Skip to content
Bits&Chips
×
×
Memberships
Advertising
Magazines
Videos
Contact

Log in

Background

“MEMS-based miniaturization enables low-cost, distributed sensing at scale”

15 January 2026
Marleen Dolman
Reading time: 3 minutes

As devices become smaller, smarter and more complex, sensor technology increasingly determines system performance and reliability. MEMS play an important but often underestimated role in this shift. For engineers, a solid insight into MEMS is essential for the design, integration and adaptation of future systems.

Micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) quietly power the devices we use every day, from smartphones to cars and medical systems. MEMS play an important role in applications where standard, off-the-shelf sensors are insufficient. Michael Kraft, professor at KU Leuven, points to medical applications such as piezoelectric micromachined ultrasound transducers (PMUTs), which replace bulky, high-voltage ultrasound transducers with MEMS-based arrays of microscopic piezoelectric membranes. This approach potentially enables handheld ultrasound devices.

Kraft also highlights neural technologies, including implantable electrode arrays designed to interface with the brain: “There are currently clinical trials ongoing aimed at stimulating the visual cortex in blind people. I wouldn’t say vision can be fully restored for these patients, but thanks to MEMS, they can be given a perception of vision again.”

Trained as an electrical engineer, Kraft has worked at leading universities, including those of Southampton and Liege in Europe and Berkeley in the US. He’s been active in MEMS since the late 1990s. In Leuven, he currently leads micro- and nanosystems research, runs the university cleanroom and works hands-on with teams developing and fabricating MEMS devices in close collaboration with industrial partners.

Tailored training

“A MEMS sensor is essentially a transducer,” Kraft explains. “It converts a physical input into an electrical signal. While the underlying physics can be complex, the basic principle is often surprisingly intuitive.”

For example, inside the sensor of a MEMS-based accelerometer, a tiny mass is suspended by microscopic springs within a silicon structure. When the device accelerates, the mass moves slightly. This changes the electrical property between electrodes. The resulting electrical signal is then processed by an IC. Although the movement involved may be only a few picometers, smaller than a single atom, the effect is measurable and repeatable. This is what allows a smartphone to detect orientation changes or a vehicle to sense rapid deceleration in an airbag system.

Importantly, the visible chip is only part of the system. A complete MEMS device integrates the mechanical sensor element, electronic readout circuitry (ASIC), electrical interconnects and protective packaging. Together, these form a miniature system that bridges the physical and digital worlds.

The tiny scale that makes MEMS so powerful also makes them difficult to design. A pressure sensor membrane may deflect only a few picometers in response to a meaningful signal. With technology this small, tiny variations in geometry, material properties or manufacturing processes can significantly affect performance.

Kraft offers a three-day introductory course on MEMS through High Tech Institute. This training covers the general aspects of the technology before moving into transduction principles for physical sensors. “Think accelerometers, gyroscopes, pressure sensors, resonant type sensors.” According to Kraft, the course is great for people who are just getting into MEMS or are looking for a refresher of the fundamentals.

Alongside this foundation, a second training for more experienced participants is available on request. This course is tailored to the maturity and interests of the participants and can focus on selected topics, including but not limited to piezoelectric devices, inertial sensors, resonant sensing, state-of-the-art technology and emerging design approaches.

MEMS innovation

Looking ahead, Kraft sees strong growth, driven by data-intensive technologies such as AI and robotics, where small, low-power, scalable sensors are essential. “Sensors detect unbiased, real-world data. MEMS devices are well-suited for this purpose because they’re small, low-power and scalable.”

Another emerging domain identified by Kraft is infrasound, which refers to sound waves well below 20 hertz. Here, the applications range from early warning systems for earthquakes and volcanoes to security monitoring. Today’s infrasound sensors are bulky and expensive, but MEMS-based miniaturization could enable low-cost, distributed sensing at scale.

