DocumentCode
786180
Title
Design of atomic force microscope cantilevers for combined thermomechanical writing and thermal reading in array operation
Author
King, William P. ; Kenny, Thomas W. ; Goodson, Kenneth E. ; Cross, Graham L W ; Despont, Michel ; Dürig, Urs T. ; Rothuizen, Hugo ; Binnig, Gerd ; Vettiger, Peter
Author_Institution
George W. Woodruff Sch. of Mech. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Volume
11
Issue
6
fYear
2002
fDate
12/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
765
Lastpage
774
Abstract
In thermomechanical data writing, a resistively-heated atomic force microscope (AFM) cantilever tip forms indentations in a thin polymer film. The same cantilever operates as a thermal proximity sensor to detect the presence of previously written data bits. This paper uses recent progress in thermal analysis of the writing and reading modes to develop new cantilever designs for increased speed, sensitivity, and reduced power consumption in both writing and reading operation. Measurements of cantilever electrical resistance during heating reveals physical limits of cantilever writing and reading, and verifies a finite-difference thermal and electrical simulation of cantilever operation. This work proposes two new cantilever designs that correspond to fabrication technology benchmarks. Simulations predict that the proposed cantilevers have a higher data rate and are more sensitive than the present cantilever. The various cantilever designs offer single-bit writing times of 0.2 μs-25 μs for driving voltages of 2-25 V. The thermal reading ΔR/R sensitivity is as high as 4×10-4 per vertical nm in near steady-state operation.
Keywords
arrays; atomic force microscopy; digital storage; finite difference methods; indentation; micromechanical devices; polymer films; thermal analysis; 0.2 to 25 mus; 2 to 25 V; array operation; atomic force microscope cantilevers; cantilever electrical resistance; driving voltages; fabrication technology; finite-difference simulation; indentations; polymer film; proximity sensor; reading modes; sensitivity; single-bit writing times; steady-state operation; thermal analysis; thermal reading; thermomechanical data storage; thermomechanical writing; writing modes; Atomic force microscopy; Electric variables measurement; Electrical resistance measurement; Energy consumption; Force sensors; Polymer films; Thermal force; Thermal sensors; Thermomechanical processes; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1057-7157
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JMEMS.2002.803283
Filename
1097797
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