Abstract

AbstractRecent research has established that for silicon structural films used in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), the susceptibility to premature failure under cyclic fatigue loading originates from a degradation process that is confined to the surface oxide. In ambient air environments, a sequential, stress-assisted oxidation and stress-corrosion cracking process can occur within the native oxide on polycrystalline silicon (referred to as reaction-layer fatigue); for the structural films of micron-scale dimensions, such incipient cracking in the oxide can lead to catastrophic failure of the entire silicon component. Since the degradation process is intimately linked to the thin reaction layer on the silicon, modification of this surface and the access of the environment to it can dramatically alter the fatigue resistance of the material. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the efficacy of modifying the fatigue behavior of polycrystalline silicon with alkene-based monolayers. Specifically, 2-μm thick polysilicon fatigue structures were coated with a monolayer film based on 1-octadecene and cyclically tested to failure in laboratory air. By applying the coating, the formation of the native oxide was prevented. Compared to the fatigue behavior of untreated polysilicon, the lives of the coated samples ranged from 105 to >1010 cycles at stress amplitudes greater than ∼90% of the ultimate strength of the film. The dramatic improvement in fatigue resistance was attributed to the monolayer inhibiting the formation of the native oxide and stress corrosion of the surface. It is concluded that the surprising susceptibility of thin structural silicon films to premature fatigue failure can be inhibited by such monolayer coatings.

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