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  4. Effect of Native Oxide on Stress in Silicon Nanowires: Implications for Nanoelectromechanical Systems
 
research article

Effect of Native Oxide on Stress in Silicon Nanowires: Implications for Nanoelectromechanical Systems

Esfahani, Mohammad Nasr
•
Pakzad, Sina Zare
•
Li, Taotao
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September 15, 2022
Acs Applied Nano Materials

Understanding the origins of intrinsic stress in Si nanowires (NWs) is crucial for their successful utilization as transducer building blocks in next-generation, miniaturized sensors based on nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS). With their small size leading to ultrahigh-resonance frequencies and extreme surface-to-volume ratios, silicon NWs raise new opportunities regarding sensitivity, precision, and speed in both physical and biochemical sensing. With silicon optoelectromechanical properties strongly dependent on the level of NW intrinsic stress, various studies have been devoted to the measurement of such stresses generated, for example, as a result of harsh fabrication processes. However, due to enormous NW surface area, even the native oxide that is conventionally considered as a benign surface condition can cause significant stresses. To address this issue, a combination of nanomechanical characterization and atomistic simulation approaches is developed. Relying only on low-temperature processes, the fabrication approach yields monolithic NWs with optimum boundary conditions, where NWs and support architecture are etched within the same silicon crystal. Resulting NWs are characterized by transmission electron microscopy and micro-Raman spectroscopy. The interpretation of results is carried out through molecular dynamics simulations with ReaxFF potential facilitating the incorporation of humidity and temperature, thereby providing a close replica of the actual oxidation environment-in contrast to previous dry oxidation or self-limiting thermal oxidation studies. As a result, consensus on significant intrinsic tensile stresses on the order of 100 MPa to 1 GPa was achieved as a function of NW critical dimension and aspect ratio. The understanding developed herein regarding the role of native oxide played in the generation of NW intrinsic stresses is important for the design and development of silicon-based NEMS.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acsanm.2c02983
Web of Science ID

WOS:000859049800001

Author(s)
Esfahani, Mohammad Nasr
Pakzad, Sina Zare
Li, Taotao
Li, XueFei
Tasdemir, Zuhal
Wollschlaeger, Nicole
Leblebici, Yusuf  
Alaca, B. Erdem
Date Issued

2022-09-15

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC

Published in
Acs Applied Nano Materials
Volume

5

Issue

9

Start page

13276

End page

13285

Subjects

Nanoscience & Nanotechnology

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

Materials Science

•

nanoelectromechanical systems (nems)

•

silicon nanowires

•

native oxide

•

intrinsic stress

•

raman spectroscopy

•

molecular dynamics

•

reactive molecular-dynamics

•

si nanowires

•

oxidation

•

strain

•

diffraction

•

interface

•

growth

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSM  
Available on Infoscience
October 10, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/191391
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