| Literature DB >> 30407403 |
Jose Luis Muñoz-Gamarra1, Arantxa Uranga2, Nuria Barniol3.
Abstract
This work demonstrates the feasibility to obtain copper nanoelectromechanical (NEMS) relays using a commercial complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology (ST 65 nm) following an intra CMOS-MEMS approach. We report experimental demonstration of contact-mode nano-electromechanical switches obtaining low operating voltage (5.5 V), good ION/IOFF (10³) ratio, abrupt subthreshold swing (4.3 mV/decade) and minimum dimensions (3.50 μm × 100 nm × 180 nm, and gap of 100 nm). With these dimensions, the operable Cell area of the switch will be 3.5 μm (length) × 0.2 μm (100 nm width + 100 nm gap) = 0.7 μm² which is the smallest reported one using a top-down fabrication approach.Entities:
Keywords: CMOS-NEMS; NEMS; NEMS switch; copper switch
Year: 2016 PMID: 30407403 PMCID: PMC6190103 DOI: 10.3390/mi7020030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1(A) Schematic of the electrical pad (PAD in figure) and open pad (OPENPAD in figure) configuration. (B) Scanning electronic microscope (SEM) image of an electrical PAD and OPENPAD (with additional zoomed SEM image) before the releasing process. (C) Schematic cross section of the CMOS technology showing OPENPAD, etch stoppers layers in the BEOL metal layers and M1 NEMS structure with M2 anchors before the releasing process. (D) SEM image of a field ion beam cross section of a M1-M2 NEMS structure before the releasing process.
Figure 2Schematic view of M1 configuration in order to get a 90 nm gap. (A) Top view schematic, showing M1 and M2 layers and open pad for releasing. (B) Three dimensional schematic showing M2 layer and M2-M1 vias to anchore the M1 driver and keep a reduced 90 nm gap between cantilever and driver.
Figure 3(A) Released 2T M1 switch (l = 3.5 μm) (Cu cantilevered switch has been colored for easy recognition). (B) SEM image of a field ion beam cut (P–P´) before the releasing process (C) Schematic view of the switch cross-section with dimensions.
Figure 4Switch electrical response with a protection resistance of 25 MΩ (Inset SEM image after I/V curve).
Figure 5Switch electrical characterization in different successive cycles.
Figure 6Top-down mechanical switches state of the Art.