; fibre optic switches;
voltage-controlled oscillators; lasers; optical splitters,
couplers, modulators, attenuators and switches; DC-toRF frequency switches; fibre optic components.
Computers and electronics: hard disk heads; inkjet
printer heads; optical projectors; gaming controllers.
Medical: blood pressure sensors; motion sensor to monitor activity such as in heart pacemakers; biological sensor systems; implanted sensors; sensors in prosthetic
devices; ‘labs on a chip’.
Navigation and Earth science: accelerometers; gyroscopes; seismic motion detectors.
Military: munitions guidance; arming systems for munitions; numerous other applications listed under other
categories above.
Key discoveries and inventions
Some key scientific discoveries and technologies that
led to the development of MEMS devices are as follows,
in date order.
• 1745 and 1748: while modern electric motors generally use electromagnetic principles, it is possible to
design a motor using electrostatic principles instead.
In 1745, Benedictine monk Andrew Gordon described
the “electrical whirl” and “electric chimes”, the first
electrostatic mechanical devices capable of rotary and
linear motion.
In 1748, Benjamin Franklin invented the electric wheel,
which is regarded as the first true electrostatic motor.
Benjamin Franklin is often erroneously credited with
the invention of electrostatic electric chimes (“Franklin
Bells”), but these were invented by Gordon and used as
an annunciator for his experimental lightning rod in 1752.
Modern motors are electromagnetic devices as they are
significantly more compact and powerful; however, for
MEMS devices where it is difficult to fabricate coils to generate magnetic fields, electrostatics is often used instead.
For more details, see the following videos:
“Electric whirls” – https://youtu.be/6hkIGIAgxFU
“Franklin’s Bells (5b1030)” – https://youtu.be/0TvvYa_
Qk6k
“Electrostatic Motor” – https://youtu.be/9NkUcJBqVB4
• 1947: the first transistor was invented, paving the way
for semiconductor fabrication technologies and electronic technologies that would later be used for MEMS.
• 1954: the piezoresistive effect was discovered in silicon and germanium, where it is much greater than in
DIY MEMS?
Fig.2: Nathanson’s resonant gate transistor.
It consists of a gold beam 0.1mm long and 5-10 microns
thick which resonates at 5kHz. The inventor describes it as
“an electrostatically excited tuning fork employing fieldeffect transistor ‘readout’.” Source: Nathanson et al., 1967,
courtesy IEEE.
siliconchip.com.au
We saw an interesting but rather expensive book on DIY MEMS
called “DIY MEMS: Fabricating Microelectromechanical Systems in Open Use Labs” by Deborah Munro from New Zealand.
According to the author, MEMS devices could be fabricated in
open-use facilities. You can read sample pages or buy the book
at Amazon.com
There is commercial software for designing MEMS layouts as
well as other types of devices called “Layout Editor”. However, it
can be used as a free file viewer for various microelectronics designs of any size, or as a free editor for small designs.
See https://layouteditor.org/
Australia’s electronics magazine
November 2020 15
Fig.3: K.E. Petersen’s electrostatically-driven torsional
scanning mirror is etched from a single piece of silicon, with
a reflective coating applied to the mirror’s surface.
metals. This means that the material changes its resistance in response to a force. So these materials can
be used to sense force, an effect now utilised by strain
gauges, pressure sensors and certain accelerometers
among others.
Strain gauges based on this effect were developed in 1958,
with Kulite (https://kulite.com/) producing the first commercial strain gauge in 1959. They also invented the silicon
pressure sensor in 1961.
• 1959: Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments filed the patent
for the first integrated circuit (US Patent 3138743; https://patents.google.com/patent/US3138743A/en). He
and Robert Noyce (US Patent 2981877; https://patents.
google.com/patent/US2981877/en) of Fairchild Semiconductor are considered the co-inventors of the integrated circuit.
Fig.4: the different results achieved by bulk micromachining methods with wet and dry etching and isotropic
and anisotropic processes. The dark bands represent the
etch-resistant masking material. The isotropic methods
undercut the mask while the anisotropic methods do not,
but must be aligned with the crystal matrix.
16
Silicon Chip
This led to small-scale silicon fabrication technologies
which are also applicable to MEMS.
