21.12.2022 • NewsAdditive manufacturingRobotik

3D printing of customized sensors

New method can be used for prototyping MEMS devices and manufacturing small- and medium-sized batches.

A newly-developed 3D printing technique could be used to cost-effectively produce customized electronic machines the size of insects which enable advanced appli­cations in robotics, medical devices and others. The breakthrough could be a potential game-changer for manu­facturing customized chip-based microelectro­mechanical systems (MEMS). These mini-machines are mass-produced in large volumes for hundreds of electronic products, including smartphones and cars, where they provide posi­tioning accuracy. But for more specialized manu­facturing of sensors in smaller volumes, such as accelero­meters for aircraft and vibration sensors for industrial machinery, MEMS technologies demand costly customi­zation.

Robotics is one area where small volumes of advanced sensors can now be...
Robotics is one area where small volumes of advanced sensors can now be produced with 3D printing. (Source: D. Callahan)

Frank Niklaus, who led the research at KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, says the new 3D printing technique provides a way to get around the limitations of conventional MEMS manu­facturing. “The costs of manufacturing process development and device design optimizations do not scale down for lower production volumes,” he says. The result is engineers are faced with a choice of suboptimal off-the-shelf MEMS devices or economi­cally unviable start-up costs. Other low-volume products that could benefit from the technique include motion and vibration control units for robots and industrial tools, as well as wind turbines.

The researchers built on two-photon polymeri­zation, which can produce high resolution objects as small as few hundreds of nanometers in size, but not capable of sensing func­tionality. To form the transducing elements, the method uses shadow-masking, which works something like a stencil. On the 3D-printed structure they fabricate features with a T-shaped cross-section, which work like umbrellas. They then deposit metal from above, and as a result, the sides of the T-shaped features are not coated with the metal. This means the metal on the top of the T is electri­cally isolated from the rest of the structure. With this method, he says, it takes only few hours to manufacture a dozen or so custom designed MEMS accelero­meters using relatively inexpensive commercial manu­facturing tools.

The method can be used for proto­typing MEMS devices and manu­facturing small- and medium-sized batches of tens of thousands to a few thousand MEMS sensors per year in an economically viable way, he says. “This is something that has not been possible until now, because the start-up costs for manu­facturing a MEMS product using conventional semi­conductor techno­logy are on the order of hundreds of thousands of dollars and the lead times are several months or more,” he says. “The new capabilities offered by 3D-printed MEMS could result in a new paradigm in MEMS and sensor manu­facturing. “Scala­bility isn’t just an advantage in MEMS production, it’s a necessity. This method would enable fabri­cation of many kinds of new, customized devices.” (Source: KTH)

Reference: S. Pagliano et al.: Micro 3D printing of a functional MEMS accelerometer, Microsyst. Nanoeng. 8, 105 (2022); DOI: 10.1038/s41378-022-00440-9

Link: Division of Micro and Nanosystems, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

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