Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
703055 Diamond and Related Materials 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Diamond, due to its large band gap of 5.5 eV, offers the possibility of making MEMS structures out of a single material by varying the doping level to achieve the semiconducting, metallic and insulating (undoped) properties needed in a typical MEMS structure. Polycrystalline diamond (poly-C) is inexpensive and retains many of the unique properties of single-crystal diamond. However, the development of diamond-based single-material MEMS (SMM) technology faces two major challenges; (a) producing highly-insulating and highly-conducting poly-C films in a multilayer structure and (b) developing dry-etching technology to produce multilayer structures made of poly-C. Furthermore, poly-C can be layered to perform a number of functions, whereas a complex stack of materials would otherwise be required. Consequently, due to poly-C's high selectivity as a masking material, the SMM fabrication process developed in the current work allows the reduction of the number of fabrication masks by a factor of 1.5–2 as compared to that used in a conventional MEMS process. A number of complex poly-C SMM structures were fabricated using SiO2 as a sacrificial layer to address the SMM related issues in a single paper.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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