Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 February 2011
Polycrystalline silicon is the most widely used structural material for surface micromachined microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). There are many advantages to using thick polysilicon films; however, due to process equipment limitations, these devices are typically fabricated from polysilicon films less than 3 μm thick. In this work, microelectromechanical test structures were designed and processed from thick (up to 10 μm) in situ boron-doped polysilicon films. The elastic modulus of these films was about 150 GPa, independent of film thickness. The thermal oxidation of the polysilicon induced a compressive stress into the top surface of the films, which was detected as a residual stress in the polysilicon after the device fabrication was complete.