The present invention relates to a motor which can be constructed using MEMS (micro-electromechanical systems) technology, and to a method of constructing the motor.
Recently there has been much research to develop MEMS devices, that is mechanical devices having dimensions of micrometers (for example, having a maximum diameter no more than say 10 millimetres). Some such devices include an element which rotates around a shaft attached to a stator. One such device is shown in cross-section in
In such a system a contact bearing is not suitable, and to minimise contact resistance it is preferable that the shaft 102 has a wide clearance from the sides of the aperture 103. However, a small clearance is required in order to avoid eccentricity in the rotation of the shaft 102. As a consequence, the contact surfaces at which the moving parts touch each other experience frictional resistance, and are liable to abrasion.
The present invention aims to provide a new and useful MEMS device, and a new and useful method for fabricating MEMS devices.
In general terms, the present invention proposes that at least one surface of the MEMS device is provided with grooves for generating an air bearing between the rotor and the shaft and/or stator as the rotor rotates.
Conveniently, the grooves may be formed on a surface of the stator which faces a surface of the rotor, or a surface of the rotor which faces the stator. The grooves may generate an air current through the gap between the rotor and the shaft.
In a first case, the air bearing can be between the rotor and the stator, and can support at least a proportion of the weight of the rotor.
In a second case, which is freely combinable with the first, the air bearing can be between the rotor and the shaft.
For example, the air bearing may be positioned between the shaft and the stator to generate a force having a component in the rotational plane (i.e. the plane perpendicular to the axis of the shaft) which, in the case that the central axis of the aperture of the rotor moves away from the axis of the shaft, urges the rotor to move so that the axis of the aperture returns to coincide with the axis of the shaft.
Advantageously, the shaft and stator are co-operatively shaped such that the gap between them includes a plurality of circumferentially spaced constrictions. At each of these constrictions the air has a higher pressure and tends to push the rotor and the shaft apart. When the rotor is correctly centred on the axis of the shaft, the respective forces from the constrictions balance, but when the rotor is displaced from the axis of the shaft so as to narrow one or more of the constrictions and widen the other(s), the air pressure at the narrowed constriction(s) grows and the air pressure at the widened constriction fall(s), so that a force is generated to urge the rotor back to the correct position.
In a second example of the air bearing being formed between the rotor and the shaft, the shaft may be formed to include a first surface which is at least partially upwardly facing (when the MEMS device is in use), and in this case the air bearing may be formed between that first surface of the shaft and a second at least partially downwardly-facing surface of the rotor. The air bearing at least partly supports the weight of the rotor.
In principle, the first surface of the shaft and the opposing second surface of the rotor could each be planar and perpendicular to the rotational axis. However, the inventors have found that it is advantageous if both of these surfaces are conical (or, more exactly, frustoconical), since in this case the air flow between the rotor and the shaft is smoother.
In a preferred case, the rotor is formed with a chamber which includes a conical surface, and the shaft is not of uniform thickness along its axis but rather includes a wide portion located within the chamber and including a conical surface facing the conical surface of the substrate.
The invention can also be expressed as a method of forming an MEMS device which includes forming grooves in it to generate an air bearing upon the rotor rotating.
The method may include forming corresponding openings in two substrates, and joining the substrates together with the corresponding openings facing each other and sandwiching a wide portion of respective shafts, and cutting the joined substrates to form rotors encircling the respective shafts.
Preferred features of the invention will now be described, for the sake of illustration only, with reference to the following figures in which:
a) is a cross section of a first substrate that can be produced from the substrate of
b) is a cross section of a substrate of a second substrate that can be produced from the substrate of
a)–(c) shows the effect of a second air bearing between the shaft and the rotor in an alternate embodiment of the invention.
The steps of constructing a MEMS device which is a first embodiment of the invention will now be described.
