| Engineers have created a miniature hotplate that can reach  temperatures above 1100°C (2012°F), self-contained within a “laboratory” no  bigger than a child’s shoe. The micro-hotplates are only a few dozen microns across  (roughly the width of a human hair), yet are capable of serving as  substrates, heaters and conductors for thin-film experiments ranging from  material analyses to the development of advanced sensors. Researchers at Boston MicroSystems, Inc. craft the  hotplates out of silicon carbide, a robust material that can tolerate extreme  heat and reach peak temperature in less than one-thousandth of a second. Silicon carbide is not only stable at high temperatures,  it is also impervious to chemical attack from most materials. As a result,  the hotplates can be cleaned by merely burning debris off the surface. Contained on a microchip, the tiny “labs” reside within a  polycarbonate chamber that can endure near-vacuum pressures. Ports on the  chamber’s sides allow gases to pass through and feed experiments, and because  of the chamber’s transparency, researchers can observe experiments with a  microscope as they progress. The hotplates also contain an integrated temperature gauge  and a pair of electrodes. These components allow researchers to test the  electrical properties of various materials that may be deposited onto the  hotplates. Using the stable, thin-film deposition properties and  integrated circuitry of the hotplates, researchers are already developing  applications such as oxygen and engine emission sensors. The sensor may have  several advantages over devices in today’s combustion engines, due to the  micro-hotplate’s chemical stability, small size, rapid response and low power  consumption. The techniques necessary for crafting and optimising these  micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) were developed with support from the  National Science Foundation Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program  and SBIR programs at the Department of Energy, Environmental Protection  Agency, and NASA. Comments from the researchers: “High-temperature silicon carbide micro-hotplates are new  to the research community and may prove to be flexible tools for optics,  chemical vapour deposition chambers, micro-reactors and other applications.”  – Rick Mlcak, Boston MicroSystems. “The micro-hotplate arrays are versatile research  tools-the same basic system can adapt to handle such diverse experiments as  analyses of heat treatments and the characterization of new thin film  materials.” – Rick Mlcak, Boston MicroSystems. Comments from NSF: “The proposed oxygen sensor may find applications in the  characterisation of automobile emissions and the control of oxidation and  reduction reactions in ceramics and metallurgical processing.” – Winslow  Sargeant, the NSF SBIR program officer who oversees the Boston Microsystems  award. “The exceptionally small size and low power consumption of  the micro-hotplate oxygen sensors make them particularly suited for portable  instrumentation, monitoring of hazardous environments, sensing of respiration  and biological processes, control of oxygen-sensitive industrial processes,  and the packaging and monitoring of food.” – Winslow Sargeant. |