This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to Application No. EP 05255430.0 filed on Sep. 6, 2005, entitled “Method for Manufacturing a Mass-Spring System,” the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to the manufacture of a micromechanical mass-spring system for use as an inertial device. The invention further relates to micromechanical mass-spring systems incorporating thin asymmetric springs and a method of manufacturing such systems, using bulk etching and bulk and/or surface micromachining techniques.
Micro electromechanical systems (MEMS) are becoming increasingly important in the manufacture of inertial devices such as angular rate sensors and multiple axis accelerometers. Micromechanical structures such as asymmetric springs, diaphragms and mass-spring systems are increasingly used in such devices, where these structures are used to obtain in-plane movements of structures when applying out-of-plane forces. The manufacturing methods of these structures generally involve bulk micromachining techniques.
Known devices which use such methods are realized by using the full wafer thickness of (100) silicon to define, for example, an asymmetric spring along the (111) plane by etching from both sides of the wafer. This results in springs typically thicker than 30 microns and a large spread in thickness, and a resulting large chip size. These methods strongly limit the downscaling of the dimensions of such springs, thereby limiting improvements in chip size and manufacturing costs.
Further prior art methods for manufacturing the asymmetric springs have aimed to reduce chip size using a combination of etch-stop against pn-junction techniques to form the thickness of the springs, a shallow wet etch to form the asymmetric feature and dry etching to release the springs from the manufacturing substrate. Such methods can produce springs with a practical thickness in the range of 10 to 20 microns, and a reduced width of approximately 5 microns including an asymmetric cut.
Known devices which employ such methods include devices for measuring force components using monocrystalline materials, such as 2-axis and 3-axis accelerometers and devices for measuring angular velocity and angular rate.
As mentioned above, limitations currently exist in the manufacturing methods of micromechanical structures such as asymmetric springs, and there is a need within the related industry to produce thinner structures in order to reduce the chip size of micromechanical inertial devices, in a cost-effective manner.
The present invention seeks to overcome the aforementioned problems, by providing an alternative manufacturing method which can be used to build mass-spring systems comprising asymmetric springs with a thickness down to sub-micron values and a corresponding width in the range of 1 micron or more, in an efficient and effective manufacturing method.
According to the present invention there is provided a method for manufacturing a micromechanical mass-spring system comprising a mass and an asymmetric spring, the method comprising: providing a silicon substrate; forming a mass on the substrate; etching the silicon substrate to define a section upon which the asymmetric spring is to be formed; forming a surface layer on the surface of the substrate; etching to form the asymmetric spring from the surface layer; and etching to release the mass and spring from the substrate.
Implementation of the present invention by using silicon process technology and by using photolithographic methods, thin-film deposition, doping and etching processes leads to the manufacture of much thinner asymmetric springs within mass-spring systems, thereby providing greater flexibility in the manufacture of inertial devices in which in-plane movements of micromechanical structures such as asymmetric springs occur when applying out-of-plane forces to the structures.
Mass-spring systems manufactured according to the present invention may also be incorporated in applications such as: 2- and 3-axis accelerometers, which may include capacitive detection; 1- and 2-axis angular rate sensors with electrostatic excitation and capacitive detection; a capacitive inertial measurement unit (IMU) comprising two chips, one of which has a gyro having up to two axes and an accelerometer having up to three axes, and the other of which has three signal conditioning means; and a complete single-chip IMU with a gyro having up to two axes and an accelerometer having up to three axes on the same chip.
A reduced chip size allows multiple inertial devices to be placed on the same chip, thereby facilitating the fitting of the chip to, for example, a vehicle.
Such devices may also be employed to design and manufacture different types of actuators that take advantage of obtaining in-plane movements when applying out of plane forces; for example parts for microvalves, micropumps, microgrippers, microhandling, microbiotics, etc.
Examples of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
Next, an anisotropic etching technique is used to etch the section of the silicon substrate 1 in the (111) plane, defining a wall 2 along this plane as illustrated in
c illustrates the formation of a doped surface layer 3 on the substrate 1. The n-type surface layer 3 is built by ion implantation and diffusion, and lies across the (111) wall 2 etched on the silicon substrate 1. The surface layer 3 is then detached from the substrate 1 (
Finally, it is necessary to release the asymmetric spring 4 from the remainder of the surface layer 3 (
The above method uses a combination of anisotropic wet etching, doping by ion implantation, etch-stop against pn-junction and dry etching techniques to create thin asymmetric springs in single-crystal silicon. The bulk micromachining techniques described can be combined with other processes to build complete sensor chips and other micromechanical inertial devices according to the present invention.
A further example of a manufacturing method of an asymmetric spring is illustrated in
Next, a sacrificial layer 7 is created above the etched silicon substrate 5, as shown in
Finally, the poly-silicon layer 8 and sacrificial layer 7 are etched to form the asymmetric spring 9 and to release the micromechanical structure from the substrate 5, as shown in
The above steps therefore use a combination of bulk etching and surface-micromachining to create micromechanical structures such as thin asymmetric springs. This example of the present invention can be extended to build two-axis angular rate sensors and three-axis accelerometers as full single-chip structures.
The above methods are not limited to the realization of springs along the (111) plane on (100) substrate; out-of-plane springs can also be manufactured by etchings at different angles to the substrate surface plane. For example, different angles can be created on the substrate by using isotropic etching and deep, near 90° vertical etching. According to the present invention, micromechanical structures such as mass-spring systems for inertial devices can be made with a large variety of geometries, as defined by designing the patterns on photolithographic masks to be used in the photolithographic process that are incorporated in the manufacture of such asymmetric springs, as described below.
As alternatives to performing anisotropic etching initially on the substrate, wet isotropic etching can be used, resulting in curved elements, or dry RIE etching can be used to define other angles between the surface plane of the substrate and masses and the surface plane of the spring elements.
Alternative thin-film materials to poly-silicon may be used in the present invention, including strong elastic dielectrics such as silicon-nitride, other semi-conductor materials such as poly silicon germanium or silicon carbon, silicon-carbide, diamond-like-carbon and different metal films or insulating films which perform well as spring material, elastic thin-film materials such as Mo, W, Ti and Ni, and alloys including the shape-memory alloy TiNi.
The present invention therefore provides an efficient method of producing micromechanical mass-spring systems comprising asymmetric springs which are a great deal thinner than those obtained by previous known methods. This allows for smaller, more compact and less expensive micromechanical devices to be built with masses and asymmetric springs as required to obtain in-plane movements when applying out-of-plane forces, such as angular rate sensors and multiple axis accelerometers.
Having described exemplary embodiments of the present invention, it is believed that other modifications, variations and changes will be suggested to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings set forth herein. It is therefore to be understood that all such variations, modifications and changes are believed to fall within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims. Although specific terms are employed herein, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05255430.0 | Sep 2005 | EP | regional |