600 likes | 939 Views
Electronic Pack.. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices. Slide 2. Definitions. MICRO STRUCTURE TECHNOLOGY can be defined as a group of three-dimensional micromachining techniques enabling feature dimensions with accuracy in the micrometer range. MICROMACHINED DEVICES can
E N D
1. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 1 Chapter 9:Micro Structure Technology andMicromachined Devices Picture shows the interior chip assembly of the SA30 Crash Sensor, a microsystem from SensoNor, Norway
2. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 2 Definitions MICRO STRUCTURE TECHNOLOGY can be defined as a group of three-dimensional micromachining techniques enabling feature dimensions with accuracy in the micrometer range.
MICROMACHINED DEVICES can be defined as devices made by Micro Structure Technology.
These micromachining techniques are mainly based upon batch organised microelectronic process technology, either directly adapted techniques like photolithographics, or modified techniques such as anisotropic etching techniques.
Some micromachining techniques are specially developed for this field, e.g., anodic bonding of micromachined devices.
3. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 3 Example: SP80 Pressure Sensor Developed at SINTEF (earlier Center for Industrial Research), Norway and manufactured by Capto as (earlier SensoNor AS, earlier ame), Borre, Norway.
This sensor visualises the main features and limitations of micromechanical sensors, and points out pressure sensing as a main application for these kinds of sensors.
4. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 4 SP80 Principal Design A piezoresistive integrated pressure sensor with the pressure-sensitive diaphragm micromachined in a silicon chip by anisotropic etching.
Ion implanted piezoresistors in a full Wheatstone bridge configuration as the electronic sensing element.
Temperature measuring resistor and a heating resistor are implanted on the same chip, to compensate or thermostat the chip to minimise thermal drifts.
By varying the area and the thickness of the diaphragm, pressure ranges from 0.5 Bar full scale pressure up to 60 Bar full scale pressure can be achieved
Packaged in a transistor header
Main application areas are within general instrumentation, metrology and aerospace application.
5. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 5 The SP80 Silicon Chip Set - Drawing
6. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 6 The SP80 Silicon Chip Set - Picture
7. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 7 Dimensions and Processing The size is 4*4 mm, thickness approximately 0.3 mm, the diaphragm area is typical 2*2 mm and the diaphragm thickness is typical 30 micrometers.
The diaphragm is manufactured by stripping off the surface oxide of the silicon wafer by means photolithographic technique in the areas we want the diaphragm cavity.
Then the wafer is etched in an anisotropic etching solution with the remaining oxide as masking film.
This etching solution attacks the single crystal silicon with different speed in the different crystal directions.
The etch is extremely slow in the <1-1-1> direction: The etch is therefore stopped towards the (1-1-1) planes.
The chip material is (1-0-0) silicon
Therefore, the etch cavity is surrounded by four (1-1-1) planes which have an angle of inclination of 54.7 degrees relative to the (1-0-0) surface plane, rendering a cavity with four sloped walls.
8. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 8 SP80 Package Cross-sectioned view of the SP80 Pressure Sensor packaged in a transistor header.
9. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 9 SP80 Package, continued Cross-sectioned view of the SP80 Pressure Sensor packaged in a transistor header with a top chip containing a vacuum reference chamber.
10. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 10 SP80 Schematic The SP80 schematic consists of 4 ion implanted piezoresistors in a full Wheatstone bridge configuration as the electronic sensing element. In addition, a temperature measuring resistor and a heating resistor are implanted on the same chip, to compensate or thermostat the chip to minimise thermal drifts.
11. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 11 Picture of SP80 in Transistor Package Comment: The Norwegian coin is approximately the size of Ø10 mm
12. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 12 Main Features of SP80 Low non-linearity ( < +- 0.1% )
Negligible hysteresis ( < +- 0.005% of full scale output )
Low long term drift ( typical less than 0.1% per year )
Active thermal compensation by utilising the on-the-chip heating resistor.
Small size.
13. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 13 Drawbacks of SP80 Reference pressure medium must be non-conducting and non-corrosive to be compatible with the on-chip sensing elements and electronics.
Safe overload is limited to 3 times rated pressure as no mechanical overload stop is implemented.
The devices have no normalised output signal. Each device has to be individually calibrated when system installed.
