The invention relates to a micromechanical actuator as a micro-electrical-mechanical system (MEMS), and to a method for its production. The invention also relates to the use of the actuator as an electrical switch which is arranged on a substrate, for example composed of silicon. A switch such as this is referred to in the following text as a microswitch.
An MEMS may have very small dimensions down to a few 100 μm. The moving mechanical structures and structural elements are produced very economically by the known methods and apparatuses in the semiconductor industry. These include, in particular, photolithographic processes as well as sputtering, vapor deposition, etching of all types, stripping, printing and electroplating. Further applications of an MEMS are, for example, sensors, transmissions and valves.
The invention will be described in the following text using the example of thermally actuated electrical microswitches by means of two actuators, in the form of MEMS. However, it is suitable for all other applications of MEMS which have a mechanical spring element as the moving structural element. The moving elements can be actuated not only by thermal expansion but also, for example, by magnetic, piezoelectric, magnetostrictive or electrostatic force.
The document U.S. Pat. No. 7,036,312 B2 describes a typical MEMS, which is partially mounted on a substrate. Two elongated actuators form an arrangement as a microswitch. Each actuator consists of a so-called hot arm and a cold arm. The respective end of the two arms is firmly anchored to the substrate on an electrically insulating layer. At the other, moving end, the two arms are firmly connected to one another by means of an insulating material. A metallic heating loop is located on the hot arm, consisting of a forward conductor and a return conductor which is electrically insulated from it, starting from the anchor point and leading back to the other anchor point. The heating loop is used for thermal actuation of the actuator. For this purpose, an electrical voltage or constant current is applied briefly to, or impressed on, the two anchor points, to the connecting surfaces located there or to so-called pads of the heating loop. The resistive heat produced by the electric current leads to an increase in the mechanical length of the hot arm. The difference between the lengths of the hot and cold arms which occurs during this process leads to a diverging movement of the two arms, which are firmly connected at the end, in this area, to be precise in the direction from the hot arm to the cold arm. The extent of the diverging movement on an approximately circular path is a multiple of the length change of the hot arm, or the difference between the length changes of the two arms. This diverging movement is a maximum if a bearing were to be located as a rotation point in the area of the anchor point of the cold arm. However, there would then be no restoring force acting on the cold arm when the actuation is switched off. The cold arm is therefore designed such that its cross section tapers significantly, that is to say its width tapers, in the vicinity of its anchor point. This can also be produced without any additional process steps, in comparison to a bearing. The dimensions of the cross section of the taper and its length at the same time govern the respectively effective flexibility and restoring force of the cold arm. This flexible taper is also referred to in the following text as a flexer.
Two such actuators are arranged such that they form an electrical microswitch, wherein the signal current to be switched flows via the cold arms of the actuators. The cold arms are therefore composed of metal. The two actuators and their switching contacts, which are located at the moving end, are arranged and designed such that only one actuating switching pulse with a time in the order of magnitude of about 10 milliseconds is required for each actuator, for the microswitch to change between the ON and OFF switching states. Because of the low thermal capacity of the heating loop, both the heating up and cooling down take place very quickly. In the ON switching state, the two switching contacts are hooked to one another, with the actuation, that is to say the thermal excitation, being switched off. Therefore, overall, a microswitch based on an MEMS such as this requires only a very small amount of excitation energy.
A specific minimum contact force is required in order to achieve a reliable electrical contact. This is applied by the restoring force of at least one of the two actuators. The restoring force is governed virtually exclusively by the material characteristics of the flexer and its dimensions. The cold arm, and therefore also the flexer, consist of an electrically conductive material, for example nickel.
It is known that metals which are subject to a mechanical stress have a tendency to so-called creepage, that is to say they are deformed plastically. In the case of a microswitch having an actuator according to U.S. Pat. No. 7,036,312 B2, which is in the ON switching state for a relatively long time, the effective contact force therefore continuously decreases. Particularly in the case of MEMS as microswitches, this disadvantageous effect is observed even in a short time, for example after a few switching processes, or after a few months when in the ON switching state all the time.
