durusmail: mems-talk: Integrating a thick dielectric layer surrounding suspended silicon nitride membranes
Integrating a thick dielectric layer surrounding suspended silicon nitride membranes
2008-06-02
2008-06-02
2008-06-02
2008-06-03
2008-06-03
Integrating a thick dielectric layer surrounding suspended silicon nitride membranes
Michael D Martin
2008-06-03
The trick in this application is to carefully manage your stresses.  I would
consider using thick layers of both oxide and "low stress" LPCVD nitride , say
2.5um of each.  Or perhaps a triple stack (Nitride/Oxide/Nitride).  If you
carefully manage the deposition process you with have somewhat tensile nitride
with compressive oxide.  What I've seen in the past is that the released
membranes will tear at the edges if you have too much tension.  Another problem
you might want to engineer around is the contribution of the silicon (exposed on
the side of the via) to your capacitance.  This is an issue we contend with in
lipid membrane research.  So if possible I would coat the via with a dielectric,
say a short thermal oxidation after release?  Not sure if the membrane will
survive it though. PECVD oxynitride is a lower temperature process that might
work though these films sometimes have pin holes.

Good luck,
   Michael Martin
   U. of Louisville




>>> Ken Healy  6/2/2008 2:41 PM >>>
Hello,

I'd like to ask for advice on how best to modify the standard procedure
for fabricating suspended silicon nitride membranes to incorporate a
thick dielectric layer (>=5um).

The aim is to reduce the capacitance from the top to the bottom of the
chip supporting the membrane, as it will be used to separate two
chambers of conductive fluid. The capacitance with standard membranes is
very high since the thickest dielectric layer is the thin silicon
nitride (50-100 nm in my case).

Reducing the fluid contact area will reduce the capacitance, but the
microfluidics required to achieve an equivalent reduction in capacitance
appears more complicated than adding a dielectric layer.

(The particular application I'm working on is nanopore-based DNA
analysis, where the noise level scales with capacitance. For background
info see http://eleceng.ucc.ie/nanopore/)


The best process I have come up with so far is as follows, but it's
still significantly more complicated than the standard procedure for
silicon nitride membrane fabrication. See the diagram below for reference.


membrane nitride
======================================================================
dielectric oxide               |        |
--------------------------------        ------------------------------
                               /          \
                              /            \
silicon                     /              \
                            /                \
                           /                  \
--------------------------                    ------------------------
mask oxide               |                    |
==========================                    ========================
mask nitride


1. Grow 5 um thermal oxide on 100 silicon wafers (on both sides to avoid
wafer bow due to stress)

2. Grow 50-100 nm low-stress silicon nitride on top of the oxide

3. Follow the standard membrane fabrication procedure to define openings
in the mask nitride layer.

4. Anisotropically etch the mask oxide layer with CHF3/O2 plasma,
protecting the silicon nitride with photoresist.

5.KOH-etch the silicon following the standard membrane fabrication
procedure.

6. Finally, etch the exposed dielectric oxide with CHF3/O2, protecting
the membrane silicon nitride with photoresist.

7. Remove any fluoropolymer residue resulting from the CHF3/O2 etch with
oxygen
plasma.

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
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