| Literature DB >> 29441272 |
Liga Jasulaneca1, Jelena Kosmaca1, Raimonds Meija1, Jana Andzane1, Donats Erts1,2.
Abstract
This review summarizes relevant research in the field of electrostatically actuated nanobeam-based nanoelectromechanical (NEM) switches. The main switch architectures and structural elements are briefly described and compared. Investigation methods that allow for exploring coupled electromechanical interactions as well as studies of mechanically or electrically induced effects are covered. An examination of the complex nanocontact behaviour during various stages of the switching cycle is provided. The choice of the switching element and the electrode is addressed from the materials perspective, detailing the benefits and drawbacks for each. An overview of experimentally demonstrated NEM switching devices is provided, and together with their operational parameters, the reliability issues and impact of the operating environment are discussed. Finally, the most common NEM switch failure modes and the physical mechanisms behind them are reviewed and solutions proposed.Entities:
Keywords: NEM; nanocontacts; nanoelectromechanical switches; nanowires; reliability
Year: 2018 PMID: 29441272 PMCID: PMC5789396 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.9.29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Schematics of electrostatically actuated 2T NEM nanobeam-based switches. Top panel: single-clamped 2T NEM switch in a) off and b) on state. Middle panel: double-clamped 2T NEM switch in c) off and d) on state. Bottom panel: single-clamped NEM switch with multiple drain electrodes in e) off and f) on state.
Figure 2a) Plots of total energy ET calculated for a Ge nanowire-based NEM device at different electrostatic potentials. The electrode surface is located at z = 0. Inset shows the energy barrier between the two stable (on/off) minima in relation to 10kBT. Reprinted with permission from [13], copyright 2004 AIPP. b) Comparison between experimentally measured (diamonds) and theoretically predicted (solid line) switching cycles for a carbon nanotube-based 2T bistable NEM switch, showing a sharp transition to the on state and a typical hysteresis behaviour. Reprinted with permission from [15], copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Figure 3Operation of a 2T switch with a semi-paddle configuration. a) Image of the fabricated switch and schematic representation of its operational states and b) switching characteristics of the device, showing three operation states A (off), B (torsional movement) and C (flexural movement). Reprinted with permission from [48], copyright 2014 AIPP.
Figure 4a) Example of 2T nanowire-based NEM switching between two symmetrically located drain electrodes and b) corresponding current indicating the switching events. Square voltage pulses alternately applied to the drain electrodes are represented by the red line (secondary axis). Reprinted with permission from [14], copyright 2013 Andzane et al.
Figure 5Schematics of electrostatically actuated 3T NEM nanobeam-based switches. Top panel: single-clamped 3T NEM switch in a) off and b) on state. Bottom panel: double-clamped 3T NEM switch in c) off and d) on state.
Figure 6Resonant oscillations of the switching element as an effective solution to overcome on-state adhesion. a) Illustration of resonance-assisted detachment of a Ge nanowire (left panel) and corresponding electrical current measured during the nanowire switching process (right panel). Ge nanowire has been switched between two electrodes by applying a combined AC–DC field between the nanowire and the counter electrode. Reprinted with permission from [11], copyright 2013 Royal Society of Chemistry. b) Resonance-assisted release of a carbon nanotube from the contact with electrode (left panel) and corresponding reduction of separation gap (right panel). Reprinted with permission from [71], copyright 2013 AIPP.
Parameters of nanocontact areas (nanowire radius rnw, cross-sectional area of the nanowire Snw, radius of electrode apex Re, nanocontact area Sc) in Ge and Mo6S3I6 nanowire-based 2T NEM contact switches.
| Material | |||||
| Ge [ | 30 | 2.8 | 100 | 78 | 36 |
| 150 | 70.7 | 115 | 331 | 214 | |
| 75 | 17.7 | 420 | 321 | 55 | |
| 50 | 7.9 | 1300 | 259 | 30 | |
| 60 | 11.3 | 600 | 218 | 52 | |
| Ge [ | 50 | 7.9 | – | 965 | 8 |
| Mo6S3I6 [ | 100 | 31.4 | – | 100 | 314 |
| 100 | 31.4 | – | 45 | 698 | |
Figure 7Switching cycles of Mo6S3I6 nanowire-based NEM switch illustrating the impact of the contact area on hysteresis width: a) Von–Voff hysteresis loop for the contact area of 100 nm2 (shown in the inset), and b) for the contact area of 45 nm2 (shown in the inset). Reprinted with permission from [8], copyright 2010 IOP Publishing.