• 1968: arguably the first MEMS device in terms of the
modern understanding of such devices was a 1968 invention (US Patent US3413573; https://patents.google.
com/patent/US3413573/en) by Harvey Nathanson. It
was a resonant gate transistor comprising a mechanical resonator and a transistor (Fig.2).
The purpose of this device was to act as a tuner in
miniature radios. The cantilever was about 1mm long. It
was created using similar techniques as are used today;
a batch fabrication process in which layers of metal and
insulators on a silicon substrate are alternatively shaped
and undercut by etchants, etchant-resistant masks and
sacrificial layers.
• 1970: the first silicon accelerometer was produced by
Kulite, based on piezoresistivity of silicon where it
changes its resistance in response to a mechanical load.
• 1977: the first capacitive pressure sensor was developed
at Stanford University.
• 1979: HP produced the first micromachined inkjet
nozzle, “thermal inkjet technology”.
• 1980: K.E. Petersen of IBM invented the electrostatically-driven torsional scanning mirror using batch photolithography and thin-film techniques. It consisted of a
flat armature-like shape made and etched from a single
Fig.5: how surface micromachining uses a sacrificial layer
(tan), which is eventually removed, to produce a freestanding structure; in this case, a cantilever beam. Source:
memsnet.org
Australia’s electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.6: a MEMS wafer subassembly joined to a CMOS wafer
integrated circuit subassembly using eutectic and fusion
wafer bonding. A cross-section of the final result is shown
at upper right, with a plan view below. This is a gyroscope
assembly. Source: Allan Hilton and Dorota S. Temple.
piece of silicon, in which the mirror surface had a reflective coating – see Fig.3.
The silicon arms (22 and 24) attached to the mirrored
surface (30) were arranged as a torsion bar and could twist
in response to electrostatic forces as supplied by the electrodes mounted beneath and on either side of the longaxis centreline of the reflector portion (14 & 16).
This allowed a light beam to be reflected in one direction or another.
This device is now the basis of digital video projector systems (pioneered by Texas Instruments and called
digital light processing [DLP]) and optical switches, for
example, to switch between several optical fibres, among
other applications.
See https://patents.google.com/patent/US4317611/en
• 1981: IBM invents the scanning tunnelling microscope
(STM) that can image individual atoms on a surface using a cantilever and probe.
• 1982: a MEMS-based disposable blood pressure sensor is produced by Foxboro/ICT and Honeywell, selling for US$40.
• 1982: the LIGA process is invented in Germany (more
details below).
• 1984: the first polysilicon MEMS device is produced
(Howe, Muller).
Fig.7: the LIGA process for making high aspect ratio
MEMS devices. The first step is at the top, and the process
continues clockwise.
• 1985: the atomic force microscope (AFM) is invented,
based on IBM’s STM.
• 1988: the first electrostatic side-drive motors (100 microns across) are made by Richard Muller et al. at UC
Berkeley.
• 1989: an electrostatic lateral comb drive is fabricated
in polysilicon (Tang et al.).
Mask
F
SFx+
Etch
Silicon
nCFx+
Deposit
Polymer
Polymer (nCF2)
F
SFx+
Etch
Fig.8: a tall, high aspect ratio gear produced with LIGA
technology.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.9: in deep reactive ion etching, an area is etched, a
polymer coating is deposited and then further etching is
performed. The polymer coating is preferentially etched at
the bottom and not on the sidewalls due to the dominant
flow direction of the plasma etchant.
Australia’s electronics magazine
November 2020 17
Fig.10(a): a silicon structure formed with deep reactive ion
etching (DRIE).
Fig.10(b): after the structure in Fig.10(a) is modified by
removing the outer pillars and sharpening the central pillar
with reactive ion etching (RIE), the result is a needle for
interfacing with biological cells. Source: Yael Hanein et al.
• 1992: the MEMS deformable grating light modulator (GLM), also known as the grating light valve
(GLV), was invented. It has uses in display technology, graphic printing, lithography and optical communications.
• 1993: the first surface micromachined accelerometer,
the TI ADXL50, went on sale. It was mainly used for
airbag deployment systems. More on this later.
• 1994: Bosch patents the process for deep reactive ion
etching.
• 1995: Xenon difluoride, XeF2, was demonstrated as an
isotropic etchant for MEMS and used to dissolve sacrificial layers to release moving parts. It is also highly
selective, meaning it will not dissolve certain materials but will fully dissolve others giving excellent design
flexibility for MEMS devices.
