A hybrid polymer/ceramic/semiconductor fabrication platform for high-sensitivity fluid-compatible MEMS devices with sealed integrated electronics
Nahid Hosseini, Matthias Neuenschwander, Jonathan D. Adams, Santiago, H. Andany, Oliver Peric, Marcel Winhold, Maria Carmen Giordano, Vinayak, Shantaram Bhat, Dirk Grundler, and Georg E. Fantner

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel hybrid fabrication platform combining polymers, ceramics, and semiconductors to create high-sensitivity, fluid-compatible MEMS devices with integrated electronics, overcoming traditional material limitations.
Contribution
It introduces a new multi-layer fabrication method enabling polymer MEMS with high-temperature electronic integration and enhanced sensitivity.
Findings
Cantilevers with up to 6 times lower force noise
Demonstrated self-sensing AFM cantilevers
Effective biomolecule detection using membrane sensors
Abstract
Active microelectromechanical systems can couple the nanomechanical domain with the electronic domain by integrating electronic sensing and actuation mechanisms into the micromechanical device. This enables very fast and sensitive measurements of force, acceleration, or the presence of biological analytes. In particular, strain sensors integrated onto MEMS cantilevers are widely used to transduce an applied force to an electrically measurable signal in applications like atomic force microscopy, mass sensing, or molecular detection. However, the high Young's moduli of traditional cantilever materials (silicon or silicon nitride) limit the thickness of the devices, and therefore the deflection sensitivity that can be obtained for a specific spring constant. Using softer materials such as polymers as the structural material of the MEMS device would overcome this problem. However, these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Advanced MEMS and NEMS Technologies · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
