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Piezoresistive effect

The piezoresistive effect is a change in the electrical resistivity of a semiconductor or metal when mechanical strain is applied. In contrast to the piezoelectric effect, the piezoresistive effect causes a change only in electrical resistance, not in electric potential.

History

The change of electrical resistance in metal devices due to an applied mechanical load was first discovered in 1856 by Lord Kelvin. With single crystal silicon becoming the material of choice for the design of analog and digital circuits, the large piezoresistive effect in silicon and germanium was first discovered in 1954 (Smith 1954).[1]

Mechanism

In conducting and semi-conducting materials, changes in inter-atomic spacing resulting from strain affect the bandgaps, making it easier (or harder depending on the material and strain) for electrons to be raised into the conduction band. This results in a change in resistivity of the material. Within a certain range of strain this relationship is linear, so that the piezoresistive coefficient

 

where

∂ρ = Change in resistivity
ρ = Original resistivity
ε = Strain

is constant.

Piezoresistivity in metals

Usually the resistance change in metals is mostly due to the change of geometry resulting from applied mechanical stress. However, even though the piezoresistive effect is small in those cases it is often not negligible. In cases where it is, it can be calculated using the simple resistance equation derived from Ohm's law;

 

where

  Conductor length [m]
A Cross-sectional area of the current flow [m²][2]: p.207 

Some metals display piezoresistivity that is much larger than the resistance change due to geometry. In platinum alloys, for instance, piezoresistivity is more than a factor of two larger, combining with the geometry effects to give a strain gauge sensitivity of up to more than three times as large than due to geometry effects alone. Pure nickel's piezoresistivity is -13 times larger, completely dwarfing and even reversing the sign of the geometry-induced resistance change.

Piezoresistive effect in bulk semiconductors

The piezoresistive effect of semiconductor materials can be several orders of magnitudes larger than the geometrical effect and is present in materials like germanium, polycrystalline silicon, amorphous silicon, silicon carbide, and single crystal silicon. Hence, semiconductor strain gauges with a very high coefficient of sensitivity can be built. For precision measurements they are more difficult to handle than metal strain gauges, because semiconductor strain gauges are generally sensitive to environmental conditions (especially temperature).

For silicon, gauge factors can be two orders of magnitudes larger than those observed in most metals (Smith 1954). The resistance of n-conducting silicon mainly changes due to a shift of the three different conducting valley pairs. The shifting causes a redistribution of the carriers between valleys with different mobilities. This results in varying mobilities dependent on the direction of current flow. A minor effect is due to the effective mass change related to changing shapes of the valleys. In p-conducting silicon the phenomena are more complex and also result in mass changes and hole transfer.

Giant piezoresistance in metal-silicon hybrid structures

A giant piezoresistive effect – where the piezoresistive coefficient exceeds the bulk value – was reported for a microfabricated silicon-aluminium hybrid structure.[3] The effect has been applied to silicon-based sensor technologies.[4]

Giant piezoresistive effect in silicon nanostructures

The longitudinal piezoresistive coefficient of top-down fabricated silicon nanowires was measured to be 60% larger than in bulk silicon.[5][6] In 2006, giant piezoresistance[7] was reported in bottom-up fabricated silicon nanowires – a >30 increase in the longitudinal piezoresistive coefficient compared to bulk silicon was reported. The suggestion of a giant piezoresistance in nanostructures has since stimulated much effort into a physical understanding of the effect not only in silicon [8][9][10][11][12][13][14] but also in other functional materials. [15]

Piezoresistive silicon devices

The piezoresistive effect of semiconductors has been used for sensor devices employing all kinds of semiconductor materials such as germanium, polycrystalline silicon, amorphous silicon, and single crystal silicon. Since silicon is today the material of choice for integrated digital and analog circuits the use of piezoresistive silicon devices has been of great interest. It enables the easy integration of stress sensors with Bipolar and CMOS circuits.

