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TINY TOOLS CARVE GLASS
02 November 2004 - Pennsylvania State University
| Tools so tiny that they are difficult to see, are solving the problems of carving patterns in glass, ceramics and other brittle materials. |
Tools so tiny that they are difficult to see, are solving the problems of carving patterns in glass, ceramics and other brittle materials, according to a Penn State engineer. 'Even very brittle materials like glass will cut smoothly at a micron level,' says Dr. Eric R. Marsh, associate professor of mechanical engineering. 'The tools we are making are small enough so that the brittle materials behave like a malleable material like aluminium, producing smooth curly chips of glass or ceramic.' Normally, brittle materials come apart in large uncontrolled chunks or they simply fracture completely. The researchers are trying to control the machining process so that well-defined, accurate, microscopic patterns can be created in brittle materials. Demands for smaller channels in glass for micro fluids, dimples to create tiny chemical reservoirs and MEMs – microelectromechanical systems, fuel the need to find quick, inexpensive ways to create these tiny devices. Marsh; Chris J. Morgan, graduate student at University of Kentucky, and R. Ryan Vallance, assistant professor, George Washington University, begin with polycrystalline diamond on Carborundum -- a commercially available product -- to create miniature drills and end mills using microelectro discharge machining. EDM removes parts of the millimetre diamond surface by sputtering them off to fashion the tool. They use this non-contact method because the tools are tiny and fragile. The Carborundum base becomes the shaft of the drill or mill end. The researchers describe how the tools are created and used in an online edition of the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, available in hard copy from 10 December 2004. The engineers take advantage of the uneven surface created by diamond removal at the microscopic level and use the rough surface for cutting. The tools spin exceptionally fast to remove material to create dimples or channels. The fast spinning, however, does not mean that the carving takes place rapidly. The tools are so small and so fragile that only very slight pressure, about as much as a paperclip exerts, sculpts the surface. It can take as long as an hour to produce one dimple a half millimeter in diameter. Slow as that may be, the process would be faster than the current process which employs photolithography. Tiny tools can be designed and manufactured in less than a day and used to create the desired surface immediately. Photolithography requires many more steps and much longer lead-time. While photolithography is typically only used on silicon chips or wafers, the tiny tools will work on glass, emeralds, sapphires, ceramics of all kinds and calcium fluorite. There are applications in optics, DNA analysis and biocomputers on a chip. Tiny tools can also create shapes that photolithography cannot. In photolithography, surface shapes have to be built up by layer after layer of material creating a stair-step surface. Tiny tools grind and shape smooth surfaces although they cannot yet achieve the nano-size structures available with photolithography. 'This really is a way to get shapes that we cannot get any other way,' says Marsh. Currently, the researchers are using existing machines designed for larger equipment to operate the tools, but they hope to develop a tabletop appliance. Equipment donations from Professional Instruments and Lion Precision in Minnesota and Panasonic supported this work. The National Science Foundation funded this research.
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About: Pennsylvania State University
From agricultural college to world-class learning community - the story of the Pennsylvania State University is one of an expanding mission of teaching, research, and public service. But that mission was not so grandly conceived in 1855, when the Commonwealth chartered the school at the request of the Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society. The goal was to apply scientific principles to farming, a radical departure from the traditional curriculum grounded in mathematics, rhetoric, and classical languages. Penn State has continued to respond to Pennsylvania’s changing economic and social needs. In 1989 the Pennsylvania College of Technology in Williamsport became an affiliate of the University. In 1997, Penn State and the Dickinson School of Law joined ranks. And Penn State’s new World Campus, which "graduated" its first students in 2000, uses the Internet and other new technologies to offer instruction on an "anywhere, anytime" basis. To help meet the increasing demands placed on it, Penn State has looked to philanthropy for additional resources. President Bryce Jordan in 1984 launched a six-year effort that raised $352 million in private gifts to the University. This initiative enabled Penn State to attract world-class teachers and researchers, and assist thousands of financially needy and academically talented students. The Grand Destiny campaign (1996-2003) raised $1.37 billion, further strengthening academic programs and broadening the University's service to the Commonwealth and beyond. The Materials Research Institute is an administrative unit that coordinates, supports and performs materials research in association with more than 200 faculty in 15 different departments and 4 colleges. The MRI is established under the Office of the Vice President for Research and Dean of the Graduate School to promote integration of research, teaching and outreach in materials research, science and engineering with a University-wide, interdisciplinary perspective. The MRI has several sister organizations with similar missions including the Institute for Life Science and the Penn State Institutes of the Environment (PSIE). The mission of the MRI is to strategically position Penn State University - its students, research associates, faculty and corporate partners - to make important and significant advances in materials science, materials engineering, and their technological applications for communication, computers, energy, manufacturing, medicine and transportation. |
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For Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS)
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