“Maintaining Europe’s strong position in MEMS,” Kraft argues, “requires continued investment and training.” His courses at High Tech Institute, sitting at the forefront of the current MEMS technology, help engineers and companies build the knowledge needed to translate emerging ideas into practical, competitive sensor solutions while strengthening Europe’s long-term expertise in the field.

Related content

High-tech connectors join forces for a stronger software community

Mark Sidler boards and leads Topic

Top jobs
Your vacancy here?
View the possibilities
in the media kit
Events
Courses
Headlines
  • ASML’s high-NA EUV tech shifts from R&D to production qualification phase

    27 February 2026
  • Liquid crystal smart glass factory in Veldhoven put up for auction

    26 February 2026
  • Axelera AI raises over $250M on global commercial growth

    25 February 2026
  • Imec boosts metal-oxide resist performance

    25 February 2026
  • ARCNL receives ERC support for optical metrology past the diffraction limit

    25 February 2026
  • ASML hits 1,000 W in EUV source proof of concept

    24 February 2026
  • Curriculum reform cuts pre-university physics hours

    24 February 2026
  • Capital gains tax stirs unrest among startups

    23 February 2026
  • Microalign lands €2.5M EIC grant to scale quantum-grade fiber arrays

    19 February 2026
  • Photon Bridge passes key milestone for co-packaged optics’ light sources

    19 February 2026
  • Besi projects optimism for 2026

    19 February 2026
  • Nexperia receives $60M loan to scale global chip capacity

    17 February 2026
  • Qutech unveils crossbar architecture to facilitate quantum chip testing

    16 February 2026
  • Quix teams up with Taiwanese detector firm Artilux

    16 February 2026
  • Another contender emerges to challenge ASML’s EUV source tech

    12 February 2026
  • Europractice wins EU funding through 2028

    12 February 2026
  • Applied Materials fined $252M for ignoring export curbs

    12 February 2026
  • Mark Sidler boards and leads Topic

    12 February 2026
  • Court orders probe into governance at Nexperia

    11 February 2026
  • China presses Netherlands to drop Nexperia court case

    10 February 2026
Bits&Chips logo

Bits&Chips strengthens the high tech ecosystem in the Netherlands and Belgium and makes it healthier by supplying independent knowledge and information.

Bits&Chips focuses on news and trends in embedded systems, electronics, mechatronics and semiconductors. Our coverage revolves around the influence of technology.

Advertising
Subscribe
Events
Contact
High-Tech Systems Magazine (Dutch)
(c) Techwatch bv. All rights reserved. Techwatch reserves the rights to all information on this website (texts, images, videos, sounds), unless otherwise stated.
  • Memberships
  • Advertising
  • Videos
  • Contact
  • Search
Privacy settings

Bits&Chips uses technologies such as functional and analytical cookies to improve the user experience of the website. By consenting to the use of these technologies, we may capture (personal) data, unique identifiers, device and browser data, IP addresses, location data and browsing behavior. Want to know more about how we use your data? Please read our privacy statement.

 

Give permission or set your own preferences

Functional Always active
Functional cookies are necessary for the website to function properly. It is therefore not possible to reject or disable them.
Voorkeuren
De technische opslag of toegang is noodzakelijk voor het legitieme doel voorkeuren op te slaan die niet door de abonnee of gebruiker zijn aangevraagd.
Statistics
Analytical cookies are used to store statistical data. This data is stored and analyzed anonymously to map the use of the website. De technische opslag of toegang die uitsluitend wordt gebruikt voor anonieme statistische doeleinden. Zonder dagvaarding, vrijwillige naleving door je Internet Service Provider, of aanvullende gegevens van een derde partij, kan informatie die alleen voor dit doel wordt opgeslagen of opgehaald gewoonlijk niet worden gebruikt om je te identificeren.
Marketing
Technical storage or access is necessary to create user profiles for sending advertising or to track the user on a site or across sites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}

Your cart (items: 0)

Products in cart

Product Details Total
Subtotal €0.00
Taxes and discounts calculated at checkout.
View my cart
Go to checkout

Your cart is currently empty!

Start shopping

Notifications