In order to avoid plastic deformation or creepage of the metals used, in particular nickel, as a result of the mechanical stress, it is possible to use an alloy or a mixture of nickel with very small proportions of manganese, iron or cobalt in order to electrochemically produce the arms, and therefore the flexer. Such alloys or mixtures make it possible, in comparison to pure nickel, to stabilize the grain structure, in particular at relatively high temperatures, and to achieve a reduced tendency to plastic deformation. However, this has the disadvantage that it is dependent on the metals to be used and their precise alloying proportions. The characteristics when loaded in the long term are unknown.
The heating loop is mechanically coupled to the cold arm by electrically insulating holders. The holders are then arranged at a number of points in the longitudinal direction of the actuators, and are attached to the hot and cold arms. The holders allow maximum utilization of the length change for transmission to the cold arm, in that divergent strain at right angles to the length expansion of the heating loop is prevented. In order to achieve the maximum possible length extension of the heating loop, this can also be arranged movably in the holders. In consequence, the thermally actuating force acts only on the moving end of the actuator on the cold arm. The problem of plastic deformation of metals as described above, and therefore the decreasing restoring force of the spring effect of the flexer cannot, however, be solved even in an arrangement such as this.
One object of the invention is to propose a micromechanical actuator which has at least one spring element which may be permanently subjected to mechanical stress and in the process has mechanical characteristics which are stable in the long term, and in which case different materials, particularly metals, can be used for an electrically conductive structural element. A further aim is to be able to produce the actuator using known methods.
The object is achieved by a micromechanical actuator as claimed in independent patent claim 1 and by a method for its production as claimed in patent claim 19. Advantageous embodiments of the invention are the subject matter of the dependent claims.
The actuator according to the invention uses the long-term-stable mechanical characteristics of a material which has silicon for the second spring element on the cold arm, which is referred to as the first spring element.
In order to achieve good electrical conductivity, the first spring element has metal, when this first spring element is also used to carry a signal current. Otherwise, the first spring element of the actuator may partially or completely have silicon or some other material with similar material characteristics, for example glass, ceramic, plastic.
According to the invention, the second spring element has silicon, which may be polycrystalline or monocrystalline silicon. According to one embodiment of the invention, a metallic element can be arranged at a distance from the second spring element and is connected to the first spring element such that an electric current can be transported through the metallic element from one anchor point to another anchor point which is arranged on the first spring element. The current can therefore pass through a bypass formed in this way to the first spring element, and need not pass through the second spring element, which has silicon and has a higher electrical resistance than metal. In contrast, the silicon in the second spring element contributes to the second spring element having characteristics resulting in mechanical behavior which is stable in the long term. The metallic element is particularly advantageous when the intention is to pass a signal current via the first spring element to an electrical contact point which is arranged thereon and is intended for mechanical switching of a contact.
The invention will be described in detail in the following text with reference to the schematic
In the vicinity of its anchor point 26, the cold arm 2 is made elastic by means of a taper. This results in the desired large deflection 7 of the actuator 1, which is a multiple of the length expansion of the heating loop 4. However, this small area of the flexer 12, which is illustrated by +45° shading in
When the heating loop 4 cools down, it returns to its original length, and therefore to the original position. Because it is firmly connected by the end holder 8 to the cold arm 2, the tensile force of the heating loop 4 assists the return movement of the actuator 1 when the actuation is switched off. When the microswitch is in the ON switching state, at least one of the two actuators 1 does not return to the initial position. The spring force of the flexer 12 and the supporting tensile force of the heating loop 4 apply the contact force of the microswitch, as a result of which both structural elements are subject to a permanent mechanical stress. This results in the disruptive plastic deformation of the metals that are used.
