TY - JOUR
T1 - Sensitive Transfer-Free Wafer-Scale Graphene Microphones
AU - Pezone, Roberto
AU - Baglioni, Gabriele
AU - Sarro, Pasqualina M.
AU - Steeneken, Peter G.
AU - Vollebregt, Sten
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - During the past decades micro-electromechanical microphones have largely taken over the market for portable devices, being produced in volumes of billions yearly. Because performance of current devices is near the physical limits, further miniaturization and improvement of microphones for mobile devices poses a major challenge that requires breakthrough device concepts, geometries, and materials. Graphene is an attractive material for enabling these breakthroughs due to its flexibility, strength, nanometer thinness, and high electrical conductivity. Here, we demonstrate that transfer-free 7 nm thick multilayer graphene (MLGr) membranes with diameters ranging from 85-155 to 300 μm can be used to detect sound and show a mechanical compliance up to 92 nm Pa
-1, thus outperforming commercially available MEMS microphones of 950 μm with compliances around 3 nm Pa
-. The feasibility of realizing larger membranes with diameters of 300 μm and even higher compliances is shown, although these have lower yields. We present a process for locally growing graphene on a silicon wafer and realizing suspended membranes of patterned graphene across through-silicon holes by bulk micromachining and sacrificial layer etching, such that no transfer is required. This transfer-free method results in a 100% yield for membranes with diameters up to 155 μm on 132 fabricated drums. The device-to-device variations in the mechanical compliance in the audible range (20-20000 Hz) are significantly smaller than those in transferred membranes. With this work, we demonstrate a transfer-free method for realizing wafer-scale multilayer graphene membranes that is compatible with high-volume manufacturing. Thus, limitations of transfer-based methods for graphene microphone fabrication such as polymer contamination, crack formation, wrinkling, folding, delamination, and low-tension reproducibility are largely circumvented, setting a significant step on the route toward high-volume production of graphene microphones.
AB - During the past decades micro-electromechanical microphones have largely taken over the market for portable devices, being produced in volumes of billions yearly. Because performance of current devices is near the physical limits, further miniaturization and improvement of microphones for mobile devices poses a major challenge that requires breakthrough device concepts, geometries, and materials. Graphene is an attractive material for enabling these breakthroughs due to its flexibility, strength, nanometer thinness, and high electrical conductivity. Here, we demonstrate that transfer-free 7 nm thick multilayer graphene (MLGr) membranes with diameters ranging from 85-155 to 300 μm can be used to detect sound and show a mechanical compliance up to 92 nm Pa
-1, thus outperforming commercially available MEMS microphones of 950 μm with compliances around 3 nm Pa
-. The feasibility of realizing larger membranes with diameters of 300 μm and even higher compliances is shown, although these have lower yields. We present a process for locally growing graphene on a silicon wafer and realizing suspended membranes of patterned graphene across through-silicon holes by bulk micromachining and sacrificial layer etching, such that no transfer is required. This transfer-free method results in a 100% yield for membranes with diameters up to 155 μm on 132 fabricated drums. The device-to-device variations in the mechanical compliance in the audible range (20-20000 Hz) are significantly smaller than those in transferred membranes. With this work, we demonstrate a transfer-free method for realizing wafer-scale multilayer graphene membranes that is compatible with high-volume manufacturing. Thus, limitations of transfer-based methods for graphene microphone fabrication such as polymer contamination, crack formation, wrinkling, folding, delamination, and low-tension reproducibility are largely circumvented, setting a significant step on the route toward high-volume production of graphene microphones.
KW - graphene
KW - high volume production
KW - membrane
KW - MEMS
KW - microphone
KW - transfer free
KW - wafer scale
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129335051&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.2c03305
DO - 10.1021/acsami.2c03305
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85129335051
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 14
SP - 21705
EP - 21712
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 18
ER -