Publication | Open Access
Array of Resonant Electromechanical Nanosystems: A Technological Breakthrough for Uncooled Infrared Imaging
15
Citations
39
References
2018
Year
EngineeringNew Readout SchemeVanadium Oxide LayerMetamaterialsReadout ElectronicsIntegrated CircuitsOptomechanicsMicro-electromechanical SystemElectronic DevicesMicromachinesOptical PropertiesNanoelectronicsUncooled Infrared ImagingInstrumentationNanomechanicsMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringPhysicsTechnological BreakthroughNanotechnologyThermal PhysicsMicroelectronicsMicro TechnologyOptical SensorsBiomedical SensorsMicrofabricationBiomedical DiagnosticsInfrared SensorApplied PhysicsNano Electro Mechanical SystemNanofabricationThermal SensorDynamic MetamaterialsThermal EngineeringResonant Electromechanical Nanosystems
Microbolometers arethe most common uncooled infrared techniques that allow 50 mK-temperature resolution to be achieved on-scene. However, this approach struggles with both self-heating, which is inherent to the resistive readout principle, and 1/f noise. We present an alternative approach that consists of using micro/nanoresonators vibrating according to a torsional mode, and whose resonant frequency changes with the incident IR-radiation. Dense arrays of such electromechanical structures were fabricated with a 12 µm pitch at low temperature, allowing their integration on complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) circuits according to a post-processing method. H-shape pixels with 9 µm-long nanorods and a cross-section of 250 nm × 30 nm were fabricated to provide large thermal responses, whose experimental measurements reached up to 1024 Hz/nW. These electromechanical resonators featured a noise equivalent power of 140 pW for a response time of less than 1 ms. To our knowledge, these performances are unrivaled with such small dimensions. We also showed that a temperature sensitivity of 20 mK within a 100 ms integration time is conceivable at a 12 µm pitch by co-integrating the resonators with their readout electronics, and suggesting a new readout scheme. This sensitivity could be reached short-term by depositing on top of the nanorods a vanadium oxide layer that had a phase-transition that could possibly enhance the thermal response by one order of magnitude.
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