• 1999: Lucent’s “LamdaRouter” optical network switches
are released, based on MEMS devices.
Fabrication techniques
Fig.11: a Damasko watch spring made from
polycrystalline silicon, which they refer to as “Epi-PolySilicon” (EPS). The silicon is made by vapour deposition
followed by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE). It has
many advantages over a traditional spring such as being
non-magnetic, temperature insensitive, of minimal
asymmetry and with highly precise dimensions.
18
Silicon Chip
MEMS devices are made using integrated circuit fabrication techniques such as photolithography, etching and
deposition etc. But enhancements and modifications of
those processes are required, as well as new processes not
normally used for IC fabrication.
The fabrication processes for MEMS are known generally as microfabrication, and can be broadly divided into
two high-level categories.
Bulk micromachining, surface micromachining and the
related process of wafer bonding are the standard methods.
The other category is designed for structures with high
aspect ratios and is known as HARMST (high aspect ratio
microsystems technology). The main HARMST technologies
are LIGA (a German acronym for lithography, galvanoforming
moulding); silicon ion etching; and glass and hot embossing.
Other, less-common fabrication methods utilise lasers,
ion beams and electrical discharge machining.
Fig.12: the evolution of MEMS accelerometers, from the
1991 prototype to 2004. Today, such sensors incorporate
additional functions such as gyroscopes and are used
for airbag inflation, vehicle stability control and vehicle
rollover detection among other purposes.
Australia’s electronics magazine
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iPhones disabled by helium gas
Fig.13: the functional sections of the ADXL50 accelerometer.
Common materials used to manufacture MEMS devices
are silicon, polymers, metals and ceramics.
Bulk micromachining
Bulk micromachining involves taking a substrate and
using mechanical or chemical means to remove material.
A popular chemical means involves immersing a substrate
in an etchant chemical to remove material, a process akin
to using ferric chloride for etching patterns on a PCB. This
is called wet etching (see Fig.4).
With appropriate choices of etchant, etchant temperature
and substrate, the rate and preferred direction of etching
can be controlled. For example, it is possible to selectively etch along certain crystal planes of a silicon substrate
(anisotropic etching) or etch them all evenly at the same
time (isotropic).
The etching process requires that a suitable masking
material, such as silicon dioxide, is used to protect those
areas that are to remain. With etching, it is possible to undercut protected areas. It is also possible to dry etch using
vapours or plasma instead of liquids.
Surface micromachining
There are many variations of surface micromachining,
but they all involve a multi-stage deposition process in
which a combination of both permanent and “sacrificial”
layers are laid down (Fig.5).
The sacrificial layers are there to support an overlying
structure. Once that has been deposited, the sacrificial
structure can be removed, for example by etching or dissolving it, leaving a structure such as a cantilever beam.
A common sacrificial layer is PSG or phosphosilicate
glass. Similar etching and dissolution processes can be
applied as with bulk micromachining.
Wafer bonding
Wafer bonding is a process by which similar materials,
such as silicon wafers, can be bonded to each other, or to
dissimilar materials such as glass.
The technique can be used to produce materials with a
variety of desired properties, it can be used for encapsulasiliconchip.com.au
This may sound like a myth, but it is true. About two years
ago, a new medical MRI facility was being tested, and during
testing, about 40 iPhones and Apple watch devices became disabled, but no Android devices were affected.
It was thought that the machine must have emitted some
type of electromagnetic pulse during testing that destroyed the
phones. It was later discovered that there was a helium leak during testing which disabled the devices.
iPhones, Apple watches and numerous other devices use
MEMS oscillators to generate clock signals instead of traditional
quartz crystal oscillators as they are cheaper and smaller. These
devices are hermetically sealed in a package which contains either an inert gas or a vacuum.
Changes to the gas mix or pressure inside the package can
affect the oscillation frequency to such an extent that its output
frequency is outside of the bounds at which the CPU or other
clock-driven components will function.
As helium molecules are small, it is very difficult if not practically impossible to seal the package against an infusion of helium. Therefore, the gas will diffuse through the hermetic seal,
changing the atmosphere inside the device and causing its oscillation frequency to shift. This is not usually a problem as such
devices are usually only exposed to the very low concentration
of helium naturally present in our atmosphere.
The devices returned to operation after a few days. The fact
that it only affected Apple devices is because most Android devices use quartz oscillators. Apple mentions the susceptibility
to helium in its documentation.
