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Nanomechanical Characterization of Vertical Nanopillars Using an MEMS-SPM Nano-Bending Testing Platform
Author(s) -
Zhi Li,
Sai Gao,
Uwe Brand,
Karla Hiller,
Susann Hahn,
Gerry Hamdana,
Erwin Peiner,
Helmut Wolff,
Detlef Bergmann
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
sensors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.636
H-Index - 172
ISSN - 1424-8220
DOI - 10.3390/s19204529
Subject(s) - nanopillar , microelectromechanical systems , materials science , stiffness , bending , characterization (materials science) , bending stiffness , nanotechnology , scanning probe microscopy , composite material , nanostructure
Nanomechanical characterization of vertically aligned micro- and nanopillars plays an important role in quality control of pillar-based sensors and devices. A microelectromechanical system based scanning probe microscope (MEMS-SPM) has been developed for quantitative measurement of the bending stiffness of micro- and nanopillars with high aspect ratios. The MEMS-SPM exhibits large in-plane displacement with subnanometric resolution and medium probing force beyond 100 micro-Newtons. A proof-of-principle experimental setup using an MEMS-SPM prototype has been built to experimentally determine the in-plane bending stiffness of silicon nanopillars with an aspect ratio higher than 10. Comparison between the experimental results and the analytical and FEM evaluation has been demonstrated. Measurement uncertainty analysis indicates that this nano-bending system is able to determine the pillar bending stiffness with an uncertainty better than 5%, provided that the pillars' stiffness is close to the suspending stiffness of the MEMS-SPM. The MEMS-SPM measurement setup is capable of on-chip quantitative nanomechanical characterization of pillar-like nano-objects fabricated out of different materials.

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