Title
Sensitivity Enhancement of Silicon-on-Insulator CMOS MEMS Thermal Hot-Film Flow Sensors by Minimizing Membrane Conductive Heat Losses.
Abstract
Minimizing conductive heat losses in Micro-Electro-Mechanical-Systems (MEMS) thermal (hot-film) flow sensors is the key to minimize the sensors' power consumption and maximize their sensitivity. Through a comprehensive review of literature on MEMS thermal (calorimetric, time of flight, hot-film/hot-film) flow sensors published during the last two decades, we establish that for curtailing conductive heat losses in the sensors, researchers have either used low thermal conductivity substrate materials or, as a more effective solution, created low thermal conductivity membranes under the heaters/hot-films. However, no systematic experimental study exists that investigates the effect of membrane shape, membrane size, heater/hot-film length and <mml:semantics>Membrane</mml:semantics> (size) to <mml:semantics>Heater</mml:semantics> (hot-film length) Ratio (MHR) on sensors' conductive heat losses. Therefore, in this paper we have provided experimental evidence of dependence of conductive heat losses in membrane based MEMS hot-film flow sensors on MHR by using eight MEMS hot-film flow sensors, fabricated in a 1 mu m silicon-on-insulator (SOI) CMOS foundry, that are thermally isolated by square and circular membranes. Experimental results demonstrate that: (a) thermal resistance of both square and circular membrane hot-film sensors increases with increasing MHR, and (b) conduction losses in square membrane based hot-film flow sensors are lower than the sensors having circular membrane. The difference (or gain) in thermal resistance of square membrane hot-film flow sensors viz-a-viz the sensors on circular membrane, however, decreases with increasing MHR. At MHR = 2, this difference is 5.2%, which reduces to 3.0% and 2.6% at MHR = 3 and MHR = 4, respectively. The study establishes that for membrane based SOI CMOS MEMS hot-film sensors, the optimum MHR is 3.35 for square membranes and 3.30 for circular membranes, beyond which the gain in sensors' thermal efficiency (thermal resistance) is not economical due to the associated sharp increase in the sensors' (membrane) size, which makes sensors more expensive as well as fragile. This paper hence, provides a key guideline to MEMS researchers for designing the square and circular membranes-supported micro-machined thermal (hot-film) flow sensors that are thermally most-efficient, mechanically robust and economically viable.
Year
DOI
Venue
2019
10.3390/s19081860
SENSORS
Keywords
Field
DocType
MEMS thermal flow sensors,review,conduction losses,heater,hot-film,membrane shape,membrane to heater ratio,silicon-on-insulator (SOI),complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)
Analytical chemistry,Microelectromechanical systems,Thermal efficiency,Electrical conductor,CMOS,Membrane,Engineering,Thermal conduction,Optoelectronics,Thermal resistance,Thermal conductivity
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
19
8
1424-8220
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.39
0
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Zahid Mehmood110.39
Ibraheem Haneef210.39
Syed Zeeshan Ali321.75
F. Udrea466.19