Figure 8Size-dependent tuning of the mechanism of electrical conduction through a nanocontact. a) Experimental measurements of an Au–ZnO interface carried out for different Au particle/ZnO nanowire diameter ratios RAu; b) Corresponding I(V) characteristics. c) A model of the current density of the top face of a nanowire with diameter of 60 nm and RAu = 0.8. The dashed line is the edge of the contact interface. Adapted with permission from [91], copyright 2015 American Chemical Society.
Figure 9a) Experimental setup for in situ SEM investigation of processes occurring in nanocontacts. b) Graph illustrating the relative change of the resonance frequency of the nanowire and current density j in the contact area versus voltage applied to the nanowire. Reprinted with permission from [54], copyright 2015 IOP Publishing.
Figure 10a) NEM switch with graphene sheet as the active element. Reprinted with permission from [25], copyright 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. b) Fabrication process of a nanocrystalline graphene (NCG) based NEM switch with bottom (B) and top (T) electrodes. c) Optical and scanning electron microscope images of the as-fabricated device arrays. Reprinted with permission from [27], copyright 2016 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 11a) Schematics and design of U-shaped dual Si beam NEM switch. Reprinted with permission from [20], copyright 2012 AIPP. b) I(V) characteristics of a Si-based NEM switch illustrating significant reduction of hysteresis loop from >2 V to 0.5 V when initial Pt contact (black line) was replaced by amorphous carbon (aC) coating (coloured lines). Reprinted with permission from [61], copyright 2014 IEEE.
Figure 12Different jump-in I(V) characteristics of a) bare, thin SiC beams (SiC–SiC contact) showing gradual current rise and b) aluminium metallized SiC (Al–Al contact) showing abrupt transition to the on state (at 3 V). Reprinted with permission from [23], copyright 2010 American Chemical Society.
Figure 13Materials properties for NEM switching elements. Marker coordinates correspond to the electrical conductivity and Young’s modulus of each material, and the marker colour represents its melting temperature T.
Comparison of materials for NEM switching elements.
| Materials | Device fabrication approaches (examples) | Advantages | Challenges | Possible applications | |
| metals | Mo [ | top-down (lithography, etching, thermal annealing, atomic layer deposition) | - high electrical conductivity | - surface oxidation (Mo, Cu, Ru, TiW) | - RF applications |
| carbon allotropes | CNTs [ | top-down (lithography, etching, metal sputtering) with bottom-up (dielectrophoresis, | - combination of high electrical conductivity and extraordinary mechanical strength | - mechanical strain-dependent electrical properties (CNTs) | - memory and logic applications |
| semiconductors | Si [ | top-down (lithography, etching) or bottom-up (nanomanipulation) | - operation at relatively high voltages up to 40–50 V (Si, Ge, Mo6S3I6) | - surface oxidation (Si, Ge) | - memory (Si) |
| ceramics | TiN [ | top-down (lithography, etching, sputtering, thermal anneal, atomic layer deposition) | - combination of high electrical conductivity and stiffness (TiN) | residual stress (TiN) | - memory and logic applications (TiN) |
Advantages and disadvantages of contact material/switching element combinations.
| Contact material/switching element | Advantages | Cycling performance | Drawbacks |
| Ir/Cr [ | - high hardness | good cycling characteristics for 105–109 [ | high adhesion forcea in comparison with Cr, Ni, Ti, W, Pt [ |
| Pt/Cr [ | - lower adhesion force in comparison with Ir, Ti, Ni, Cr, Al, Cu [ | resistance (in comparison with Ni and Cr) [ | contact resistance increase over time [ |
| W/Cr [ | - lower adhesion force in comparison with Pt [ | good | formation of native oxide |
| Ti/Cr [ | - combination of reliability, useful lifetime, hardness and Young's modulus relatively better than for other materials (e.g., Au, Al, Cu) | good | higher resistivity in comparison with other metals |
| Ni/Cr [ | - good corrosion/oxidation resistance | poor | high initial contact resistance (3–5 orders of magnitude higher than W, Pt, Ti, Ir) [ |
| Cr/Cr [ | - high corrosion resistance and hardness | poor | formation of native oxide |
| Al/Cr [ | - low initial contact resistance | gradually became nonconductive after 104
| high adhesion force, formation of native oxide |
| Cu/Cr [ | - low initial contact resistance | abrupt large rise in contact resistance after 104
| high adhesion force, formation of native oxide |
| Au/Au [ | - no oxidation | material transfer during cycling | high adhesion force, low hardness; |
| Au–Ni alloy, 20 atom % Ni/Au [ | - reduced wear rate in comparison with pure Au | larger number of switching cycles with stable contact resistance compared with pure Au | contact resistance higher than that of pure Au |
| Mo6S3I6/Au | - low surface energy [ | larger number of switching cycles in comparison with Au electrode | S forms covalent bond with Au |
| DLC/CNT [ | - low adhesion, mechanical robustness | stable contact resistance over 106 switching cycles | high contact resistance |
| SiC/SiC [ | - stable performance over testing period of 7 days in ambient air | stable performance over 107 full switching cycles at room temperature | high contact resistance |
| RuO2/Au [ | - electrically conductive and stable oxide | reached more than 109 switching cycles without failure [ | lower conductivity that Au–Au contacts [ |
| Pt | - combination of mechanical robustness with metal-like conductivity | no cycling tests performed | no cycling tests performed |
aMetal-coated AFM tip/thin film-based nanoscale test platform. Si AFM tip was used in adhesion force measurements. bRepresentative NEM switching device. cMicroscale test platform.
