Rajkumar, you are right, the stress is the cause of the difficulty. Si3N4 has tensile stress (membranes are stretched after release). A typical solution is to avoid high stress areas, which typically happen near sharp corners, by rounding the corners slightly. You also want to make sure your wafer is rigid enough to support this stress (avoid many membranes close together, etc). As for SiO2, it is in general very difficult to have membranes made out of it, because it high compressive stress of the films. Typically anything thicker than a fraction of a micron will "crumple" and you will see a wave-like pattern on your membranes after release, if the don't break even earlier. I would recommend avoiding SiO2 films if possible. If you absolutely have to have them, then play with deposition parameters trying to minimize stress, and use very thin membranes. Anatoli Olkhovets, Lucent - Bell Labs. ao4@lucent.com -----Original Message----- From: mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org [mailto:mems-talk-bounces@memsnet.org]On Behalf Of Raj Kumar Sent: Monday, November 25, 2002 5:00 AM To: mems-talk@memsnet.org Subject: [mems-talk] Diaphragm breakage Dear MEMS Experts Hello! I am trying to make diaphragms of SiO2 and Si3N4. The SiO2 is dry grown on Si and is 8000A. Si3N4 ( on a different sample)is LPCVD deposited (1500A) on a grown buffer oxide layer(500A). I am releasing these diaphragms by opening trenches along four sides of the diaphragm (diaphragm remain hinged to four corners) and subsequently bulk micromachining in KOH/TMAH. The diaphragm breaks from the corners (where it is hinged) in case of Si3N4. Whereas in case of SiO2 in breakage take place in the diaphragm, in front of hinge. This happens when sufficient release has taken place. I am suspecting the stress is making it. Any suggestion is welcomed. Sincerely yours RAJKUMAR _________________________________________________________________________ ____ _______________________________________________ MEMS-talk@memsnet.org mailing list: to unsubscribe or change your list options, visit http://mail.mems-exchange.org/mailman/listinfo/mems-talk Hosted by the MEMS Exchange, providers of MEMS processing services. Visit us at http://www.memsnet.org/