Referring firstly to
Two coated substrates as shown in
A first way of treating the coated substrate is wet chemical etching on surface of the substrate 13 carrying the layer 1. The coated substrate is dipped into an etchant solution, and a chemical reaction occurs on the unmasked areas of the substrate 13 and corrodes into the substrate material. The liquid etchant being typically isotropic causes corrosion to spread around the unmasked portion to form undercuts under the layer 1. This produces a structure as shown in
A second way of treating the coated substrate is dry plasma etching of the substrate 23, in which etchant gas is released and used to form plasma ions which are accelerated by a high electrical potential toward the coated surface of the substrate 23, causing rapid corrosion. Since the ions travel straight towards the substrate, openings 13 are formed with cylindrical walls 13, as shown in
Note, however, that it would be possible to provide a tapered profile as shown in
In each of the methods described above, the openings 7, 15 are formed to extend through approximately half the thickness of the substrates 13, 23. Following that, etching methods are employed on the opposite surfaces of the substrates 13, 23 (the lower surface as shown in
A coating film (labelled 19 in the
Following the deposition of the layer 19, a thin electrically conducting film 21 is deposited on the surface of the substrate 3 of the
The substrates 13, 23 are positioned as shown in
To precisely align the openings 7, 15 a position microscopic alignment method is used, preferably using appropriate alignment markers. The substrates 13, 23 are then heated to cause fusion between them at their interface. Optionally, a thin Pyrex glass adhesion layer 25 may be provided on one or other of the contact surfaces of the substrates 3 to promote the fusion electrically. The details of a suitable bonding technique are available in several publications related to semiconductor fabrication processes, such as “Semiconductor wafer bonding: science and technology”, Q.-Y. Tong and U. Gosele, John Wiley, 1999. As described there, a low-powered electrical voltage is typically applied to the substrate 23 using a conductor probe, so that molecular attractions occur on the interface between the substrate 23 and the adhesion layer 25, thus bonding them together. Such a bonding process can be applied to substrates of various materials, and other adhesion layers 25, such as gold or polymer layers, may be used depending upon the process requirements. Note that the contact surfaces of the substrates 13, 23 and the layer 25 should be thoroughly cleansed or polished before the joining in order to provide a high quality article-free surface contact in order to give adhesion consistency.
Due to the electrically insulating DLC layer 19, the process of bonding the substrates 13, 23 to each other will not cause the shaft 27 to be attached to either of the substrates 13, 23, since no adhesion layer is formed on any of its surfaces. Hence, there is no additional step required to isolate the shaft 27 from the substrates 13, 23 during the bonding process. The adhesion only takes place at the interface between the substrates 13, 23, so that the shaft 27 is at all times free to rotate.
Note that once the substrates 13, 23 are bonded together, the wide portion 31 of the shaft 27 is permanently trapped inside the chamber 24 formed between the substrates 13, 23.
In the next process step, as illustrated in
To intensify the induced electromagnetic force, a thin layer 35 of material with high magnetic saturation properties, such as Nickel-Iron (Ni—Fe) is coated onto the innermost surface of the cavities 33 using an appropriate electro-plating technique. Such a method operates by applying electrical charges to draw metallic irons from a mixture solution containing the ingredients and using layer 21 as an electrode. The metal layer 35 shown in
The shaft 27 is then attached to a substrate 39 which will later be divided into stators 43, each of which surround the axis 11 of a respective shaft 27. The structure of the substrate 39 is shown in cross section in
At this point, the substrates 13, 23 and 39 are partitioned along vertical lines 72 indicated in
Note that structures resembling what is shown in
Additionally, an air flow is generated between the shaft 27 and the rotor 4. As shown on
Turning to a second embodiment of the invention, the construction of this embodiment is very largely identical to that of the first embodiment, except that in this embodiment the holes 17 in the substrate 13 and/or the substrate 23 of
Although only two embodiments of the invention have been described, many variations are possible within the scope of the invention as will be clear to a skilled person. For example, in principle it would be possible to form the grooves (which generate the area of increased air pressure) on the curved surface of the shaft. However, practically speaking it is difficult to form grooves on the curved surfaced of the shaft, so this possibility is not recommended. Furthermore, it might be possible to form the grooves on the stator rather than on the rotor, but this will generally lead to a much reduced air pressure in the bearing.
In a further example, although the invention has been illustrated in the case that the motor is an electromagnetic motor, the invention is applicable also if the motor is an electrostatic motor.
The motor device proposed by the present invention can be implemented in applications such as a (micro)-gyroscope, a (micro-) HDD (hard disk drive), a (micro-)optical storage drive, a (micro-)lens actuator, a (micro-)pump, a (micro)-fan, etc. In designs according to the invention the shaft may have a thickness less than 2 mm (e.g. about 1 mm), the rotor may have a diameter less than 10 mm (e.g. about 8 mm) and a thickness of less than 2 mm (e.g. about 1 mm).
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