2019
DOI: 10.1063/1.5096540
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Hydrogel-mediated semiconductor wafer bonding

Abstract: The concept of hydrogel-mediated semiconductor wafer bonding was proposed and demonstrated in this work. The unique property of hydrogels was utilized to simultaneously realize high mechanical stability, electrical conductivity, and optical transparency in semiconductor interfaces. The high applicability of this method for rough surfaces to be bonded was also demonstrated, owing to the soft, deformable interfacial contact agent to be solidified in the bonding process. Furthermore, the bonding experiments were … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The detachment normal stress of the bonded interface was measured as 43 kPa. The employment of the hydrogel PAM enables bond formation at room temperature [35]. The hydrogen bonds stemming from PAM may cause the adhesion to the semiconductor surfaces [45,46].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The detachment normal stress of the bonded interface was measured as 43 kPa. The employment of the hydrogel PAM enables bond formation at room temperature [35]. The hydrogen bonds stemming from PAM may cause the adhesion to the semiconductor surfaces [45,46].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, wafer bonding is a promising scheme for high-performance semiconductor optoelectronics, and has been employed in the fabrication of a variety of devices such as light-emitting diodes [1,2,4,5,24], lasers [7,8,[25][26][27], photodetectors [28,29], and solar cells [25,[30][31][32][33][34]. Hydrogel-mediated semiconductor wafer bonding is an emerging technique for heterogeneous materials integration, simultaneously forming interfaces with high mechanical stability, electrical conductivity, optical transparency, and surface-roughness tolerance [35]. This hydrogel-mediated bonding technique has been applied to introduce wavelength-converting materials [36] and graphene quantum dots [37] into semiconductor interfaces, towards the realization of ultrahigh-performance optoelectronic devices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Figure 6 shows the dependence of the interfacial mechanical bonding strength and electrical resistivity on the PAM concentration for the samples with HF surface pretreatment bonded at room temperature. It is noted that the employment of hydrogel can enable mechanically stable bond formation at room temperature [40][41][42], which was conversely difficult in the case of the bonding approach (1). The hydrogen bonds stemming from PAM presumably causes adhesion to semiconductor surfaces [43,44].…”
Section: Bonding Via Embedding Gqds In Hydrogelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, the PAM matrix holds the GQDs and suppresses their sedimentation owing to its viscosity induced by the entanglement of PAM polymer chains. Other hydrogel materials, such as agarose and polyvinyl alcohol, may also be used as bonding agents [42]. The interfacial bonding mechanical strength was observed to gradually decrease when the PAM concentration increases, which is potentially attributed to the spatial non-uniformity of the PAM at the bonded interface due to the increased viscosity of the PAM solution, as shown in Figure 6.…”
Section: Bonding Via Embedding Gqds In Hydrogelmentioning
confidence: 99%