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Water‐Soluble Sacrificial Layers for Surface Micromachining
Author(s) -
Linder Vincent,
Gates Byron D.,
Ryan Declan,
Parviz Babak A.,
Whitesides George M.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.200400159
Subject(s) - polymer , materials science , surface micromachining , counterion , chemical engineering , polymerization , fabrication , surface modification , acrylic acid , monomer , solvent , polymer chemistry , nickel , metal , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , composite material , chemistry , metallurgy , ion , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , engineering
Abstract This manuscript describes the use of water‐soluble polymers for use as sacrificial layers in surface micromachining. Water‐soluble polymers have two attractive characteristics for this application: 1) They can be deposited conveniently by spin‐coating, and the solvent removed at a low temperature (95–150 °C), and 2) the resulting layer can be dissolved in water; no corrosive reagents or organic solvents are required. This technique is therefore compatible with a number of fragile materials, such as organic polymers, metal oxides and metals—materials that might be damaged during typical surface micromachining processes. The carboxylic acid groups of one polymer—poly(acrylic acid) (PAA)—can be transformed by reversible ion‐exchange from water‐soluble (Na + counterion) to water‐insoluble (Ca 2+ counterion) forms. The use of PAA and dextran polymers as sacrificial materials is a useful technique for the fabrication of microstructures: Examples include metallic structures formed by the electrodeposition of nickel, and freestanding, polymeric structures formed by photolithography.

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