The MEMS device in question is the SiTime SiT1532 and is
said to be the world’s smallest (1.5mm x 0.8mm), lowest power
32.768kHz oscillator, and twice as accurate as a quartz crystal.
See the video “MEMS oscillator sensitivity to helium (helium
kills iPhones)” at https://youtu.be/vvzWaVvB908
Tests in that video show the device is disabled in a 2% helium
environment after 30 minutes. Hydrogen molecules are slightly
larger than helium molecules, and did not affect the device in
that experiment. The video author also does a very interesting
teardown of the MEMS device.
tion purposes, or it can be used to create large multi-layered structures – see Fig.6. A variety of bonding techniques
can be used such as fusion, anodic, thermocompression,
eutectic, glass frit and adhesive bonding.
LIGA
LIGA is suitable for extremely high aspect ratio parts
such as a column several millimetres tall but only 0.03mm
thick (see Figs.7 & 8).
LIGA works as follows:
1) A thick layer of PMMA (commonly known as Perspex
or acrylic) is deposited onto an electrically conducting substrate such as silicon or metal. This PMMA is designed to
be sensitive to X-rays or UV light.
2) The PMMA is exposed to X-rays or UV light via a
mask and “developed” to remove unwanted material from
the exposed areas.
3) Metal is deposited by an electrolytic process akin to
electroplating, to fill the cavities where the PMMA was
removed.
4) The PMMA is removed, such as by dissolution, leaving a free-standing metal structure.
Australia’s electronics magazine
November 2020 19
with a plasma as with bulk micromachining, but then the
process is stopped, and the hole has an inert Teflon-like
polymer layer deposited in it.
The etching process then continues, but since the plasma
is coming from a vertical direction, the sides of the hole
are protected, while the protective layer in the bottom is
removed and the substrate to be etched can then also be
removed. The process is repeated until the desired hole
depth is achieved.
Hot embossing
Fig.14: an electron micrograph of the ADXL50 single-axis
accelerometer sensor.
Since the X-ray source has to be a highly collimated beam
from a synchrotron, this makes such a method expensive
for parts fabrication. A variation of this process takes the
part made and then uses it as a tool to create an impression into a polymer layer. The impression formed is then
filled with metal. This moulding process can be repeated
many times, reducing cost.
UV LIGA is a cheaper process and doesn’t need a synchrotron source, but is only suitable for lower aspect ratio parts.
Ion etching
Deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) is used for making deep,
high aspect ratio holes for MEMS devices. But it can also be
used to fabricate other devices such as watch springs and
deep trenches for capacitors in DRAM chips (see Figs.9-11).
The most common process involves standard etching
In hot embossing, a high aspect ratio metal part is made
by another MEMS process such as LIGA with the inverse
pattern of the part that is to be fabricated, and that is used
as a mould to make a plastic part. Both the mould and a
mouldable plastic are pressed together under vacuum to
make the part. Such parts are cheap and are used in microfluidics for medical applications.
For more information, see our detailed article on fluidics
and microfluidics in the August 2019 issue (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/11762).
The first popular MEMS device
The first MEMS device to obtain large-scale market acceptance was an accelerometer based on CMOS technology. It was fabricated using surface micromachining, as was
the device by Nathanson mentioned earlier.
The device was made by Analog Devices and called the
ADXL50 (see Figs.12-14) and was released to the market
once it was fully qualified, in 1993. Its application was to
trigger airbags in cars (for more information on airbags, see
our November 2016 article at www.siliconchip.com.au/
Article/10424). It incorporated both electronic circuitry
along with micromachined structures.
How forces change as objects shrink
As devices shrink, the relative strength
of various natural forces changes. Gravity
becomes less important, but the van der
Waals force (a short-range force between
atoms and molecules) becomes proportionally strong.
When the scale of an object changes, its
volume changes by the cube of one dimension, and its surface area by the square of
that dimension.
At smaller scales, friction becomes more
significant than inertia; heat dissipation
(proportional to surface area) is more significant than heat retention (proportional to
volume); and electrostatic forces are more
significant than magnetic forces.
As devices become smaller, they can
be heated or cooled much more quickly,
which is important for thermally-activated
devices like some inkjet heads.
Heat dissipation is not a major problem
in most cases.
