For vertical sidewalls and wet etching, you're talking (110) silicon. One of the more knowledgeable people in this area is D L Kendall, who published a number of papers in the 1970s and 1980s and a few in the 1990s. Lots of practical advice can be found in his papers. He also did a chapter in an SPIE book, "Handbook of Microlithography, Micromachinining, and Microfabrication, Volume 2". Making a through wafer trench that is 2um wide may prove to be exceedingly challenging. You'll probably run into diffusion limitations. Separate effects may tend to widen the trench, such as a finite (111) etch rate, slight crystal misalignment, and etch mask erosion/stress. Good luck, Bill Eaton, Ph.D. Materials & Analysis Manager NP Photonics > > Dear members: > I have a question about silicon trench wet etching. If etched > from back side, > for example, 2um mask dimension, how wide the trench will be > in the front side > with wet etching? I know this depends on the orientation of > wafer and the > trench direction. According to the book, if the trench is > aligned accurately, > it is possible to get a vertical side wall, thus, the width > in front side will > be the same as that in back side, say, 2um. > > I donot know whether it requires very high accuracy to > alignment in order to > get vertical side wall. If I do the alignment manualy, > generally how thin i > can get in the front side? Is there anybody has experience in > this area? > > thanks. > > Regards, > Yilei Zhang > >