|
Researchers at Case Western Reserve University report in the
November 8 issue of Science that miniature micron-sized
polysilicon laboratory specimens subjected to cyclic tension/compression
loading undergo fatigue, and could ultimately fail, as a result
of damage produced by the compressive cycles, rather than from
moisture-assisted stress corrosion cracking.
The success of many advanced technologies that use devices such
as sensors and actuators, including gyroscopes and optical devices,
depends on microscopic components called microelectromechanical
systems (MEMS) devices made of polycrystalline silicon or polysilicon.

Harold Kahn (left), research associate
professor in the department of materials science and engineering,
and Roberto Ballarini, professor in the department of civil
engineering, research polysilicon fatigue.
|
This new information, the researchers said, could help developers
mitigate fatigue failure in MEMS devices that experience significant
mechanical stress during operation.
The Science article ("Fatigue Failure in Polysilicon:
It's Not Due to Simple Stress Corrosion Cracking") was written
by Harold Kahn, research associate professor in the department
of materials science and engineering; Roberto Ballarini, professor
in the department of civil engineering and a lead researcher on
the project; Arthur Heuer, University professor and Kyocera Professor
of Ceramics in the department of materials science and engineering;
and Justin Bellante, a recent bachelor's and master's degree graduate
in materials science and engineering.
Polysilicon is a manufactured thin film consisting of silicon
crystallites that is made in a microfabrication laboratory using
chemical vapor deposition. The films are associated with rough
surfaces that result from the plasma etching used in the final
stages of MEMS processing. The researchers speculate that under
compressive loading these surfaces come into contact, and their
wedging action produces microcracks that grow during subsequent
tension and compression cycles.
"Over the past few years there has been a debate about the roles
that moisture and mechanical stress play in the fatigue failure
of polysilicon devices," Ballarini said. "Some research groups
claim that polysilicon fatigue is associated with stress corrosion
cracking. This failure mechanism is associated with the propagation
of a sharp crack under an applied stress too low for immediate
catastrophic failure and in the presence of a corrosive environment
like humid air.
"Our research shows," he continued, "that polysilicon under constant
stress is not susceptible to stress corrosion, but the fatigue
strength is strongly influenced by the ratio of compression to
tension stresses experienced during each cycle. The failure originates
from microcracks and those cracks likely originate on the surface
of the polysilicon."
Polysilicon MEMS structures, Heuer explained, contain many raised
areas along their surfaces that act as stress concentrators and
could result in microcracks when exposed to tensile or compressive
stresses.
"The microcracks then extend from the surface into the miniaturized
structures, weakening the material and causing failure," Heuer
said.
To study the fatigue of polysilicon, Kahn and Bellante used on-chip
test structures that rely on electrostatic actuation (the attraction
to each other of two plates of opposite electrical charge) rather
than an external testing machine.
"By using both DC and AC voltage sources," Kahn said, "we varied
the ratio of compressive to tensile stresses in the cycle. And
by using high frequencies, we could subject specimens to more
than a billion cycles in less than a day."
"MEMS, the use of miniaturized devices for high tech products,
is becoming more and more popular in modern technology," Heuer
said. "This research tells us to be mindful of the manner in which
we create the surfaces of polysilicon chips so that devices that
experience significant mechanical stresses like gyroscopes and
optical devices can be rendered less susceptible to fatigue failure."
|