4.5 Article

Electrothermally activated paraffin microactuators

Journal

JOURNAL OF MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 165-174

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JMEMS.2002.1007394

Keywords

microactuators; paraffin

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A new family of electrothermally activated microactuators that can provide both large displacements and forces, are simple to fabricate, and are easily integrated with a large variety of microelectronic and microfluidic components are presented. The actuators use the high volumetric expansion of a sealed, surface micromachined patch of paraffin heated near its melting point to deform a sealing diaphragm. Two types of actuators have been fabricated using a simple three mask fabrication process. The first device structure consists of a 9 pm thick circularly patterned paraffin layer ranging in diameter from 400 to 800 pm all covered with a 4-mum-thick metallized p-xylylene sealing diaphragm. All fabricated devices produced a 2.7-mum-peak center deflection, consistent with a simple first order theory. The second actuator structure uses a constrained volume reservoir that magnifies the diaphragm deflection producing consistently 3.2 mum center diaphragm deflection with a 3-mum-thick paraffin actuation layer. Microactuators were constructed on both glass and silicon substrates. The actuators fabricated on glass substrates used between 50-200 mW of electrical power with response times ranging between 30-50 ms. The response time for silicon devices was much faster (3-5 ms) at the expense of a larger electrical power (500-2000 mW).

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