scholarly journals Mechanically transformative electronics, sensors, and implantable devices

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (11) ◽  
pp. eaay0418 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sang-Hyuk Byun ◽  
Joo Yong Sim ◽  
Zhanan Zhou ◽  
Juhyun Lee ◽  
Raza Qazi ◽  
...  

Traditionally, electronics have been designed with static form factors to serve designated purposes. This approach has been an optimal direction for maintaining the overall device performance and reliability for targeted applications. However, electronics capable of changing their shape, flexibility, and stretchability will enable versatile and accommodating systems for more diverse applications. Here, we report design concepts, materials, physics, and manufacturing strategies that enable these reconfigurable electronic systems based on temperature-triggered tuning of mechanical characteristics of device platforms. We applied this technology to create personal electronics with variable stiffness and stretchability, a pressure sensor with tunable bandwidth and sensitivity, and a neural probe that softens upon integration with brain tissue. Together, these types of transformative electronics will substantially broaden the use of electronics for wearable and implantable applications.

Author(s):  
Fahad Mirza ◽  
Gaurang Naware ◽  
Thiagarajan Raman ◽  
Ankur Jain ◽  
Dereje Agonafer

Convergence and miniaturization of consumer electronic products such as cameras, phones, etc. has been driven by enhanced performance and reduced microelectronics size. For past few decades Moore’s law has been driving the microelectronics industry to achieve high performance with small form-factors at a reasonable cost. While the continued miniaturization of the transistors has resulted in unparalleled growth of the electronics industry, further performance increment via size scaling could be cost-ineffective and difficult to manufacture. To satisfy the current/future integrated Circuit (IC) package requirements, vertical integration of chips holds the key, i.e., 3-D packaging. Chip-stacking (3-D) is emerging as a powerful technology to reduce package footprint, decrease interconnection power, higher frequencies, and provide efficient integration of heterogeneous devices. It allows further reduction in the form factor of current systems and eases the interconnect performance limitation since the components are integrated on top of each other instead of side-by-side, resulting in shorter interconnect lengths. Due to high package density and chip-stacking on top of each other, heat dissipation from the stacked chips becomes a concern. To overcome these thermal challenges and provide shorter/faster inter-chip electrical connection, Through Silicon Via (TSV) technology is being implemented in 3-D ICs. TSVs allow 3-D chips to be interconnected directly and provide high speed signal propagation. TSVs provide inter-chip heat/current path but the current flowing through the TSVs results in localized heat generation (Joule Heating) within the silicon, which could be detrimental to the overall performance of the system. In this paper, the effect of Joule heating on the device performance measured by trans-conductance, electron mobility (e− mobility), and channel thermal noise is analyzed. Thinned (100 μm) chips with a uniform power map and evenly distributed TSVs are analyzed in this work. Thermal distribution in the package is studied for different TSV currents including a base-line case of no-current (thermal TSV only) and the junction temperature is determined for each case. The response from the thermal analysis is correlated to the device performance through existing relations. Results indicate that joule heating has a significant effect on the thermal response of the 3D IC and subsequently proves to be detrimental to the chip performance. An understanding of the electrical performance dependence on TSV joule heating is developed through this work.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (28) ◽  
pp. 1950166
Author(s):  
Felix Bahr ◽  
Debasish Banerjee ◽  
Fabio Bernardoni ◽  
Mateusz Koren ◽  
Hubert Simma ◽  
...  

We discuss the extraction of the ground state [Formula: see text] matrix elements from Euclidean lattice correlation functions. The emphasis is on the elimination of excited state contributions. Two typical gauge-field ensembles with lattice spacings 0.075, 0.05 fm and pion masses 330, 270 MeV are used from the O[Formula: see text]-improved CLS 2-flavor simulations and the final state momentum is [Formula: see text] GeV. The b-quark is treated in HQET including the [Formula: see text] corrections. Fits to two-point and three-point correlation functions and suitable ratios including summed ratios are used, yielding consistent results with precision of around 2% which is not limited by the [Formula: see text] corrections but by the dominating static form factors. Excited state contributions are under reasonable control but are the bottleneck towards precision. We do not yet include a specific investigation of multi-hadron contaminations, a gap in the literature which ought to be filled soon.


Micromachines ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 743
Author(s):  
Steven Lao ◽  
Hamza Edher ◽  
Utkarsh Saini ◽  
Jeffrey Sixt ◽  
Armaghan Salehian

This paper pertains to the development & evaluation of a dielectric electroactive polymer-based tactile pressure sensor and its circuitry. The evaluations conceived target the sensor’s use case as an in-situ measurement device assessing load conditions imposed by compression garments in either static form or dynamic pulsations. Several testing protocols are described to evaluate and characterize the sensor’s effectiveness for static and dynamic response such as repeatability, linearity, dynamic effectiveness, hysteresis effects of the sensor under static conditions, sensitivity to measurement surface curvature and temperature and humidity effects. Compared to pneumatic sensors in similar physiological applications, this sensor presents several significant advantages including better spatial resolution, compact packaging, manufacturability for smaller footprints and overall simplicity for use in array configurations. The sampling rates and sensitivity are also less prone to variability compared to pneumatic pressure sensors. The presented sensor has a high sampling rate of 285 Hz that can further assist with the physiological applications targeted for improved cardiac performance. An average error of ± 5.0 mmHg with a frequency of 1–2 Hz over a range of 0 to 120 mmHg was achieved when tested cyclically.


