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Micro 3D printing of a functional MEMS accelerometer

Engineering and Technology

Micro 3D printing of a functional MEMS accelerometer

S. Pagliano, D. E. Marschner, et al.

Discover how a team of researchers from KTH Royal Institute of Technology and EPFL have pioneered a revolutionary 3D-printed MEMS accelerometer using innovative techniques like two-photon polymerization. Their groundbreaking work demonstrates a path towards cost-efficient, custom MEMS devices for varied applications.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Microelectromechanical system (MEMS) devices, such as accelerometers, are widely used across industries, including the automotive, consumer electronics, and medical industries. MEMS are efficiently produced at very high volumes using large-scale semiconductor manufacturing techniques. However, these techniques are not viable for the cost-efficient manufacturing of specialized MEMS devices at low- and medium-scale volumes. Thus, applications that require custom-designed MEMS devices for markets with low- and medium-scale volumes of below 5000–10,000 components per year are extremely difficult to address efficiently. The 3D printing of MEMS devices could enable the efficient realization and production of MEMS devices at these low- and medium-scale volumes. However, current micro-3D printing technologies have limited capabilities for printing functional MEMS. Herein, we demonstrate a functional 3D-printed MEMS accelerometer using 3D printing by two-photon polymerization in combination with the deposition of a strain gauge transducer by metal evaporation. We characterized the responsivity, resonance frequency, and stability over time of the MEMS accelerometer. Our results demonstrate that the 3D printing of functional MEMS is a viable approach that could enable the efficient realization of a variety of custom-designed MEMS devices, addressing new application areas that are difficult or impossible to address using conventional MEMS manufacturing.
Publisher
Microsystems & Nanoengineering
Published On
Oct 26, 2022
Authors
Simone Pagliano, David E. Marschner, Damien Maillard, Nils Ehrmann, Göran Stemme, Stefan Braun, Luis Guillermo Villanueva, Frank Niklaus
Tags
3D printing
MEMS accelerometer
two-photon polymerization
metal evaporation
strain gauge transducer
custom devices
responsivity
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