This has enabled a wide range of products using the piezoresistive effect. Many commercial devices such as pressure sensors and acceleration sensors employ the piezoresistive effect in silicon. But due to its magnitude the piezoresistive effect in silicon has also attracted the attention of research and development for all other devices using single crystal silicon. Semiconductor Hall sensors, for example, were capable of achieving their current precision only after employing methods which eliminate signal contributions due to applied mechanical stress.

Piezoresistors

Piezoresistors are resistors made from a piezoresistive material and are usually used for measurement of mechanical stress. They are the simplest form of piezoresistive devices.

Fabrication

Piezoresistors can be fabricated using wide variety of piezoresistive materials. The simplest form of piezoresistive silicon sensors are diffused resistors. Piezoresistors consist of a simple two contact diffused n- or p-wells within a p- or n-substrate. As the typical square resistances of these devices are in the range of several hundred ohms, additional p+ or n+ plus diffusions are a potential method to facilitate ohmic contacts to the device.

 

Schematic cross-section of the basic elements of a silicon n-well piezoresistor.

Physics of operation

For typical stress values in the MPa range the stress dependent voltage drop along the resistor Vr, can be considered to be linear. A piezoresistor aligned with the x-axis as shown in the figure may be described by

 

where  , I,  ,  , and   denote the stress free resistance, the applied current, the transverse and longitudinal piezoresistive coefficients, and the three tensile stress components, respectively. The piezoresistive coefficients vary significantly with the sensor orientation with respect to the crystallographic axes and with the doping profile. Despite the fairly large stress sensitivity of simple resistors, they are preferably used in more complex configurations eliminating certain cross sensitivities and drawbacks. Piezoresistors have the disadvantage of being highly sensitive to temperature changes while featuring comparatively small relative stress dependent signal amplitude changes.

Other piezoresistive devices

In silicon the piezoresistive effect is used in piezoresistors, transducers, piezo-FETS, solid state accelerometers and bipolar transistors.