The smaller a cantilever beam is, the
lower its spring constant and the more
flexible it is.
20
Silicon Chip
Electrical resistance is inversely proportional to scale while capacitance changes
linearly with scale and electrostatic forces
change with the square of scale.
Electromagnetic forces scale with the
fourth power of conductor length, but for
permanent magnets, the amount of strength
retained is roughly linear with size (depending on their geometry and the specific application).
The fact that electromagnetic forces decrease so dramatically with scale is the reason they are not commonly used in MEMS
devices. An electrostatic device is preferred
to an electromagnetic device, as the forces
involved scale with the square of the dimension, not the fourth-power.
In microfluidic devices, a reduction in radius of ten times results in a 10,000 times
increase in pressure drop per unit length,
due to a fourth power dependence.
Consider a mirror on a MEMS device that
might be used as part of an optical switch.
A 50% reduction in the height, width and
thickness of such a device results in the
Australia’s electronics magazine
torque required to rotate the mirror being
reduced by a factor of 32.
Beyond MEMS
Beyond MEMS is NEMS or nanoelectromechanical systems. These are like MEMS
devices but at the nanometre (one-millionth
of a millimetre) scale. They are the next step
beyond MEMS, and move into the realm of
machines that can directly manipulate molecules like DNA, as in nature.
As an example of a nanoscale machine
from nature, consider the following simulation video by Australia’s Walter and Eliza
Hall Institute of Medical Research of various
processes involving DNA: www.wehi.edu.
au/wehi-tv/molecular-visualisations-dna
There are many other similar videos at
https://www.wehi.edu.au/wehi-tv
Apart from the possible future development of NEMS to manipulate DNA and other
biological molecules, experimental NEMS
devices are currently being made. There
are unique challenges at such scales as
intermolecular forces dominate.
siliconchip.com.au
A look at some MEMS devices
There is already a vast variety of MEMS devices available. Here are just some of them – but it is simply not possible to cover all of
them in the available space. Some other uses for MEMS not discussed below include blood pressure monitors, pressure monitors for
other applications, pill cams, ultrasonic transducers, DNA microarrays, micropumps, flow sensors and microfluidics applications.
Texas Instruments digital
light processing (DLP)
A scanning electron
microscope image
of the micromirrors
on the DLP device.
DLP is a MEMS video projection technology using micromirrors to direct a beam to
a projected area or away from it and onto a
heatsink. Toggling the micromirrors rapidly
gives control of brightness from 0% up to
100%. Colours are produced either with one
DLP chip and a colour wheel, or with three
DLP chips and three differently coloured
beams of light.
A MEMS micro-mirror
device, the core
component of a DLP
device. Each micromirror
drives one pixel. The
mirror is mounted on a
suspension device with
a torsional restoring
spring. The mirror is
moved by electrostatic
forces from the columns at
upper left and lower right. Source:
Wikimedia user Egmason.
MEMS accelerometers
MEMS acceleroMotion
meters are made of
1.3
Micron Gap
many interdigitated
125
2
Micron
Microns
Overlap
fingers, similar to
thick
the comb drive
A single finger of a
shown overleaf.
typical accelerometer
As the device
sensor element. It is a
differential capacitor
experiences a
where the rate of
force, the capchange of the output is
acitance between proportional to the force
the fingers changes. experienced. Source:
Analog Devices.
Rotary MEMS motors
Rotary MEMS motors may be driven
by electrostatic or by
other means.
MEMS three-axis gyroscope
A MEMS gyroscope is correctly known
as a Coriolis vibratory gyroscope. It contains parts that vibrate in all three axes.
They will tend to continue to vibrate in the
same plane, but if an external rotational
force is applied, the Coriolis effect causes a
force to be generated between the vibrating
structure and its support.
This force is measured to determine the
rate of rotation. Accelerometers and gyroscopes can be combined in one device,
which is then known as an inertial
measurement unit
(IMU).
A MEMS threeaxis gyroscope:
(1) outer frame (2) inner frame (3) driving
comb electrodes (4) parallel plate sense
electrode (5) double folded beams (6) anchors
(7) linear beams and (8) self-rotation ring.
Source: Minh Ngoc Nguyen et al.
Grating light valve (GLV)
GLV is a technology that competes with
DLP for display projection. Each pixel in a
display device is representing by multiple
ribbons which are moved electrostatically by
a distance a tiny fraction of the wavelength
of light.