Temperature range is limited (-55 - +125 °C) and uncompensated thermal sensitivity drift is relative high ( = -0.2%/°C).
14. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 14 Applications for Micromachined Sensors and Microsystems: The biomedical market
Blood pressure sensors
The space, defence and avionics markets
Accelerometers for rocket navigation
Micro gravity sensor
Gyroscopes for navigation
The agriculture electronics market
Automotive sensors used in tractors, harvesters etc.
The off-shore oil exploitation market
High pressure measurement in oil wells
Sea wave sensor
The automotive market
Acceleration microsystems for air bag systems
Tire pressure microsystems
The data and peripheral market
Disk drive write and read heads
The consumer market
Photo diodes in cameras
Level measurement in white goods appliances.
15. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 15 Top10 Success Factors 1. Batch organised processing technology
2. Microelectronics manufacturing infrastructure
3. Research results from solid state technology and other related fields of microelectronics
4. Micromachining
5. Wafer and chip bonding
6. Mechanical material characteristics
7. Sensor effects
8. Actuator functions
9. Integrated electronics
10. Combination of features
16. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 16 Bottom10 Limiting Factors 1. Slow market acceptance
2. Low production volumes
3. Immature industrial infrastructure
4. Poor reliability
5. Complex designs and processes
6. Immature processing technology
7. Immature packaging and interconnection technologies
8. Limited research resources
9. Limited human resources
10. High costs
17. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 17 Milestones in the Planar Silicon Processing Technology (and some other related breakthroughs):
1890: Punched cards invented
1939: Vacuum tubes and mechanical computing
1948: The invention of the transistor
1959: The invention of the planar silicon processing
1959: The invention of the integrated circuit
1964: Mainframe computing
1971: The invention of the microprocessor
1981: introduction of personal computers
1985: 1 Megabit random-access-memory chips available
1991: 64 Megabit random-access-memory chips available
1994: Internet in widespread use
1994: 256 Megabit random-access-memory chips available
1995: Microprocessors with more than 3 million transistors available
2000: Microprocessors with more than 100 million transistors available
2005: 1 Gigabit random-access-memory chips available
2006: Digital consumerisation (Video on mobile phones etc)
2007: ?? The evolution continues
18. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 18 Manufacturers of Micromechanical Devices The industry structure is highly diversified both in size, technological basis and organisation type.
Traditional sensor manufacturers have seen micromechanical sensors as a natural expansion of their technological basis, and have taken up research and production of these sensors as a part of their activity.
Semiconductor companies have entered this market as an expansion of their integrated circuit activity, since they already have most of the needed equipment and the appropriate marketing channels.
System companies or original equipment manufacturers which see micromechanical devices as a way to boost their systems.
"Start ups", companies having micromechanical devices as their main business idea.
There are of course companies that does not fit into any of these types and some are someplace in between these types.
19. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 19 Manufacturers USA:
Honeywell, Microswitch, SenSym, IC Sensors, Motorola, Delco, Foxboro/ICT, Endevco, Kulite, Lucas/NovaSensor, Michigan Microsensors
Japan:
Hitachi, Toshiba, NEC, Yokagawa Hokushin, Toyota Motor Company
Europe:
Germany: Infineon, Bosch,
The Netherlands: Philips, Microtel, Xensor Integration
UK: Druck
Switzerland: Keller, Kistler
Finland: Vaisala
Sweden: Radi Medical Systems
Norway: SensoNor
20. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 20 Research Centers USA
Stanford University, Case Western Reserve University, University of Michigan, University of California at Berkeley, University of Wisconsin, MIT
Japan:
Tohoku University, Kyoto University, Fudan University,
Europe:
The Netherlands: Delft University, Twente University
Belgium: IMEC, Catholic Un of Leuven
Switzerland: University of Neuchâtel, CSEM
Germany: Fraunhofer Institute, IFT Munich, Fraunhofer Institute, IMT Itzehoe, Techn. Un of Berlin
Denmark: Techn. Un of Denmark
Finland: VTT
Sweden: Uppsala University, KTH/Acreo
Norway: SINTEF
21. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 21 Batch Processes Adapted from Microelectronics/IC Technology with no or Minor Modifications Photolithography
Spin coating
Etching techniques
Diffusion of dopants
Implantation
Epitaxy
Chemical vapour deposition (CVD)
Thin film technology
Thick film technology
22. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 22 Batch Processes Modified from Microelectronics/IC Technology Processes Double-sided photolithography
Wafer fusion bonding
LIGA and LIGA-like techniques
Laser micromachining
23. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 23 Batch Processes Adapted or Modified from Other Technologies than Microelectronics/IC Technology Micro stereo lithography
Micro electro discharge machining
24. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 24 Batch Processes Mainly Developed for Micromachined Devices Bulk micromachining
Surface micromachining
Anodic wafer bonding
Fusion bonding (Direct bonding)These technologies will be commented on the following slides
25. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 25 Bulk Micromachining in Silicon Bulk Micromachining in Silicon is here defined as three-dimensional micromachining in single crystal silicon by means of photolithographic etching techniques.