See also

References

  1. ^ Barlian, A.A.; Park, W.-T.; Mallon, J.R.; Rastegar, A.J.; Pruitt, B.L. (March 2009). "Review: Semiconductor Piezoresistance for Microsystems". Proceedings of the IEEE. 97 (3): 513–552. doi:10.1109/jproc.2009.2013612. ISSN 0018-9219. PMC 2829857. PMID 20198118.
  2. ^ Liu, Chang (2006). "Piezoresistive Sensors" (PDF). Foundations of MEMS. Upper Saddle River, NG: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0131472860. Retrieved March 3, 2013.
  3. ^ Rowe, A. C. H.; Donoso-Barrera, A.; Renner, Ch.; Arscott, S. (April 8, 2008). "Giant Room-Temperature Piezoresistance in a Metal-Silicon Hybrid Structure". Physical Review Letters. 100 (14): 145501. arXiv:0803.0655. Bibcode:2008PhRvL.100n5501R. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.100.145501. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 18518044. S2CID 42265969.
  4. ^ Ngo, H.-D.; Tekin, T.; Vu, T.-C.; Fritz, M.; Kurniawan, W.; Mukhopadhyay, B.; Kolitsch, A.; Schiffer, M.; Lang, K.-D. (2011). MEMS sensor with giant piezoresistive effect using metall-semiconductor hybrid structure. 16th International Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference. IEEE. p. 1018-1021. doi:10.1109/transducers.2011.5969160.
  5. ^ Toriyama, T.; Tanimoto, Y.; Sugiyama, S. (2002). "Single crystal silicon nano-wire piezoresistors for mechanical sensors". Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). 11 (5): 605–611. doi:10.1109/jmems.2002.802905. ISSN 1057-7157.
  6. ^ Toriyama, T.; Sugiyama, S. (2003). "Single crystal silicon piezoresistive nano-wire bridge". Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. Elsevier BV. 108 (1–3): 244–249. doi:10.1016/s0924-4247(03)00269-3. ISSN 0924-4247.
  7. ^ He, Rongrui; Yang, Peidong (2006). "Giant piezoresistance effect in silicon nanowires". Nature Nanotechnology. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 1 (1): 42–46. Bibcode:2006NatNa...1...42H. doi:10.1038/nnano.2006.53. ISSN 1748-3387. PMID 18654140. S2CID 17694712.
  8. ^ Allain, P. (November 8, 2012). Étude des propriétés électro-thermo-mécaniques de nanofils en silicium pour leur intégration dans les microsystèmes (Doctoral) (in French). Université Paris Sud. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  9. ^ Reck, K.; Richter, J.; Hansen, O.; Thomsen, E.V. (2008). Piezoresistive effect in top-down fabricated silicon nanowires. 2008 IEEE 21st International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems. IEEE. p. 7-17. doi:10.1109/memsys.2008.4443757. ISSN 1084-6999.
  10. ^ Yang, Peidong (2008). "Chemistry and physics of silicon nanowire". Dalton Transactions. Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) (33): 4387–4391. doi:10.1039/b801440j. ISSN 1477-9226. PMID 18698439.
  11. ^ Milne, J. S.; Rowe, A. C. H.; Arscott, S.; Renner, Ch. (November 23, 2010). "Giant Piezoresistance Effects in Silicon Nanowires and Microwires". Physical Review Letters. 105 (22): 226802. arXiv:1010.1633. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.105v6802M. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.105.226802. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 21231411. S2CID 12201580.
  12. ^ Koumela, A; Mercier, D; Dupré, C; Jourdan, G; Marcoux, C; Ollier, E; Purcell, S T; Duraffourg, L (September 2, 2011). "Piezoresistance of top-down suspended Si nanowires". Nanotechnology. IOP Publishing. 22 (39): 395701. Bibcode:2011Nanot..22M5701K. doi:10.1088/0957-4484/22/39/395701. ISSN 0957-4484. PMID 21891838. S2CID 24747354.
  13. ^ Rowe, A.C.H. (March 28, 2014). "Piezoresistance in silicon and its nanostructures". Journal of Materials Research. 29 (6): 731–744. arXiv:1309.6445. Bibcode:2014JMatR..29..731R. doi:10.1557/jmr.2014.52. ISSN 0884-2914. S2CID 119238891.
  14. ^ McClarty, M. M.; Jegenyes, N.; Gaudet, M.; Toccafondi, C.; Ossikovski, R.; Vaurette, F.; Arscott, S.; Rowe, A. C. H. (July 11, 2016). "Geometric and chemical components of the giant piezoresistance in silicon nanowires". Applied Physics Letters. 109 (2): 023102. arXiv:1512.01396. Bibcode:2016ApPhL.109b3102M. doi:10.1063/1.4955403. ISSN 0003-6951. S2CID 119189299.
  15. ^ Ali, Utku Emre; Modi, Gaurav; Agarwal, Ritesh; Bhaskaran, Harish (March 18, 2022). "Real-time nanomechanical property modulation as a framework for tunable NEMS". Nature Communications. 13 (1): 1464. Bibcode:2022NatCo..13.1464A. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-29117-7. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 8933423. PMID 35304454.
  • Kanda, Yozo (1991). "Piezoresistance effect of silicon". Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. Elsevier BV. 28 (2): 83–91. doi:10.1016/0924-4247(91)85017-i. ISSN 0924-4247.
  • S. Middelhoek and S. A. Audet, Silicon Sensors, Delft, The Netherlands: Delft University Press, 1994.
  • A. L. Window, Strain Gauge Technology, 2nd ed, London, England: Elsevier Applied Science, 1992.
  • Smith, Charles S. (April 1, 1954). "Piezoresistance Effect in Germanium and Silicon". Physical Review. American Physical Society (APS). 94 (1): 42–49. Bibcode:1954PhRv...94...42S. doi:10.1103/physrev.94.42. ISSN 0031-899X.
  • S. M. Sze, Semiconductor Sensors, New York: Wiley, 1994.

