Crystallization of Silicon Microstructures Through Rapid Self-Heating for High-Performance Electronics on Arbitrary Substrates

2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. 970-976
Author(s):  
Helena Silva ◽  
Gokhan Bakan ◽  
Adam Cywar ◽  
Nicholas Williams ◽  
Faruk Dirisaglik ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Toshiyuki Tsuchiya

Abstract In this article, an overview of the mechanical reliability of silicon microstructures for micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) is given to clarify what we now know and what we still have to know about silicon as a high-performance mechanical material on the microscale. Focusing on the strength and fatigue properties of silicon, attempts to understand the reliability of silicon and to predict the device reliability of silicon-based microstructures are introduced. The effective parameters on the strength and the mechanism of fatigue failure are discussed with examples of measurement data to show the design guidelines for highly reliable silicon microstructures and devices.


Author(s):  
Md. Zahirul Islam ◽  
Chad A. Ulven

Abstract Like synthetic fiber reinforced composites, natural fiber reinforced composites possess a good potential to be used in high performance applications due to their good balance of mechanical and damping properties. Composite materials used in sporting goods equipment and automotive applications are subjected to repeating, regular loads. Therefore a clear understanding about the reliability of composite materials under fatigue/cyclic loading is important for their design in high performance applications. Currently, the fatigue performance of natural fiber reinforced composites are not well understood or characterized. The fatigue damage of flax fiber reinforced polymer matrix composites can be divided into two components: thermal damage due to self-heating in the sample and micro-mechanical damage due to damage creation (i.e. crack initiation, crack propagation, delamination, etc.). In this study, fatigue tests were conducted at four different loading frequencies and the two energy components defined were separated experimentally. The fatigue life of flax fiber reinforced composites was found to decrease with increasing loading frequency. Thermal damage due to the high self-heating temperature of the sample was found to be the main responsible form of energy which decreases fatigue life with increasing loading frequency. Micro-mechanical damage due to cyclic loading was not found to change significantly with increasing loading frequency.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. eaay7633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shanhai Ge ◽  
Yongjun Leng ◽  
Teng Liu ◽  
Ryan S. Longchamps ◽  
Xiao-Guang Yang ◽  
...  

We present a novel concept to achieve high performance and high safety simultaneously by passivating a Li-ion cell and then self-heating before use. By adding a small amount of triallyl phosphate in conventional electrolytes, we show that resistances of the passivated cells can increase by ~5×, thereby ensuring high safety and thermal stability. High power before battery operation is delivered by self-heating to an elevated temperature such as 60°C within tens of seconds. The present approach of building a resistive cell with highly stable materials and then delivering high power on demand through rapid thermal stimulation leads to a revolutionary route to high safety when batteries are not in use and high battery performance upon operation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikaël Cassé ◽  
Gérard Ghibaudo

The wide range of cryogenic applications, such as spatial, high performance computing or high-energy physics, has boosted the investigation of CMOS technology performance down to cryogenic temperatures. In particular, the readout electronics of quantum computers operating at low temperature requires larger bandwidth than spatial applications, so that advanced CMOS node has to be considered. FDSOI technology appears as a valuable solution for co-integration between qubits and consistent engineering of control and read-out. However, there is still lack of reports on literature concerning advanced CMOS nodes behavior at deep cryogenic operation, from devices electrostatics to mismatch and self-heating, all requested for the development of robust design tools. For these reasons, this chapter presents a review of electrical characterization and modeling results recently obtained on ultra-thin film FDSOI MOSFETs down to 4.2 K.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-82
Author(s):  
Marjan Urekar ◽  
Marina Bulat ◽  
Bojan Vujicic ◽  
Dragan Pejic

Calibration of measuring transducers for precision measurement is done by measuring voltage drop at the resistor standard, produced by output dc current proportional to the input measured value. Resistance fluctuations due to the temperature coefficient of the resistor standard are minor, thanks to the stable temperature conditions in laboratory environment. This fact brings the need to calculate the effect of resistor self-heating on its resistance. This thermal effect, produced by the flow of current through the resistor, is often disregarded. For the precise measurements this can be a significant source of error and must be quantified. This paper describes mathematical model of measurement error, resistor self-heating coefficient is defined, as it?s not usually given in product datasheets. The effect on measurement results is given in detail. Composite resistor standard prototype is described, made from off-the-shelf mass produced components, calculated and hand selected to cancel the self-heating coefficient effects. The prototype is compared to the existing commercially available high performance resistor standard.


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