Author(s):  
Yong Zhao ◽  
Kunyong Chen ◽  
Jue Yu ◽  
Shunzhou Huang

This paper presents a parallel compliance device with variable translational stiffness properties. The variation of endpoint stiffness depends on the change of the spring stiffness in each limb. A synthesis algorithm for realizing the desired force compliance performance is built. Based on the proposed algorithm, a group of optimal spring stiffness can be derived. For the implementation of this device, an electromagnetic linear spring with current-controlled stiffness is developed. After testing the mechanical characteristics of the electromagnetic spring, a prototype of the parallel compliance device is built. The endpoint stiffness under different combinations of spring stiffness values is exhibited in the form of stiffness ellipsoids. A case is studied and verifies the ability of the presented compliance device to realize the desired endpoint stiffness. As the stiffness adjustment range of electromagnetic spring is limited, the bound of physically realizable stiffness of the presented compliance device is also discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (DPC) ◽  
pp. 001435-001469 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly Pollard ◽  
Meng Guo ◽  
Richie Peters ◽  
Mike Phenis ◽  
Laura Mauer ◽  
...  

The continuing challenge to meet the need for lighter, smaller, faster and smarter electronic systems has pushed the advancement of 2.5D and 3D technology. The ability to create and integrate through-silicon vias (TSV) into device designs in 2.5- and 3-D platforms allows a decrease in interconnection path length, which results in improved device performance and reliability in a small form factor. Mainly due to its high silicon etch rate and selectivity to mask materials, the Bosch process is often used in the TSV fabrication. In this process, the silicon via is created by the deep reactive ion etching (DRIE). DRIE is comprised of repeating a combination of steps: an etch step and a passivation step. The passivation created in the DRIE process results in a fluoropolymer residue remaining on the wafer at the end of the process. The residue must be removed to enable deposition of a defect-free barrier, which enables a defect-free seed layer and void-free plating into the via. There are numerous technical papers and presentations on the etching and filling of these vias but the process for cleaning remains under addressed. Initially, standard processes used after RIE and consisting of an ashing process to remove any remaining photoresist, followed by immersion in a solution-based post etch residue remover were adopted for post-TSV cleans. However, the fluoropolymer does not have the same chemical characteristics as typical post-RIE etch residues and the major challenge has been the difficulty to completely remove it, especially on the via sidewall, using traditional post etches residue removers. Therefore, new formulated cleaning solutions and processes are actively sought for the removal of post etch residue for TSVs. This paper will describe a robust cleaning process for one step removal of both the photoresist and sidewall polymer residues from TSVs. A combination soak and high pressure spray process using a proprietary environmentally friendly chemistry, coupled with a megasonic final rinse provides a unique solution for both polymer residue and photoresist removals on high aspect ratio vias. SEM, EDX and Auger analysis will illustrate the cleanliness levels achieved.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. eaav3294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amay J. Bandodkar ◽  
Philipp Gutruf ◽  
Jungil Choi ◽  
KunHyuck Lee ◽  
Yurina Sekine ◽  
...  

Wearable sweat sensors rely either on electronics for electrochemical detection or on colorimetry for visual readout. Non-ideal form factors represent disadvantages of the former, while semiquantitative operation and narrow scope of measurable biomarkers characterize the latter. Here, we introduce a battery-free, wireless electronic sensing platform inspired by biofuel cells that integrates chronometric microfluidic platforms with embedded colorimetric assays. The resulting sensors combine advantages of electronic and microfluidic functionality in a platform that is significantly lighter, cheaper, and smaller than alternatives. A demonstration device simultaneously monitors sweat rate/loss, pH, lactate, glucose, and chloride. Systematic studies of the electronics, microfluidics, and integration schemes establish the key design considerations and performance attributes. Two-day human trials that compare concentrations of glucose and lactate in sweat and blood suggest a potential basis for noninvasive, semi-quantitative tracking of physiological status.


Actuators ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 107
Author(s):  
Yinglong Chen ◽  
Junhao Zhang ◽  
Yongjun Gong

The soft actuator possesses the characteristics of flexibility, environmental adaptability, and human–machine interaction. Firstly, aiming to resolve the limitation of variable stiffness performance of a traditional pneumatic artificial muscle (PAM) actuator, based on the antagonistic mechanism of extensor and contractor muscles, a novel pneumatic soft actuator coupled of extensor and contractor muscles is proposed in this paper. The actuator can perform the compound action of elongation/contraction, and the stiffness of it can be controlled by adjusting the elongation and contraction forces. Secondly, based on the deformation principle of woven and elastic fabric layers, the mechanical characteristics model of the actuator is established and simulated. The mechanical properties of the actuator are tested under different pressures and deformation displacement and the variable stiffness characteristics of the actuator are verified. Finally, actuators are utilized to manufacture a soft mechanical manipulator, which can achieve variable stiffness in a fixed bending attitude.


Author(s):  
M.V. Astakhov ◽  
E.V. Slavkina

The use of articles of polymer composite materials is a widespread way to reduce the weight of the structure and increase its corrosion resistance. One of the main disadvantages of such articles is low resistance to shock loads. The advantages and disadvantages of known methods of increasing the resistance to dynamic loading of parts and assemblies of polymer composite materials are considered. The design of a multilayer adaptive beam element containing an inner layer of elasticviscoplastic dilatant liquid — polysilicon as a layer of variable stiffness increasing the resistance to impact is proposed. Based on laboratory testing followed by statistical processing the results, the mechanical characteristics of polysilicon under shock loading (density, Poisson’s ratio, Young’s modulus, shear modulus) were determined, and dependence of normal stress on relative longitudinal strain is plotted. A method for calculating the strength of an adaptive beam element with an inner layer of polysilicon under impact is proposed.


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