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Thin-film piezoelectric MEMS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 November 2012

Chang-Beom Eom
Affiliation:
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Wisconsin–Madison; eom@engr.wisc.edu
Susan Trolier-McKinstry
Affiliation:
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Wisconsin–Madison; eom@engr.wisc.edu

Abstract

Major challenges have emerged as microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) move to smaller size and increased integration density, while requiring fast response and large motions. Continued scaling to nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) requires revolutionary advances in actuators, sensors, and transducers. MEMS and NEMS utilizing piezoelectric thin films provide the required large linear forces with fast actuation at small drive voltages. This, in turn, provides accurate displacements at high integration densities, reduces the voltage burden on the integrated control electronics, and decreases NEMS complexity. These advances are enabled by the rapidly growing field of thin-film piezoelectric MEMS, from the development of AlN films for resonator and filter applications, to their implementation in adaptive radio front ends, to the demonstration of large piezoelectricity in epitaxial Pb(Zr,Ti)O3 and PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3–PbTiO3thin films. Applications of low voltage MEMS/NEMS include transducers for ultrasound medical imaging, robotic insects, inkjet printing, mechanically based logic, and energy harvesting. As described in this article, advances in the field are being driven by and are prompting advances in heterostructure design and theoretical investigations.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2012
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Figure 1. Ultrasound images of a fetus taken by (a) a single piezoelectric piston in 1960 and (b) 3D image scans using ceramic PZT 2D transducer arrays at 1 MHz. (Image courtesy of GE Medical.) (c) PZT ceramic 20 × 20 = 400 element 1-MHz 2D array, (d) 256 × 256 = 65,536 5-MHz subdiced elements. (Image courtesy of Stephen Smith at Duke University.) Both transducer arrays are about 1 inch on a side. The quality of images depends on the piezoelectric and mechanical coupling coefficients and the bandwidth.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Wurtzite crystal structure of AlN showing Al atoms in gray and N in blue. All Al-centered tetrahedra are arranged with one neighbor directly above (parallel to the c-axis) and three neighbors forming the base of a pyramid below.

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Figure 3. Typical ferroelectric distortions (exaggerated for clarity) of the perovskite ABO3structure; the A ions (red) are at the corners of the unit cell, the B ions (blue) are close to the center of the unit cell, and the O ions (white) are near the face centers. Upon developing spontaneous polarization, a spontaneous strain also develops.

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Figure 4. Illustrations (with distortions exaggerated to simplify visualization) of different mechanisms for piezoelectricity. (a) Extension of a perovskite unit cell. View looking along the a-axis of a perovskite material with tetragonal distortion. The blue atoms at the corners of the unit cell correspond to large cations such as Pb; O is shown in gray; and the small B site cation (typically Ti, Zr, or Nb) is shown in red. The arrow shows the orientation of the spontaneous polarization, PS. The black box outlines the unit cell. Distortion of the unit cell from its original shape (shown in the red dotted outline) is apparent on application of an electric field, E. (b) Motion of a domain wall in a tetragonally distorted perovskite, in which the directions of the spontaneous polarization differ by 90°. As the domain wall moves, the material changes shape. Figure courtesy of I. Fuji.

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Figure 5. Illustration of common sensing and actuation modes in piezoelectric microelectromechanical systems. (a) Bending mode induced by e31,f (sometimes called d31 mode) for a film with top and bottom electrodes. The unimorph structure bends when lateral contraction of the piezoelectric layer acts on the passive elastic layer. (b) Out-of-plane bending due to in-plane expansion of d33 actuated-structure using interdigitated electrodes. In order to confine the electric field in the plane of the device, the layers underneath the piezoelectric should be electrically insulating. Barrier layers such as ZrO2 or HfO2 are typically required to prevent reaction between lead-based perovskites and Si or SiO2 elastic layers. (c) Piston motion due to the out-of-plane d33 coefficient. Note: PZT, Pb(Zr,Ti)O3; E, electric field; Pr, remanent polarization.

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Figure 6. Evolution in piezoelectric e31,f coefficients, showing comparisons to data for bulk PZT materials. Data courtesy of P. Muralt. Adapted from Reference 45. Note: PZT, Pb(Zr,Ti)O3; PMN-PT, PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3–PbTiO3.

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Figure 7. (a) High resolution transmission electron microscope (TEM) image of epitaxial SrTiO3 on silicon grown by molecular beam epitaxy. (Image courtesy of Xiaoqing Pan of the University of Michigan and Darrell Schlom at Cornell University.) SrRuO3 can then be epitaxially grown on top of the SrTiO3 by off-axis sputtering to serve as the templating layer for the piezoelectrics, as well as a bottom electrode. (b) Bright-field cross-sectional TEM image of an epitaxial PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3–PbTiO3 (PMN-PT)/SrRuO3/SrTiO3 thin-film heterostructure on an Si substrate. The inset shows the selective area electron diffraction pattern of the PMN-PT layer along the [100] zone axis showing a single crystal. (c) High-resolution TEM image of PMN-PT and SrRuO3interface. (b) and (c) are adapted from Reference 65.

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Figure 8. Array of 1 cm2 piezoelectric cells to adjust the image obtained from a large aperture x-ray space telescope. The sample is a patterned Pt/ Pb(Zr,Ti)O3/Pt/Ti on a glass substrate. It is difficult to see at this scale, but traces run from each cell to the edge of the substrate to facilitate electrical connections. The x-ray reflecting surface is on the opposite side from the piezoelectric actuators.

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Figure 9. Examples of piezoelectric energy harvesting systems. (a) Photograph of a compact piezoelectric microelectromechanical system (MEMS) energy harvesting device, which is about the size of a US quarter ($0.25) coin. A doubly clamped beam acts as a frequency locked loop, resulting in wide bandwidth, non-linear resonance. (b) Schematic of on-chip architecture for a self-powered wireless sensor network system. Robust self-powering can be achieved by utilizing all environmental energy resources, as well as dual purpose sensors and actuators, which also act as energy harvesters.87

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Figure 10. AlN contour-mode resonator. Image courtesy of G. Piazza.

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Figure 11. From epitaxial piezoelectric thin films to ink droplet creation. (a) Cross-section scanning electron micrograph of a Pb(Zr,Ti)O3(PZT) thin film, (b) optical micrograph of piezoelectric actuated microelectromechanical membrane, and (c) ink droplet jets.

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Figure 12. Montage of piezoelectric microelectromechanical (MEMS) devices. For the motor, the piezo MEMS stator is 3 mm in diameter, and the Si rotor is 2 mm in diameter. The switch uses a PZT actuator with a length of 125 microns. The phase shifter designed for 10 GHz operation has an overall dimension of 5.0 mm × 5.5 mm. The dual-wing micro wing structure was designed with 2 mm length wings. The piezoelectric energy harvester uses a 5-mm-long PZT thin-film cantilever that attached to a 5 mm × 5 mm proof mass. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Pulskamp and Ronald G. Polcawich, US Army Research Laboratory. Note: RF, radio frequency; PZT, Pb(Zr,Ti)O3; CLK, clock; GND, ground.