piezoresistive, effect, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, march, 2013, learn, when, remove, this, template, mess. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The piezoresistive effect is a change in the electrical resistivity of a semiconductor or metal when mechanical strain is applied In contrast to the piezoelectric effect the piezoresistive effect causes a change only in electrical resistance not in electric potential Contents 1 History 2 Mechanism 2 1 Piezoresistivity in metals 2 2 Piezoresistive effect in bulk semiconductors 2 3 Giant piezoresistance in metal silicon hybrid structures 2 4 Giant piezoresistive effect in silicon nanostructures 3 Piezoresistive silicon devices 3 1 Piezoresistors 3 1 1 Fabrication 3 1 2 Physics of operation 3 2 Other piezoresistive devices 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory EditThe change of electrical resistance in metal devices due to an applied mechanical load was first discovered in 1856 by Lord Kelvin With single crystal silicon becoming the material of choice for the design of analog and digital circuits the large piezoresistive effect in silicon and germanium was first discovered in 1954 Smith 1954 1 Mechanism EditIn conducting and semi conducting materials changes in inter atomic spacing resulting from strain affect the bandgaps making it easier or harder depending on the material and strain for electrons to be raised into the conduction band This results in a change in resistivity of the material Within a certain range of strain this relationship is linear so that the piezoresistive coefficient r s r r e displaystyle rho sigma frac left frac partial rho rho right varepsilon where r Change in resistivity r Original resistivity e Strainis constant Piezoresistivity in metals Edit Usually the resistance change in metals is mostly due to the change of geometry resulting from applied mechanical stress However even though the piezoresistive effect is small in those cases it is often not negligible In cases where it is it can be calculated using the simple resistance equation derived from Ohm s law R r ℓ A displaystyle R rho frac ell A where ℓ displaystyle ell Conductor length m A Cross sectional area of the current flow m 2 p 207 Some metals display piezoresistivity that is much larger than the resistance change due to geometry In platinum alloys for instance piezoresistivity is more than a factor of two larger combining with the geometry effects to give a strain gauge sensitivity of up to more than three times as large than due to geometry effects alone Pure nickel s piezoresistivity is 13 times larger completely dwarfing and even reversing the sign of the geometry induced resistance change Piezoresistive effect in bulk semiconductors Edit The piezoresistive effect of semiconductor materials can be several orders of magnitudes larger than the geometrical effect and is present in materials like germanium polycrystalline silicon amorphous silicon silicon carbide and single crystal silicon Hence semiconductor strain gauges with a very high coefficient of sensitivity can be built For precision measurements they are more difficult to handle than metal strain gauges because semiconductor strain gauges are generally sensitive to environmental conditions especially temperature For silicon gauge factors can be two orders of magnitudes larger than those observed in most metals Smith 1954 The resistance of n conducting silicon mainly changes due to a shift of the three different conducting valley pairs The shifting causes a redistribution of the carriers between valleys with different mobilities This results in varying mobilities dependent on the direction of current flow A minor effect is due to the effective mass change related to changing shapes of the valleys In p conducting silicon the phenomena are more complex and also result in mass changes and hole transfer Giant piezoresistance in metal silicon hybrid structures Edit A giant piezoresistive effect where the piezoresistive coefficient exceeds the bulk value was reported for a microfabricated silicon aluminium hybrid structure 3 The effect has been applied to silicon based