Figure 14Quality factor as a function of air pressure showing the transition from molecular (solid lines) to viscous (dashed lines) damping. Red, green and blue colours mark three different sized nanocantilevers (corresponding to widths 400 nm, 800 nm and 2 µm). Inset shows the crossover pressure dependence on cantilever width. Reprinted with permission from [159], copyright 2007 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
Figure 15Scaling impact on the capillary/elastic force ratio. The impact of reducing the length of the switching element on the ratio of capillary to elastic force is shown for three different humidity levels. Reprinted with permission from [144], copyright 2011 IEEE.
Figure 16I(V) characteristics of Ge nanowire with and without an oxide layer. Reprinted with permission from [10], copyright 2009 American Chemical Society.
Figure 17Temperature impact on NEM switch hysteresis. Hysteresis I(V) loops of a SiGe–TiN NEM relay measured at (a) 25 °C and (b) 125 °C. Reprinted with permission from [6], copyright 2015 IEEE.
Figure 18Electrical burn-out induced failure of the NEM switching element. a) Ball formation at the end of a Ge nanowire at the jump-in moment. Reprinted with permission from [10], copyright 2009 American Chemical Society. (b) GaN nanowire and (c) Mo6S3I6 nanowire bundle break in the middle when the voltage is applied in the on state. Reprinted with permission from [96], copyright 2011 American Chemistry Society and from [8], copyright 2010 IOP Publishing.
Figure 19a) Breakdown I(V) characteristics of two individual Bi2Se3 nanobelts. 1-2-3 – The step-like breakdown of a nanobelt when the increase of voltage is continued after the first partial breakdown. 1 – single-step complete breakdown of a nanobelt. b) Core meltdown of a Bi2Se3 nanobelt. c) Core meltdown of a Ge nanowire, captured in both “before” and “after” states of the nanowire in a single frame. Reprinted with permission from [55], copyright 2016 AIPP and from [10], copyright 2009 American Chemical Society.
Main failure modes of NEM switches.
| Failure mode | Reasons | Possible solutions | Affected properties of proposed solutions |
| mechanical tear [ | high impact speed and following compression stress when active element jumps into the contact | lower switching speed (smaller jump-in voltages), more durable materials | lower jump-in voltages mean weaker retraction force and possible failure due to stiction |
| increase of switch resistance resulting in current drop in on state down to the noise level [ | oxidation of the contact surfaces and contamination with hydrocarbons when operating in ambient environment | use of chemically inert materials or materials coated with electrically conductive oxides | presence of an oxide layer may lower contact conductivity |
| application of higher voltage pulses for dielectric layer breakdown | risk of burn-out failure | ||
| encapsulation | increases the device size and the complexity of the fabrication process | ||
| operation in vacuum | may be insufficient to prevent adsorption of hydrocarbons if the vacuum is not high enough | ||
| stiction [ | adhesion between switching element and contact electrode exceeds restoring (elastic) force of the switching element | decrease of contact area | increase of contact resistance |
| increase of initial gap thus increasing the retraction force | increase of jump-in voltage | ||
| use of switching element with high Young’s modulus, thus increasing the retraction force | increase of jump-in voltage | ||
| use of materials with lower surface energy | increase of contact resistance | ||
| material transfer | reduction of source–drain voltage below 5 V | increases risk of stiction in 2T NEM switches due to reduction of restoring force of switching element | |
| increase of switching speed | high mechanical impact forces | ||
| use of materials with good thermal conductivity, high melting temperature, high work function and low roughness | – | ||
| dielectric charging | use of bipolar AC rather than DC voltage actuation | the charging effect cannot be eliminated completely, more complex electronics required | |
| burn-out [ | electrostatic discharge | decrease of jump-in voltage | increases risk of stiction |
| use of dielectric layers to increase contact resistance and reduce charge dissipation rate | increase of power dissipation, delay, decrease of noise margin of the device | ||
| Joule heating | use of insulating contact layer and materials with higher melting temperature | insulating layer increases charge buildup and enhances risk of unstable pull-in voltage | |
| addition of high resistance in series | decreases on/off state current ratio | ||