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Published June 2008 | public
Journal Article

Self-Transducing Silicon Nanowire Electromechanical Systems at Room Temperature

Abstract

Electronic readout of the motions of genuinely nanoscale mechanical devices at room temperature imposes an important challenge for the integration and application of nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS). Here, we report the first experiments on piezoresistively transduced very high frequency Si nanowire (SiNW) resonators with on-chip electronic actuation at room temperature. We have demonstrated that, for very thin (∼90 nm down to ∼30 nm) SiNWs, their time-varying strain can be exploited for self-transducing the devices' resonant motions at frequencies as high as ∼100 MHz. The strain of wire elongation, which is only second-order in doubly clamped structures, enables efficient displacement transducer because of the enhanced piezoresistance effect in these SiNWs. This intrinsically integrated transducer is uniquely suited for a class of very thin wires and beams where metallization and multilayer complex patterning on devices become impractical. The 30 nm thin SiNW NEMS offer exceptional mass sensitivities in the subzeptogram range. This demonstration makes it promising to advance toward NEMS sensors based on ultrathin and even molecular-scale SiNWs, and their monolithic integration with microelectronics on the same chip.

Additional Information

© 2008 American Chemical Society. Received April 15, 2008. Publication Date (Web): May 16, 2008. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant EECS 0425914 (NSF-NSEC), MARCO, and by DARPA/SPAWAR under Grant N66001-02-1-8914. X.L.F. thanks S. Stryker for help in the engineering of the experimental apparatus. R.H. and X.L.F. thank R. T. Howe, R. Maboudian, J. S. Aldridge, I. Bargatin, M. D. LaHaye, and M. Li for helpful discussions. We thank UC Berkeley Microlab and Stanford Nanofabrication Facility for the use of their facilities.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023