Microsystem Design
By: Senturia, Stephen D.
Material type: BookPublisher: New Delhi Springer (India) Pvt. Ltd. 2015Description: 689.ISBN: 978-81-8128-546-1.Subject(s): ElectronicsDDC classification: 621.381Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | BSDU Knowledge Resource Center, Jaipur | Reference | 621.381 SEN (Browse shelf) | Not For Loan | 017643 |
It is a real pleasure to write the Foreword for this book, both because I have known and respected its author for many years and because I expect this book’s publication will mark an important milestone in the continuing worldwide development of microsystems. By bringing together all aspects of microsystem design, it can be expected to facilitate the training of not only a new generation of engineers, but perhaps a whole new type of engineer – one capable of addressing the complex range of problems involved in reducing entire systems to the micro- and nano-domains. This book breaks down disciplinary barriers to set the stage for systems we do not even dream of today. Microsystems have a long history, dating back to the earliest days of mic- electronics. While integrated circuits developed in the early 1960s, a number of laboratories worked to use the same technology base to form integrated sensors. The idea was to reduce cost and perhaps put the sensors and circuits together on the same chip. By the late-60s, integrated MOS-photodiode arrays had been developed for visible imaging, and silicon etching was being used to create thin diaphragms that could convert pressure into an electrical signal. By 1970, selective anisotropic etching was being used for diaphragm formation, retaining a thick silicon rim to absorb package-induced stresses. Impurity- and electrochemically-based etch-stops soon emerged, and "bulk micromachining" came into its own.
Contents:
Part I Getting Started
Introduction
An Approach to MEMS Design
Microfabrication
Process Integration
Part II Modeling Strategies
Lumped Modeling
Energy-Conserving Trasducers
Dynamics
Part III Domain-Specific Details
Elasticity
Structures
Energy Methods
Dissipation and the Thermal Energy Domain
Lumped Modeling of Dissipative Processes
Fluids
Circuit and System Issues
Feedback Systems
Case Studies
A Piezoresistive Pressure Sensor
A Capacity Accelerometer
A Piezoelectric Rate Gyroscope
DNA Amplification
A Microbridge Gas Sensor
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