Physics – Condensed Matter – Materials Science
Scientific paper
1998-12-14
Physics
Condensed Matter
Materials Science
10 pages, 10 figures, to be published in the proceedings of DTM '99; LaTeX with spie.sty, bibtex with spiebib.bst and psfig
Scientific paper
We present simulations of the dynamic and temperature dependent behavior of Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) by utilizing recently developed parallel codes which enable a coupling of length scales. The novel techniques used in this simulation accurately model the behavior of the mechanical components of MEMS down to the atomic scale. We study the vibrational behavior of one class of MEMS devices: micron-scale resonators made of silicon and quartz. The algorithmic and computational avenue applied here represents a significant departure from the usual finite element approach based on continuum elastic theory. The approach is to use an atomistic simulation in regions of significantly anharmonic forces and large surface area to volume ratios or where internal friction due to defects is anticipated. Peripheral regions of MEMS which are well-described by continuum elastic theory are simulated using finite elements for efficiency. Thus, in central regions of the device, the motion of millions of individual atoms is simulated, while the relatively large peripheral regions are modeled with finite elements. The two techniques run concurrently and mesh seamlessly, passing information back and forth. This coupling of length scales gives a natural domain decomposition, so that the code runs on multiprocessor workstations and supercomputers. We present novel simulations of the vibrational behavior of micron-scale silicon and quartz oscillators. Our results are contrasted with the predictions of continuum elastic theory as a function of size, and the failure of the continuum techniques is clear in the limit of small sizes. We also extract the Q value for the resonators and study the corresponding dissipative processes.
Broughton Jeremy Q.
Rudd Robert E.
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