sensor technologies 4 Giant piezoresistive effect in silicon nanostructures Edit The longitudinal piezoresistive coefficient of top down fabricated silicon nanowires was measured to be 60 larger than in bulk silicon 5 6 In 2006 giant piezoresistance 7 was reported in bottom up fabricated silicon nanowires a gt 30 increase in the longitudinal piezoresistive coefficient compared to bulk silicon was reported The suggestion of a giant piezoresistance in nanostructures has since stimulated much effort into a physical understanding of the effect not only in silicon 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 but also in other functional materials 15 Piezoresistive silicon devices EditThe piezoresistive effect of semiconductors has been used for sensor devices employing all kinds of semiconductor materials such as germanium polycrystalline silicon amorphous silicon and single crystal silicon Since silicon is today the material of choice for integrated digital and analog circuits the use of piezoresistive silicon devices has been of great interest It enables the easy integration of stress sensors with Bipolar and CMOS circuits This has enabled a wide range of products using the piezoresistive effect Many commercial devices such as pressure sensors and acceleration sensors employ the piezoresistive effect in silicon But due to its magnitude the piezoresistive effect in silicon has also attracted the attention of research and development for all other devices using single crystal silicon Semiconductor Hall sensors for example were capable of achieving their current precision only after employing methods which eliminate signal contributions due to applied mechanical stress Piezoresistors Edit Piezoresistors are resistors made from a piezoresistive material and are usually used for measurement of mechanical stress They are the simplest form of piezoresistive devices Fabrication Edit Piezoresistors can be fabricated using wide variety of piezoresistive materials The simplest form of piezoresistive silicon sensors are diffused resistors Piezoresistors consist of a simple two contact diffused n or p wells within a p or n substrate As the typical square resistances of these devices are in the range of several hundred ohms additional p or n plus diffusions are a potential method to facilitate ohmic contacts to the device Schematic cross section of the basic elements of a silicon n well piezoresistor Physics of operation Edit For typical stress values in the MPa range the stress dependent voltage drop along the resistor Vr can be considered to be linear A piezoresistor aligned with the x axis as shown in the figure may be described by V r R 0 I 1 p L s x x p T s y y s z z displaystyle V r R 0 I 1 pi L sigma xx pi T sigma yy sigma zz where R 0 displaystyle R 0 I p T displaystyle pi T p L displaystyle pi L and s i j displaystyle sigma ij denote the stress free resistance the applied current the transverse and longitudinal piezoresistive coefficients and the three tensile stress components respectively The piezoresistive coefficients vary significantly with the sensor orientation with respect to the crystallographic axes and with the doping profile Despite the fairly large stress sensitivity of simple resistors they are preferably used in more complex configurations eliminating certain cross sensitivities and drawbacks Piezoresistors have the disadvantage of being highly sensitive to temperature changes while featuring comparatively small relative stress dependent signal amplitude changes Other piezoresistive devices Edit In silicon the piezoresistive effect is used in piezoresistors transducers piezo FETS solid state accelerometers and bipolar transistors See also EditPiezoelectricity Electrical resistanceReferences Edit Barlian A A Park W T Mallon J R Rastegar A J Pruitt B L March 2009 Review Semiconductor Piezoresistance for Microsystems Proceedings of the IEEE 97 3 513 552 doi 10 1109 jproc 2009 2013612 ISSN 0018 9219 PMC 2829857 PMID 20198118 Liu Chang 2006 Piezoresistive Sensors PDF Foundations of MEMS Upper Saddle River NG Prentice Hall ISBN 0131472860 Retrieved March 3 2013 Rowe A C H Donoso Barrera A Renner