Paper
5 September 1997 Wide-bandwidth silicon nitride membrane microphones
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 3223, Micromachining and Microfabrication Process Technology III; (1997) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.284500
Event: Micromachining and Microfabrication, 1997, Austin, TX, United States
Abstract
Small, low cost microphones with high sensitivity at frequencies greater than 20 KHz are desired for applications such as ultrasonic imaging and communication links. To minimize stray capacitance between the microphone and its amplifier circuit, process compatibility between the microphone and on-chip circuitry is also desired to facilitate integration. In this work, we have demonstrated micromachined microphones packaged with hybrid JFET amplifier circuitry with frequency response extending to 100 KHz, and voltage sensitivity of approximately 2.0 mV/Pa from 100 Hz to 10 KHz, and 16.5 mV/Pa at 30 KHz with a bias voltage of 8.0 V. The microphones are fabricated with membranes and fixed backplates made of low temperature plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposited (PECVD) silicon nitride. Because the maximum temperature of the fabrication process is 300 degrees Celsius, microphones may be built on silicon wafers from any commercial CMOS foundry without affecting transistor characteristics, allowing integration with sophisticated amplifier circuitry. Low stress silicon nitride deposition was used to produce membranes up to 2.0 mm diameter and 0.5 micrometer thickness with plus or minus 0.10 micrometer flatness. The excellent planarity of both the diaphragm and the backplate, combined with a narrow sense gap (approximately 2 micrometers) results in high output capacitance (up to 6.0 pF). The high output capacitance results in noise spectral density which is approximately 3x lower than silicon diaphragms microphones previously fabricated by the authors. Diaphragms with corrugations were fabricated to relive tensile stress, to increase deflection per unit pressure and to increase deflection linearity with pressure.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Brian T. Cunningham and Jonathan J. Bernstein "Wide-bandwidth silicon nitride membrane microphones", Proc. SPIE 3223, Micromachining and Microfabrication Process Technology III, (5 September 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.284500
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Amplifiers

Capacitance

Chemical vapor deposition

Field effect transistors

Hybrid circuits

Plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition

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