New Wafer-Level Fabrication of Ultrathin Silicon Insertion Shuttles for Flexible Neural Implants
Paper in proceeding, 2023

This paper reports a novel, cost-effective process for the fabrication of ultrathin silicon (Si) shuttles applied as insertion tools for highly flexible polyimide (PI) neural implants. The process exploits the so-called etching before grinding (EBG) process established to realize Si-based neural probes of the Michigan style. In this study, EBG is combined for the first time with a subsequent deep reactive ion etch (DRIE) process applied on the wafer-level. The innovative approach allows to realize insertion shuttles with a base thickness > 50 μm using wafer grinding and to reliably thin down the slender shuttle shanks (width ≥ 35 μm) to thicknesses as small as 15 μm using DRIE. The backgrinding liquid wax applied during wafer grinding enables the safe release of the delicate shuttle structures from their carrier wafer using isopropanol. Flexible, 15-μm-thin neural probes made from PI are precisely aligned and temporarily bonded to the custom-designed insertion shuttles applying polyethylene glycol (PEG) and reliably deployed into cortical tissue.

grinding

polyimide probes

ultrathin chips

Silicon thinning

self-alignment

ultrathin probes

silicon shuttles

backgrinding liquid wax

Author

Kirti Sharma

University of Freiburg

Christian Boehler

University of Freiburg

Maria Asplund

University of Freiburg

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Electronics Material and Systems

Oliver Paul

University of Freiburg

Patrick Ruther

University of Freiburg

Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS)

10846999 (ISSN)

Vol. 2023-January 421-424
9781665493086 (ISBN)

36th IEEE International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems, MEMS 2023
Munich, Germany,

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Other Mechanical Engineering

Reliability and Maintenance

DOI

10.1109/MEMS49605.2023.10052581

More information

Latest update

3/27/2023