SINTEF

Technologies

EUROPRACTICE provides access to SINTEF’s state-of-the-art thin film piezoelectric MEMS using high-quality PZT as the piezoelectric layer. EUROPRACTICE users can get from 3 up to 12 6-inch wafers of piezoMEMS devices per Multi-Project Batch (MPB) scheme, each accommodating various designs and test structures. Each process offers high reliability and has an extensive portfolio of demonstrated applications and use cases with academia as well as industry.

 

Imec (Leuven, Belgium) is the service center for SINTEF’s piezoMEMS technologies within EUROPRACTICE, providing customers support and access to this technology.

 

A typical piezoMEMS process is shown in the table below.

SINTEF MEMS
Typical technology characteristics
Typical Si substrate:
• Type: SOI , DSP
• Size: 6-inch (150 mm)
• Thickness: 400 µm
• Dopant: Phosphorous/Boron
• Orientation: <100>
• Resistivity: 1-10 Ωcm

Top electrode:
• Material: Au, Pt
• Thickness: 50-500 nm
• Adhesion: TiW or NiCr

Piezoelectric layer:
• Composition: Nb or Ba doped Pb(Zr,Ti)O3
• Thickness: 0.25-3 µm, single layer
• Deposition: CSD , PLD

Bottom electrode:
• Material: Pt <111>, LaNiO3 <100>
• Thickness: 50-100 nm
Special features
High piezoelectric response
High uniformity
Low in-plane stress
High breakdown strength
Low power-consumption
High electrical reliability and low fatigue
Robust in harsh ambient: Space-qualified by ESA 2021
High device precision and repeatability
Selected application areas
Micromirrors and optics[1]:
• Tunable metasurfaces[2]
• Focusing lenses[3]
• Compact interferometers, ex. Fabry-Perot, Michelson[4]
• Scanners, projectors and 3D cameras[5]

Sensors and actuators:
• BioMEMS and biosensors[6]
• Gas-detection[7]
• Ultrasound[8]
• Space-applications[9]
• RF and THz MEMS

[1]      www.sintef.no/en/sintef-research-areas/sensors/small-mirrors-major-advances/ 

[2]       C. Meng et al., “Dynamic piezoelectric MEMS-based optical metasurfaces,” Sci Adv, vol. 7, no. 26, p. eabg5639, 2021, doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abg5639.

[3]       F. Dullo, J. Jose, G. Bouquet, Z. Skokic, and C. Dirdal, “Metasurface lens that is converging or diverging depending on transmission direction enables ultra-compact MEMS tunable reflective lens,” 2024. [Online]. Available: https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.02755

[4]       T. Bakke, A. Vogl, O. Żero, F. Tyholdt, I.-R. Johansen, and D. Wang, “A novel ultra-planar, long-stroke and low-voltage piezoelectric micromirror,” Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, vol. 20, p. 064010, 2010, doi: 10.1088/0960-1317/20/6/064010.

[5]       J. Thorstensen, J. T. Thielemann, P. Risholm, J. Gjessing, R. Dahl-Hansen, and J. Tschudi, “High-quality dense 3D point clouds with active stereo and a miniaturizable interferometric pattern projector,” Opt. Express, vol. 29, no. 25, pp. 41081–41097, 2021, doi: 10.1364/OE.444641.

[6] www.sintef.no/en/expertise/digital/microsystems-and-nanotechnology/biomems/

[7]       “Tunable – Sense of Smell. Artificially Perfected.,” www.tunable.com/

[8]       www.sonair.com/

[9]       R. Dahl-Hansen, J. Gjessing, P. Mardilovich, C. Fragkiadakis, and J. Thorstensen, “Reliable Pb(Zr,Ti)O3-based thin film piezoelectric micromirrors for space-applications,” Appl Phys Lett, vol. 121, no. 13, Sep. 2022, doi: 10.1063/5.0106933.