A thermal microprobe fabricated with wafer-stage processing
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1998
Abstract
A thermal microprobe has been designed and built for high resolution temperature sensing. The thermal sensor is a thin-film thermocouple junction at the tip of an atomic force microprobe (AFM) silicon probe needle. Only wafer-stage processing steps are used for the fabrication. For high resolution temperature sensing it is essential that the junction be confined to a short distance at the AFM tip. This confinement is achieved by a controlled photoresist coating process. Experiment prototypes have been made with an Au/Pd junction confined to within 0.5 μm of the tip, with the two metals separated elsewhere by a thin insulating oxide layer. Processing begins with double-polished, n-type, 4 in. diameter, 300-μm-thick silicon wafers. Atomically sharp probe tips are formed by a combination of dry and wet chemical etching, and oxidation sharpening. The metal layers are sputtering deposited and the cantilevers are released by a combination of KOH and dry etching. A resistively heated calibration device was made for temperature calibration of the thermal microprobe over the temperature range 25-110°C. Over this range the thermal outputs of two microprobes are 4.5 and 5.6 μV/K and is linear. Thermal and topographical images are also obtained from a heated tungsten thin film fuse. © 1998 American Institute of Physics.
Identifier
0008447209 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Review of Scientific Instruments
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1148902
ISSN
00346748
First Page
2081
Last Page
2084
Issue
5
Volume
69
Recommended Citation
Zhang, Yongxia; Zhang, Yanwei; Blaser, Juliana; Sriram, T. S.; Enver, Ahsan; and Marcus, R. B., "A thermal microprobe fabricated with wafer-stage processing" (1998). Faculty Publications. 16570.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/16570
