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The strength of polycrystalline silicon at the micro- and nano-scales with applications to MEMS

Posted on:2003-04-08Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:California Institute of TechnologyCandidate:Chasiotis, IoannisFull Text:PDF
GTID:1468390011487009Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
A new method for tensile testing of thin films by means of an improved apparatus has been developed to measure the elastic properties (Young's modulus, tensile strength) of surface micromachined polycrystalline silicon specimens. The newly designed tensile tester makes use of an Ultraviolet (UV) light curable adhesive to clamp micron-sized specimens. The properties determination utilizes surface topologies of deforming specimens, acquired with an Atomic Force Microscope (AFM), for determining strain fields by means of Digital Image Correlation (DIC). This full-field, direct and local measurements technique provides the capability of testing any type of thin film materials with nanometer resolution.; A systematic study of small-scale size effects was thus performed by tensioning elliptically perforated specimens (minimum radius of curvature of 1 μm) so as to: (a) vary the stress concentration with constant radius of curvature, (b) increasing radius of curvature of micronotches relative to the grain size. The results demonstrate a strong influence of the size of the highly strained domain (decreasing notch radii) on the failure strength of MEMS scale specimens, while the effect of varying the stress concentration factor is rather insignificant. In addition, tests performed on unnotched tensile specimens of varying dimensions revealed a specimen size effect by which the values of strength scaled with the specimen length. The Young's modulus, however, is found to be rather insensitive to the specimen dimensions at the scale of microns.; Contrary to the common belief that 49% HF wet release represents a safe post-process for manufacturing polycrystalline silicon, this study has clearly identified the release process as a key item in determining thin film failure properties. It is found that surface roughness as characterized by groove formation at the grain boundaries depends distinctly on the HF release time. In addition, while the actual failure mechanism in polysilicon follows a transgranular fracture, moderate exposure in HF results in partial intergranular fracture at the film surface that is responsible for complete failure. Long exposures yield films of low mechanical strength that demonstrate clear intergranular failure.
Keywords/Search Tags:Strength, Polycrystalline silicon, Film, Failure, Surface, Tensile
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