The electrical connections are represented symbolically as conductors 13, 14 and 15 in
The metallic structural elements of the actuator are generally produced electrochemically, for example from nickel. The flexer 12, the rest of the area of the cold arm 2 and the heating loop 4 are therefore also composed of this material. In general, in the case of metals, in particular in the case of electrochemically produced elements, the described metal creepage generally occurs when subjected to permanent mechanical loading, in the form of bending, tensile or compressive stress. This results in plastic deformation, as a result of which the elasticity decreases. In the case of a microswitch, this means a continuously decreasing contact force, thus adversely affecting the reliability, in a disadvantageous manner. This plastic deformation particularly affects the flexer 12, which has to absorb the greatest bending stress over a short length and with a small cross section. The mechanical characteristics of the flexer 12 are therefore particularly and exclusively critical for the long-term stability, for example, of a microswitch formed by actuators.
The actuator 1 essentially consists of a first spring element 2 and a second spring element 12, with the second spring element 12 being referred to as a flexer. The spring elements 2 and 12 are preferably deflected by a third spring element 3. In the embodiment illustrated in
Actuation takes place by means of at least one heating loop 4 for thermal expansion of at least one part of the spring element 3 and by thermal expansion to a different extent of at least one part of the spring elements 2, 12 with respect to at least one part of the spring element 3.
It has been established that silicon is very suitable for use as the material for the flexer 12. It has the required long-term stability even when subjected to a mechanical stress. Unlike metals, silicon does not tend to creep mechanically under load, but retains the elastic characteristics to the failure limit. Monocrystalline silicon can be particularly preferred since, in this case, no grain changes can occur either, and the material is not subject to mechanical stress, because of the undisturbed lattice arrangement. Because silicon is widely used in semiconductor technology, no new processes or substrates are required to produce the actuators according to the invention. The actuators can therefore also be produced highly cost-effectively. SOI wafers (Silicon On Insulator) are preferably used as the raw material for this purpose. A monocrystalline silicon layer, an SOI layer in the following text, is located fixed by adhesive on a thermally produced oxide layer on a wafer composed of silicon. It is known that specific areas of the SOI layer can be exposed by underetching the buried oxide, and can be separated from the layer located underneath, thus creating moving structures. These substrates and processes are used and applied in order to produce the flexer 12 according to the invention. The invention will therefore be described using examples with SOI wafers. However, the invention can also be implemented by means of other substrates and by processes other than this. In this case, other composite substrates may be used, which provide suitable material combinations, and in which an intermediate layer can be removed selectively after structuring of the layer located above it in order to produce moving areas by means of underetching. According to the invention, the intermediate layer is composed of an electrically insulating material, as a result of which elements can be electrically separated by structuring in the uppermost layer.
According to a first embodiment, the actuator 1 according to the invention is formed on two planes 17, 18. The first plane 17 is a part of the composite substrate, and the second plane 18 is located outside the composite substrate. The flexer 12 is arranged on the first plane 17, in the SOI layer 21. This has silicon, which also has no creepage tendency even in the case of SOI wafers when subjected to permanent mechanical stress, that is to say there is no tendency to plastic deformation.
The outlines of the flexer 12 in the SOI layer 21 are defined by etching narrow trenches 22 in this layer. The three-sided trenches 22 are represented by shading in the plan view shown in
The first spring element 2 has metal when the electrical signal to be switched is intended to be passed via the electrical conductor 15 to the switching contact 16. Otherwise, the first spring element 2 may also be composed of a semiconductor or a non-conductor.
The symbolically illustrated electrical conductor 15 connects the first spring element 2 to an electrical conductor on the rigid surface of the SOI layer 21. This conductor 15 is produced, for example, electrochemically on a sacrificial layer which bridges the trench 22. In order to achieve mobility, the conductor 15 may be formed in a meandering shape at least in the area of the bridge. The electrical conductors 13 and 14 are located at the third anchor point 26 of the heating loop 4 on an electrically insulating layer. Because these anchor points are fixed points, there is no need for movable electrical conductors here.
On thermal actuation, the actuator is deflected in the direction of the deflection arrow 7. The first spring element 2, which is located on the second plane 18, is in this embodiment made sufficiently broad that it is possible, to a first approximation, to preclude bending parallel to the surface of the substrate. The spring constant of the first spring element 2 is therefore greater than the spring constant of the second spring element 12.
