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Publication
Featured researches published by Steve Simon.
Bell Labs Technical Journal | 2005
Victor A. Lifton; Steve Simon; Robert E. Frahm
This letter presents the details of a novel battery architecture based on superhydrophobic nanostructured materials. Both electrodes of a battery are formed on nanostructured silicon surfaces that are subsequently treated to make them superhydrophobic, effectively separating the liquid electrolyte from the active electrode materials. When the battery is activated to provide power, a phenomenon called electrowetting promotes electrolyte penetration into the electrode space to initiate an electrochemical reaction. This architecture makes possible an extremely long shelf life, instantaneous ramp-up to full power, and chemistry-independent functionality.
Rapid Prototyping Journal | 2014
Victor A. Lifton; Gregory Lifton; Steve Simon
Purpose – This study aims to investigate the options for additive rapid prototyping methods in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology. Additive rapid prototyping technologies, such as stereolithography (SLA), fused deposition modeling (FDM) and selective laser sintering (SLS), all commonly known as three-dimensional (3D) printing methods, are reviewed and compared with the resolution requirements of the traditional MEMS fabrication methods. Design/methodology/approach – In the 3D print approach, the entire assembly, parts and prototypes are built using various plastic and metal materials directly from the software file input, completely bypassing any additional processing steps. The review highlights their potential place in the overall process flow to reduce the complexity of traditional microfabrication and long processing cycles needed to test multiple prototypes before the final design is set. Findings – Additive manufacturing (AM) is a promising manufacturing technique in micro-device techn...
IEEE\/ASME Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems | 2011
Victor A. Lifton; Steve Simon
Mechanically robust superhydrophobic Si-based membranes are described. The membranes are prepared using microelectromechanical-systems-type processing and implement “nanonail” design features that enable superlyophobic (also called omniphobic, superolephobic) behavior. A variety of low- and high-surface-tension liquids are repelled by such porous membranes without liquid penetrating into the pores of the membrane. Electrowetting transitions have been successfully implemented as a way to demonstrate electrically triggered and tunable permeability of the structures. Long-term stability of the hydrophobic coatings based on fluoropolymers has been evaluated using contact angle measurements. Among those, Teflon-based coatings tend to show the best survivability in aqueous and organic electrolytes for periods longer than 200 days of continuous exposure at room temperature and at 60 °C. Such robust membranes are currently used in reserve microbattery technology and microfluidic devices and, potentially, could enable other applications involving fluid separation, fuel cells, and filtration.
IEEE\/ASME Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems | 2012
Victor A. Lifton; Steve Simon; Johan Holmqvist; Thorbjörn Ebefors; David Jansson; Niklas Svedin
Design and fabrication of microfluidic energy storage devices that are based on the control of the liquid electrolyte inside a power cell are presented. A 12-cell array of individually addressable reserve microbatteries has been built and tested, yielding ~ 10-mAh capacity per each cell in the array. Lithium and manganese dioxide or carbon monofluoride (Li/MnO2 and Li/CFx) have been used as anode and cathode in the battery with LiClO4 -based electrolyte. Inherent power management capabilities allow for sequential single cell activation based on the external electronic trigger. The design is based on the superlyophobic porous membrane that keeps liquid electrolyte away from the solid electrode materials. When power is needed, battery activation (a single cell or several cells at once) is accomplished via electrowetting trigger that promotes electrolyte permeation through the porous membrane and wetting of the electrode stack, which combines the chemistry together to release stored electrochemical energy. The membrane and associated package elements are prepared using microelectromechanical system fabrication methods that are described in details along with the assembly methods.
Archive | 2017
Ronald Durando; Fred Allen; Steve Simon; Necdet Ergul
Archive | 2009
Steve Simon; Victor A. Lifton
Journal of Porous Materials | 2011
Victor A. Lifton; Steve Simon
Archive | 2007
Steve Simon; Victor A. Lifton; Nathalie Pereira; Glenn Amatucci
Archive | 2009
Fred Allen; Steve Simon; Victor A. Lifton; Ronald Durando
Archive | 2007
Steve Simon; Victor A. Lifton