Nano Science and Technology Institute - NSTI  
Nano Science and Technology Institute   Home | Subscribe | Site Map  
  ABOUT | COURSES | EVENTS | PUBLICATIONS | LEADERSHIP | OUTREACH | NEWS | PRESS | JOBS | Nanotechnology Solutions
px
px fade_top
Publications
Nanotech 2008 CDROM
Nanotech 2007 CDROM
Nanotech 2006 CDROM
Nanotech 2005 CDROM
Nanotech 2004 CDROM
3 CDROM Special Offer
Nanotech 2008 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2008 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2008 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2007 Vol. 4
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2005 Vol. 3
WCM 2005
Nanotech 2004 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2004 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2004 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2003 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2003 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2003 Vol. 3
Nanotech 2002 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2002 Vol. 2
Nanotech 2001 Vol. 1
Nanotech 2001 Vol. 2
MSM 2000
MSM 99
MSM 98
Index of Authors
Index of Keywords
Index of Affiliations
Library Request Form
Shopping Cart
Order Form
 
Publications Publications
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 3
p
 
Technical Proceedings of the 2006 NSTI Nanotechnology Conference and Trade Show, Volume 3
Nanotech 2006 Vol. 3
Technical Proceedings of the 2006 NSTI Nanotechnology Conference and Trade Show, Volume 3
 
Chapter 4: Sensors & Systems
 

Silicon Carbide Micro/Nano Systems for Harsh Environment and Demanding Applications

Authors:M. Mehregany, X-A Fu and L. Chen
Affilation:Case Western Reserve Univesity, US
Pages:471 - 474
Keywords:Silicon Carbide, harsh environment, MEMS, NEMS
Abstract:Micro/nano systems enable the development of smart products and systems by augmenting the computational ability of microelectronics with the perception and control capabilities of sensors and actuators. Micro/nano systems are also known as micro- and nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS and NEMS), and have been commercialized in a wide range of applications including crash sensing, blood pressure measurement, optical projection, fluid flow control to name a few. Silicon, in single- and polycrystalline form, has traditionally been the platform semiconductor material underpinning the fabrication of the mechanical and electronic elements of micro/nano systems. However, the materials properties of silicon impose limitations on its use in harsh environment and demanding applications. Such applications involve operation in the presence of high temperatures, corrosive media, high shock loads, erosive flows, and/or high radiation, or involve performance requirements for the mechanical elements that are beyond silicon’s capabilities. Silicon carbide (SiC) is an alternative platform semiconductor material that enables such applications because of its wider bandgap and higher melting/sublimation temperature, elastic modulus, fracture toughness, hardness, chemical inertness, and thermal conductivity. This tutorial will highlight recent material, process, and device advances in the context of the effort to establish a SiC micro/nano systems technology. This technology enables sensing and actuation in propulsion, power generation, resource exploration, nuclear reactor instrumentation, deep space exploration, and communications to name a few.
ISBN:0-9767985-8-1
Pages:913
Hardcopy:$185.00
 
Order:Mail/Fax Form
Special:3 CD Set — 15% off with Free Shipping
Up
nanoPRwire™
nanoPRwire
News Headlines
nano World news
 
 
 
 
px
© Nano Science and Technology Institute     About NSTI | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact