Wafer-scale Fabrication of Nanometer Silicon Posts for Capacitive Micromachined Ultrasonic Transducers with Substrate-Embedded Springs
- Authors
- Kim, Hae Youn; Kang, Dong-Hyun; Kim, Jinsik; Khuri-Yakub, Butrus T.; Lee, Byung Chul
- Issue Date
- 7-Sep-2020
- Publisher
- IEEE
- Keywords
- Capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducer; Nanometer silicon posts; Wafer-scale; size-reduction process
- Citation
- PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2020 IEEE INTERNATIONAL ULTRASONICS SYMPOSIUM (IUS), v.2020-September
- Indexed
- SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2020 IEEE INTERNATIONAL ULTRASONICS SYMPOSIUM (IUS)
- Volume
- 2020-September
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/7180
- DOI
- 10.1109/IUS46767.2020.9251528
- ISSN
- 1948-5719
- Abstract
- A capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducer (CMUT) with substrate-embedded springs has been demonstrated high transmit efficiency with non-flexural parallel-plate piston movement. In this paper, we introduce whole wafer-scale uniform nanometer silicon posts with a fabrication technique of combination between DRIE and RIE. In order to maintain our fabrication cost-effective, a photomask with a minimum feature size of 2.0 mu m was used for whole wafer-scale photolithography, and a size-reduced RIE process followed by DRIE was conducted for achieving the sub-micron or nanometer post area. Furthermore, In-situ nanomechanical tests of the fabricated silicon posts were conducted using a pico-indenter (PI 85L Pico-Indenter, Bruker) monitored under a scanning electron microscopy. The length and the diameter of the silicon post after size-reduction by RIE are measured as 5.6 mu m and 0.74 mu m, respectively. The uniformity across the whole 4-inch wafer is less than 5%. The loading-unloading graph by In-situ nanomechanical experiments confirmed that the silicon posts could consistently achieve above 6% elastic strain. We are currently applying this nanometer springs to the CMUTs with substrate-embedded springs.
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Collections - College of Life Science and Biotechnology > Department of Biomedical Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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