4.8 Article

Materials and processing approaches for foundry-compatible transient electronics

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707849114

Keywords

soft electronics; biodegradable electronics; transfer printing; undercut etching; hydrolysis

Funding

  1. Center for Bio-Integrated Electronics at Northwestern University
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [105-2917-I-564-038]

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Foundry-based routes to transient silicon electronic devices have the potential to serve as the manufacturing basis for green electronic devices, biodegradable implants, hardware secure data storage systems, and unrecoverable remote devices. This article introduces materials and processing approaches that enable state-of-the-art silicon complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) foundries to be leveraged for high-performance, water-soluble forms of electronics. The key elements are (i) collections of biodegradable electronic materials (e.g., silicon, tungsten, silicon nitride, silicon dioxide) and device architectures that are compatible with manufacturing procedures currently used in the integrated circuit industry, (ii) release schemes and transfer printing methods for integration of multiple ultrathin components formed in this way onto biodegradable polymer substrates, and (iii) planarization and metallization techniques to yield interconnected and fully functional systems. Various CMOS devices and circuit elements created in this fashion and detailed measurements of their electrical characteristics highlight the capabilities. Accelerated dissolution studies in aqueous environments reveal the chemical kinetics associated with the underlying transient behaviors. The results demonstrate the technical feasibility for using foundry-based routes to sophisticated forms of transient electronic devices, with functional capabilities and cost structures that could support diverse applications in the biomedical, military, industrial, and consumer industries.

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