Virtually all of the bending takes place in the area of the second spring element or flexer 12, which is composed of the material of the first plane 17, which is formed by the layer 21. When a substrate is in the form of an SOI wafer, this material is silicon, which is stable in the long term. This actuator is therefore excellently suitable for producing thermally actuated microswitches.
The structures of the structural elements are not shown to scale in all the FIGS. For example, a flexer 12 composed of silicon has a height of at least 10 μm and a width at the narrowest point of at most 15 μm. In the case of the second spring element 12, particularly when using monocrystalline silicon, edges of the spring element are preferably not structured along the major axes of the crystal structure, in order to reduce the susceptibility to fracture.
The heating loop may have a width of 4 μm to 8 μm, preferably 5 μm, and a thickness of 10 μm to 15 μm, preferably 12.5 μm. The first spring element 2 may also have the same metal thickness, particularly in the situation when the metal of the spring element 2 is produced in the same method step as the metal of the spring element 3. The distance between the spring elements 2, 3 and the surface of the SOI layer may, for example, be 1 μm. A greater distance, preferably of for example 3 μm to 8 μm, preferably 4 μm, is preferable for electrical insulation, reducing capacitive scattering effects or for providing sufficient space for vertical bending. The electrical structural elements of the actuator may be separated by the same amount, for mutual electrical isolation. The thickness of the oxide layer 20 on the SOI wafer is subject to the same constraints as the thickness of the sacrificial layer for the first spring element. Layer thicknesses of 1 to 5 μm, preferably 3 μm, may be used here. After underetching, this is then the distance between the flexer 12 and the surface of the substrate 11 located underneath it. The actuators according to the invention may also be produced with dimensions which differ significantly from the typical dimensions mentioned above. The first spring element 2 may also be clamped in at both ends, such that deflection is achieved only in the central area, see
In the figures, the flexers 12 are illustrated as being rectangular in a plan view. In order to prevent fracture points, the cross-sectional transition can be designed to be preferably smooth rather than stepped. Instead of being an arm extending longitudinally, the first spring element 2 may be in the form of a beam, as is illustrated in
In
Switching from OFF to ON:
The deflection is cancelled out only partially. The switching contacts 16 of the two actuators 1 remain hooked, as is illustrated in
The thermal actuation is not active in either of the two switching states. The active element in the ON switching state is the flexer 12, whose characteristics ensure the required contact force and therefore the contact reliability even over a very long switched-on time.
Switching from ON to OFF:
In the first process step, see
It is also possible first of all to delimit and to fill only one of the sides of the flexer 12 which move during use of the actuator from the non-moving area of the SOI layer 21 by etching. In this case, further delimiting takes place in a subsequent additional etching step, in which case these trenches are then not filled with oxide.
In the second process step, see
In the fourth process step, see
In order to reduce the resistance for the current flow through the flexer, a bypass composed of metal can preferably be applied in addition to the silicon element. It is possible to apply a metal structure directly to the silicon flexer, as a result of which the current can flow through the metal rather than through the silicon. The essential geometry of the flexer 12 need not be modified in this case. However, in order to reduce the mechanical influence of the additional metal layer on the flexer, the sacrificial layer 25 can be arranged above the silicon flexer, and the metal bypass can be applied to the sacrificial layer above the silicon flexer, in which case this is anchored such that, by virtue of its length, no mechanical reactions occur on the actual mechanical flexer spring element. The metal bypass is therefore located physically above the silicon flexer separated by the distance corresponding to the sacrificial layer thickness, but has no negative effect on the spring function resulting from mechanical creepage.
In the arrangement illustrated in
If a current is intended to flow through the first spring element 2, this can be supplied at a connection 15, with this connection being located at the left-hand outer edge of the bypass 29 in the arrangement illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 011 175.9 | Feb 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2009/000236 | 2/23/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/26/2010 |