It is also called Bulk Micromechanics in Silicon or Silicon Micromachining
To understand this technology, some basic insight in single crystal silicon is needed
26. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 26 Crystal Structure of Single Crystal Silicon It is a face-centered cubic structure (diamond structure) with two atoms associated with each lattice point of the unit cube. One atom is located in position with xyz coordinates (0, 0, 0), the other in position (a/4, a/4, a/4), a being the basic unit cell length.
27. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 27 Miller Indices for a Plane in a Crystal The orientation of of different crystal planes in the basic unit cell can be described by the Miller indices (hkl) between parentheses with each plane defined by a vector description (hx + ky + lz) of the direction perpendicular to that plane. This is related to a coordinate system oriented in parallel with the side edges of the basic cell, with the Miller indices reduced to the smallest possible integers with the same ratio.
28. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 28 Important Crystal Planes in the Silicon Crystal (100), (110) and (111) are the three most important crystal planes of the silicon crystal structure.
29. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 29 Silicon as a Mechanical Material
30. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 30 Silicon as an Electronic Material
31. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 31 Principles of Micromachining in Silicon Micromechanics in silicon is here defined as three-dimensional micromachining in single crystal silicon by means of photolithographic etching techniques.
This definition covers most techniques used to make micromechanical sensors, although in some cases additive structures such as polysilicon and silicon dioxide also have been micromachined by selective etching techniques, and in some cases mechanical drilling or other machining methods are used.
32. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 32 Wet Chemical Etching of Silicon using Alkaline Etchants The fundamental reactions are electrochemical in nature.
Holes are injected from the etching solution into the silicon and Si-atoms are ionized to Si+.
Hydroxyl (OH-) from the etching solution reacts with Si+ to hydrated silicon.
Hydrated silicon reacts with a complexing agent in the etching solution to form a soluble reaction product.
The soluble reaction product is dissolved into the etching solution and carried away from the etching site on the silicon surface into the solution.
All in all, silicon is etched and the reactant products are diluted into the etching solution.
33. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 33 Isotropic Etching of Silicon Typical wet isotropic silicon etches are either organic or inorganic acids such as acetic acid (CH3COOH) or hydrogenfluorid (HF) or mixtures together with water. Often a complexing agent is needed transforming the oxidized product into soluble species.
By using selective etching techniques in combination with etching time some sort of dimensional control of the etched structure can be obtained. By using spray etching, agitation or light enhanced etching preferred etching directions can be obtained.
Generally, dimensional accuracy below approximately 30 µmeters are very hard to achieve, making wet isotropic etching a less favourable and less used method for micromechanics in silicon compared to anisotropic etching.
34. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 34 Isotropic Etching of Silicon This table shows some popular isotropic etches
35. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 35 A Typical Isotropic Etch Cavity Isotropic etch cavity in a silicon chip with a square masking film opening. The result is an underetched etch pit with rounded structures.
36. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 36 Anisotropic Etching of Silicon An anisotropic etching solution or orientation -dependent etching solution will attack the various crystal directions in single crystal silicon with different speed. Orientation effects during this type of preferential etch have been attributed to crystallographic properties. One explanation is that the atomic bonds in some planes are more exposed than in some others. A suitable designed etching agent will thus attack and strip away certain plane orientations more quickly than others.
