4.6 Article

Ultralow Expansion Glass as Material for Advanced Micromechanical Systems

Journal

ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adem.202201873

Keywords

cantilever; glass-based microsystems; microelectromechanical systems (MEMS); precision measurement; reactive ion etching; ultralow expansion glass

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This article introduces the application of ultralow expansion (ULE) glasses in micromechanical systems, discusses the importance of manufacturing technological parameters for system design, and uses microcantilevers as basic mechanical elements to evaluate technological parameters and other impact factors. The implemented models allow the prediction of micromechanical system properties, providing effective support for system design.
Ultralow expansion (ULE) glasses are of special interest for temperature stabilized systems for example in precision metrology. Nowadays, ULE materials are mainly used in macroscopic and less in micromechanical systems. Reasons for this are a lack of technologies for parallel fabricating high-quality released microstructures with a high accuracy. As a result, there is a high demand in transferring these materials into miniaturized application examples, realistic system modeling, and the investigation of microscopic material properties. Herein, a technological base for fabricating released micromechanical structures and systems with a structure height above 100 mu m in ULE 7972 glass is established. Herein, the main fabrication parameters that are important for the system design and contribute thus to the introduction of titanium silicate as material for glass-based micromechanical systems are discussed. To study the mechanical properties in combination with respective simulation models, microcantilevers are used as basic mechanical elements to evaluate technological parameters and other impact factors. The implemented models allow to predict the micromechanical system properties with a deviation of only +/- 5% and can thus effectively support the micromechanical system design in an early stage of development.

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