Ch Arscott S April 8 2008 Giant Room Temperature Piezoresistance in a Metal Silicon Hybrid Structure Physical Review Letters 100 14 145501 arXiv 0803 0655 Bibcode 2008PhRvL 100n5501R doi 10 1103 physrevlett 100 145501 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 18518044 S2CID 42265969 Ngo H D Tekin T Vu T C Fritz M Kurniawan W Mukhopadhyay B Kolitsch A Schiffer M Lang K D 2011 MEMS sensor with giant piezoresistive effect using metall semiconductor hybrid structure 16th International Solid State Sensors Actuators and Microsystems Conference IEEE p 1018 1021 doi 10 1109 transducers 2011 5969160 Toriyama T Tanimoto Y Sugiyama S 2002 Single crystal silicon nano wire piezoresistors for mechanical sensors Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE 11 5 605 611 doi 10 1109 jmems 2002 802905 ISSN 1057 7157 Toriyama T Sugiyama S 2003 Single crystal silicon piezoresistive nano wire bridge Sensors and Actuators A Physical Elsevier BV 108 1 3 244 249 doi 10 1016 s0924 4247 03 00269 3 ISSN 0924 4247 He Rongrui Yang Peidong 2006 Giant piezoresistance effect in silicon nanowires Nature Nanotechnology Springer Science and Business Media LLC 1 1 42 46 Bibcode 2006NatNa 1 42H doi 10 1038 nnano 2006 53 ISSN 1748 3387 PMID 18654140 S2CID 17694712 Allain P November 8 2012 Etude des proprietes electro thermo mecaniques de nanofils en silicium pour leur integration dans les microsystemes Doctoral in French Universite Paris Sud Retrieved October 31 2021 Reck K Richter J Hansen O Thomsen E V 2008 Piezoresistive effect in top down fabricated silicon nanowires 2008 IEEE 21st International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems IEEE p 7 17 doi 10 1109 memsys 2008 4443757 ISSN 1084 6999 Yang Peidong 2008 Chemistry and physics of silicon nanowire Dalton Transactions Royal Society of Chemistry RSC 33 4387 4391 doi 10 1039 b801440j ISSN 1477 9226 PMID 18698439 Milne J S Rowe A C H Arscott S Renner Ch November 23 2010 Giant Piezoresistance Effects in Silicon Nanowires and Microwires Physical Review Letters 105 22 226802 arXiv 1010 1633 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 105v6802M doi 10 1103 physrevlett 105 226802 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 21231411 S2CID 12201580 Koumela A Mercier D Dupre C Jourdan G Marcoux C Ollier E Purcell S T Duraffourg L September 2 2011 Piezoresistance of top down suspended Si nanowires Nanotechnology IOP Publishing 22 39 395701 Bibcode 2011Nanot 22M5701K doi 10 1088 0957 4484 22 39 395701 ISSN 0957 4484 PMID 21891838 S2CID 24747354 Rowe A C H March 28 2014 Piezoresistance in silicon and its nanostructures Journal of Materials Research 29 6 731 744 arXiv 1309 6445 Bibcode 2014JMatR 29 731R doi 10 1557 jmr 2014 52 ISSN 0884 2914 S2CID 119238891 McClarty M M Jegenyes N Gaudet M Toccafondi C Ossikovski R Vaurette F Arscott S Rowe A C H July 11 2016 Geometric and chemical components of the giant piezoresistance in silicon nanowires Applied Physics Letters 109 2 023102 arXiv 1512 01396 Bibcode 2016ApPhL 109b3102M doi 10 1063 1 4955403 ISSN 0003 6951 S2CID 119189299 Ali Utku Emre Modi Gaurav Agarwal Ritesh Bhaskaran Harish March 18 2022 Real time nanomechanical property modulation as a framework for tunable NEMS Nature Communications 13 1 1464 Bibcode 2022NatCo 13 1464A doi 10 1038 s41467 022 29117 7 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 8933423 PMID 35304454 Kanda Yozo 1991 Piezoresistance effect of silicon Sensors and Actuators A Physical Elsevier BV 28 2 83 91 doi 10 1016 0924 4247 91 85017 i ISSN 0924 4247 S Middelhoek and S A Audet Silicon Sensors Delft The Netherlands Delft University Press 1994 A L Window Strain Gauge Technology 2nd ed London England Elsevier Applied Science 1992 Smith Charles S April 1 1954 Piezoresistance Effect in Germanium and Silicon Physical Review American Physical Society APS 94 1 42 49 Bibcode 1954PhRv 94 42S doi 10 1103 physrev 94 42 ISSN 0031 899X S M Sze Semiconductor Sensors New York Wiley 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piezoresistive effect amp oldid 1128870960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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