Typical wet anisotropic silicon etches are organic or inorganic alkaline solutions used at elevated temperatures, such as a mixture of ethylene diamine, pyrocatechol and water (EDP-etch) or potassium hydroxide and water (KOH-etch). Hydrazine-water mixture are also popular anisotropic silicon etchants. In the following table some examples of anisotropic etchants are given, including appropriate masking films.
These typical anisotropic etching solutions are all characterized by an extremely slow etching speed in the <111> directions of single crystal silicon, as shown in the example given in the following figure.
37. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 37 Anisotropic Etching of Silicon
38. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 38 Anisotropic Lateral Etch Rate Lateral etch rate as a function of crystal direction on (110) silicon wafers for an EDP-etch.
The composition of the etchant was 1l ethylene-diamine, 133 ml water, 160 gram pyrocatechol and 6 gram pyrazine.
The dashed (111) directions are all equivalent with the (111) direction in single crystal silicon.
39. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 39 Anisotropic Etch Cavity in (100) Silicon Anisotropic etch cavity in (100) silicon with a square masking film opening oriented in parallel with the <110> direction. Due to the four-fold symmetry of the slow-etching (111) planes, sideways etching is stopped giving a cavity with four sloped sidewalls. The photography shows such an etched cavity.
40. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 40 Understanding Anisotropic Underetching Anisotropic underetching of mask openings nonparallel with <110> direction, and anisotropic underetching of convex corners.
(a) is a typical pyramidal pit, bounded by the (111) planes, etched into silicon with an anisotropic etch through a square hole in an oxide mask.
(b) is a type of pit which is expected from anisotropic etch with a slow convex undercut rate.
(c) is the same mask pattern resulting in an substantial degree of undercutting using an etchant with a fast undercut rate such as EDP.
In (d), further etching of (c) produces a cantilever beam suspended over the pit.
(e) is an illustration of the general rule for anisotropic etch undercutting assuming a "sufficiently long" etching time. The reader who understands (e) has understood the main principles.
41. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 41 Selective Etching of Silicon There are four different techniques in use:
Calculate the needed etching time on the basis of the etching speed of the used etch. This is an easy, but inaccurate method, as etching speed varies with the chemical condition of the etch and upon geometrical factors limiting the agitation of the etch. Typical accuracy: ±20 micrometer.
Inspect etch cavity depth in appropriate time intervals until needed depth is reached. More time consuming than the above method, but improved accuracy. Uneven etching depth from cavity to cavity due to chemical and geometrical factor is still a problem limiting accuracy, which is typical ±10 micrometer.
Chemical selective techniques stopping the etch when an impurity doped chemical resistive layer is reached. Accuracy is typical ±3 micrometer.
Electrochemical selective techniques stopping the etch towards a biased p-n junction. This enhances passivation very effectively, giving a typical accuracy of ±1 micrometer.
42. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 42 Chemical Selective Etching of Silicon Chemical selective etching with EPD-etch as a function of boron doping concentration. The boron stop layer can be made by diffusion deposition or implantation on the opposite side of the wafer compared to the etch cavity, which are both well known processing techniques.
43. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 43 Epitaxial Layer Atop Boron Doped Stop Layer The shortcoming of not being able to integrate electronics in the boron stop layer can be avoided by depositing an epitaxial layer atop the stop layer, with doping appropriate as substrate material for integrated devices.
44. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 44 A Typical Etching Dewar for Wet Chemical Etching of Silicon
45. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 45 Electrochemical Selective Etching of Silicon Low-doped material can be passivated, both p-type and n-type. This gives more processing flexibility, and low-doped silicon can be used as substrate material for integrated components such as piezoresistors.
High accuracy of thickness of unetched layer can be achieved, typical ±1micrometer, by using well-controlled implantation and diffusion techniques for making the p-n- junction.
This method makes KOH a useful selective etch, avoiding the health dangers of EDP-etch.
46. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 46 Surface Micromachining Surface micromachining can be defined as a set of methods to make three-dimensional surface structures, with deposition of thin films as additive technique and selective etching of the deposited thin films as subtractive techniques.
In practice, single crystal silicon wafer is the dominant substrate material, and chemical vapor deposited (CVD) polysilicon is mostly used as the material making up the three-dimensional surface structures.
47. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 47 Surface Micromachining, continued A main advantage, compared to bulk micromachining, is that it does not need double sided processing (back side processing) of the wafers.
The main additive deposition techniques are evaporation, sputtering, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), and variants of these.
The main subtractive methods are selective wet etching and dry plasma etching.
Photolitography is used for pattern definition.
The use of sacrificial layers is important. With this method, etching of the sacrificial layers underneath non-etched thin film structures can be done. In this way several three-dimensional surface structures can be made, such as cavities, supported microbeams, microstrings, diaphragms, lateral mobile microelements etc.
48. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 48 Micrograph of a Surface Micromachined Structure Lateral mobile polysilicon microwheels on a silicon substrate fabricated by surface micromachining. Each wheels is free to rotate around its axis at the center of the stud element, which is fixed against the substrate and thus keeps the wheel in place. The wheels have gear teeth to show a possible gear function.
49. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 49 Process Sequence The process sequence for fabricating laterally mobile elements, such as the microwheel shown in Photo XIII.2, is schematically depicted in Figure XIII.12.
First (a), an oxide film is grown on the silicon wafer.
Then (b), a polycrystalline film is deposited by chemical vapor deposition (CVD), and openings are defined and etched out using standard photolithography (c).
A second oxide layer is deposited by CVD (d), an opening in the oxide is etched using a second lithographic mask, and a second polysilicon film is deposited and patterned with a third mask (e).
Finally (f), the sacrificial oxide layers are removed by selective etching in hydrofluoric acid (HF), leaving the first polysilicon film free to move laterally, and the second polysilicon film as a supporting element fixed to the substrate.
50. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 50 Process Sequence Diagram Figure XIII.12 Process sequence for the fabrication of laterally mobile structures using surface micromachining and sacrificial layer technique.
51. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 51 Examples of Sensor Elements Using Surface Micromachining Sensor elements can be made by surface micromachining by either using thin films with sensing effects, such zinc oxide ZnO with piezoelectric field, or using mechanical sensing properties such as variable air gap elements and/or vibrating structures.
An example of such a sensor, the Berkeley Polysilicon Microbridge Integrated Vapor Sensor. This sensor has a surface micromachined polysilicon microbridge. This sensor uses the vibrating structure sensing principle, with vibration activation and vibrating sensing by means of the capacitance between the bridge and the substrate. (Coulomb force activation and capacitance change sensing)
52. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 52 Anodic Wafer Bonding Can be defined as a method of electrostatically bonding two dissimilar materials together to form a strong, hermetic seal that involves little alteration in the shape, size, and dimensions of the members making up the joint.
It is a high yield wafer-to-wafer sealing method that makes it possible to obtain hermetic seals. The technique was first developed for silicon-to-glass anodic wafer bonding, and has later been further developed to silicon-to-silicon anodic wafer bonding and silicon-to-thin film anodic wafer bonding.
53. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 53 Anodic Wafer Bonding –Schematic View Schematic view of silicon-to-silicon anodic bonding and silicon-to-glass anodic bonding.
54. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 54 Example: Digital Micromirror Device (DMD) from Texas Instruments The device is using very advanced surface micromachining of thin Al alloys on Si substrates containing CMOS drive electronics
55. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 55 Picture of the packaged DMDs The DMDs are pixel devices
Here are the VGA (640x480), the SVGA (800x600) and the XGA (1024x768) devices shown
56. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 56 Principle of Operation for the DMD The hinge system of each pixel structure enables electronic control mirror position.
57. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 57 Picture of Digital Micromirror Device The device is packaged in an elastomer connect package with a glass window. Here shown mounted on a PCB with back end drive electronics
58. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 58 The Davis DPX 16 Projector using the TI Digital Micromirror Device XGA resolution (1024 x 768 pixels)
2.3 kg weight
1000 Lumens brightness
59. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 59 The Zeiss Optical Engine for the DP X16 Projector Advanced optics
Small size and low weight
60. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 60 The Zeiss Optical Engine for the DP X16 Projector: Modelling Mechanical modelling using ProEngineer Design Tools
61. Electronic Pack….. Chapter 9 Micro Structure Technology and Micromachined Devices Slide 61 Example: The SA30 Crash Sensor from SensoNor This is a good example of the features of microsystems – please refer to the separate slide presentation