When all the ribbons are aligned, the device acts as a mirror, and all light is directed
towards the image. When the ribbons move
apart, a diffraction grating is formed. In that
case, only some light is directed to the image,
while other light goes elsewhere.
When the distance between adjacent ribbons is ¼ of the light wavelength, no light is
reflected towards the image. By varying the
distance between zero and ¼ wavelength, a
range of brightnesses is generated.
Spectrometer on chip
A spectrometer for
chemical analysis
can be fabricated
with MEMS.
A MEMS spectrometer on a chip by
Si-Ware Systems, on their proprietary
Silicon integrated Micro-Optical Systems
Technology (SiMOST) platform.
MEMS atomic force
microscope (AFM)
AFMs are based on techniques from scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM). Today,
AFM probes or even the principal parts of the
device are made with MEMS technology. AFMs
are capable of imaging individual molecules
and sensing or manipulating individual atoms.
The operating
principle of an
atomic force
microscope. PZT
refers to a piezoelectric material
that can change
its dimensions in
response to an
applied electric
field. The tip on the
cantilever follows the
atomic profile of the surface,
with its position being monitored by the
deflection of the laser or by other methods.
Source: Wikimedia user OverlordQ.
An atomic force microscope on a chip
developed at Laboratory for Dynamics and
Control of Nanosystems at the University of
Texas by M. G. Ruppert, A. G. Fowler, M.
Maroufi and S. O. R. Moheimani.
Strain gauges
A MEMS strain gauge relies on the change
in capacitance of interdigitated electrodes as
it is extended.
An electron microscope image of a
MEMS electrostatic motor with false
colour. The central red object is the
bearing, which is surrounded by the
rotor. Around the rotor are the stators
which are driven with phased voltages.
Source: www.mems-exchange.org
siliconchip.com.au
A grating light valve (GLV) from Silicon
Light Machines, Inc.
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electronics magazine
magazine
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November
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Gears
MEMS IR sensor
Gears can be fabricated with MEMS, as
seen below.
Infrared sensors can use photonic sensors such as in CCD or CMOS devices, or
they may sense heat such as with thermoelectric infrared sensors.
Thermoelectric sensors have the advantage of lower noise and possibly lower cost
than photonic sensors. Infrared radiation
heats a thermocouple, producing a voltage
proportional to the radiation intensity.
An actual MEMS strain gauge. As the device
is stretched, the capacitance changes in
relation to the amount of extension. Source:
Michael Suster et al.,
Case Western University.
Optical switches
A MEMS optical switch contains several
optical fibre inputs and outputs, and any input can be switched to any output via the
use of two MEMS tilt mirror arrays.
A schematic
view of a 3D
optical switch.
A MEMS demonstration geartrain. Such
gears have been driven at 250,000rpm.
Source: Sandia National Laboratories.
MEMS inkjet printer heads
Inkjet printer heads are a common MEMS
device in everyday use. A recent development
is the move from rapid heating and bulk piezoelectric materials to thin-film piezoelectric materials which are deposited as part of
the MEMS fabrication process. This provides
more design flexibility and lower cost. Microfluidic technology is also incorporated into
inkjet printer heads.
Comb drive
A MEMS comb drive is a linear actuation
mechanism that consists of two interlocking microscopic
parts resembling
hair combs.
As a voltage is
applied between
them, the parts
are drawn together by electrostatAn electron
ic forces. Comb
microscope image
drive actuators
of comb drive
have been used
components. With
the application of
as the driving elean electric field, the
ments for resona- interdigitated
fingers
tors, electromeare drawn toward
each other. When
chanical filters,
the electric field is
optical shutters
removed, silicon
springs return the
and
device to its starting
microgrippers to
position. Source:
name just a few
Sandia National Labs.
applications.
Fig.36: a cross-sectional diagram of a
MEMS thermoelectric IR sensor. Infrared
radiation enters the device and heats the
thermocouple. G represents the paths of
thermal losses. Source: Dehui Xu, Yuelin
Wang, Bin Xiong and Tie Li.
MEMS loudspeakers and
microphones
MEMS loudspeakers are relatively new
and were featured in the May 2020 issue
of SILICON CHIP (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/14441). MEMS microphones are
now commonly found in consumer devices
such as smartphones, microphones with
earphones, headsets etc.
A cross-sectional diagram of a Philips
inkjet printer head in which three
MEMS wafers are bonded together.
The ink is propelled via a thin-film
piezoelectric driver which is also
deposited during the fabrication
process. Source: Philips.
Exterior view and a cross-section of
a TDK T4064 MEMS microphone,
2.7mm x 1.6mm x 0.89mm. The
device has an ASIC (applicationspecific integrated circuit)
incorporated into the housing.
The diaphragm and the backplate
together act as a parallel plate
capacitor, and when the diaphragm,
moves the capacitance changes and
an electrical signal is produced.
A comb driver
actuator as the
driver for a
resonator device. Source:
Wikimedia user Huseyintet.
22
22 S
Silicon Chip
Australia’s
Australia’s electronics
electronics magazine
magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Switches
Bio-MEMS
MEMS switches offer the ability to switch
frequencies between DC and 14GHz (Analog
Devices commercial models) and have the
advantage of being reliable, small (4mm x
5mm) and having low power consumption.
A selection of Bio-MEMS devices follows.
Smart contact lens
An example of a
smart contact
lens, the
SENSIMED
Triggerfish with
MEMS technology with
continuous
ocular monitoring
for glaucoma
patients.
Several companies are developing MEMSbased smart contact lenses. These may
have features such as autofocus, data
display via Bluetooth, intraocular pressure
monitoring for glaucoma etc.
An RF relay
which uses a comb drive as the actuator.
Source: L. Almeida et al.,
Auburn University.
Debiotech NanoPUMP
This device is designed for the transdermal infusion of insulin or other substances.
It is also the MEMS pump component of
the JewelPUMP insulin infusion system and
is connected to a reservoir with enough
product for a week. It is connected to the
patient via a flexible cannula. It also connects to a monitoring and control App on
a smartphone.
Neural probes
MEMS can be used to fabricate silicon
neural probes for brain research.
Glucose sensor
A selection of MEMS neural probes by
NeuroNexus.
Microneedles
MEMS microneedles are fabricated to
deliver medication just below the skin.
An Analog
Devices EVAL-DGM1304SDZ evaluation
board featuring a
single-pole, four-throw
MEMS ADGM1304 switch as well as a
calibration transmission line at the
bottom. The MEMS chip is at the
junction of the five RF lines.
MEMS oscillators
MEMS oscillators are smaller, cheaper,
more temperature stable, more rugged and
more power-efficient than quartz crystal oscillators. In some cases, their frequency can
be programmed from 1Hz to 725MHz in 1Hz
increments. They have found applications
in areas such as automotive electronics and
smartphones. Also, see the related panel
earlier on the effects of helium.
A MEMS glucose sensor designed for
implanting. Source: Columbia BioMEMS
Laboratory.
An implantable MEMS sensor for continuous glucose monitoring is being developed
(see above). Glucose enters a chamber via
a semipermeable membrane and binds with
a glucose-sensitive substance attached to a
diaphragm. The diaphragm is made to vibrate
via an external magnetic field which interacts
with a magnetic permalloy attached to it.
The vibrational amplitude changes according to glucose concentration. This is measured via the change in capacitance between
the moving and the ground electrode.
DNA nanoinjector
A MEMS DNA nanoinjector invented at
Brigham Young University in the USA allows scientists to inject DNA into living cells.
A MEMS oscillator. The resonator beam
is driven by electrostatic forces between
the beam and an electrode beneath it. The
dual-output Microchip DSA2311 comes in
a 2.5mm x 2.0mm x 0.85mm package and
each output can operate between 2.3MHz
and 170MHz.
Source: Microchip Technology, Inc.
siliconchip.com.au
A DNA nanoinjector.
Australia’s electronics
electronics magazine
magazine
Australia’s
The MEMS-fabricated DebioJect intradermal injection microneedle array by
Debiotech, for delivery of medications
just below the surface of the skin.
Virus detection
MEMS plays an important role in COVID-19 testing. One test involves the partitioning and multiplication of a small amount
of a patient’s viral genetic material into
a much larger amount that is easier and
more accurate to analyse. This way, a test
result can be obtained in minutes rather
than hours.
Part of the
MEMS Microfluidic Array
Partitioning
chamber of
the Combinati
Absolute Q
platform. This
is used for
rapid polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) analysis, for COVID-19 as
well as other tests and analyses.
SC
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