1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to evacuated flat panel displays such as those of the field emission cathode and plasma types and, more particularly, to a process for forming load-bearing spacer structures for such a display, the spacer structures being used to prevent implosion of a transparent face plate toward a parallel spaced-apart back plate when the space between the face plate and the back plate is hermetically sealed at the edges of the display to form a chamber, and the pressure within the chamber is less than that of the ambient atmospheric pressure. The invention also applies to products made by such process.
2. State of the Art
For more than half a century, the cathode ray tube (CRT) has been the principal device for electronically displaying visual information. Although CRTs have been endowed during that period with remarkable display characteristics in the areas of color, brightness, contrast and resolution, they have remained relatively bulky and power hungry. The advent of portable computers has created intense demand for displays which are lightweight, compact, and power efficient. Although liquid crystal displays (LCDs) are now used for laptop computers, contrast is poor in comparison to CRTs, only a limited range of viewing angles is possible, and battery life is still measured in hours rather than days. Power consumption for laptop computers having a color LCD is even greater, and thus, operational times are shorter still, unless a heavier battery pack is incorporated into those laptop computers. In addition, color LCD screens tend to be far more costly than CRTs of equal screen size.
As a result of the drawbacks of liquid crystal display technology, field emission display technology has been receiving increasing attention. Flat panel displays utilizing such technology employ a matrix-addressable array of cold, pointed, field emission cathodes in combination with a luminescent phosphor screen.
Somewhat analogous to a cathode ray tube, individual field emission structures are sometimes referred to as vacuum microelectronic triodes. Each triode has the following elements: a cathode (emitter tip), a grid (also referred to as the gate), and an anode (typically, the phosphor-coated element to which emitted electrons are directed).
Although the phenomenon of field emission was discovered in the 1950's, it has been within approximately the last ten years that extensive research and development have been directed at commercializing the technology. As of this date, low-power, high-resolution, high-contrast, monochrome flat panel displays with a diagonal measurement of about 15 centimeters have been manufactured using field emission cathode array technology. Although useful for such applications as viewfinder displays in video cameras, their small size makes them unsuited for use as computer display screens.
In order for proper display operation which requires field emission of electrons from the cathodes and acceleration of those electrons to the phosphor-coated screen, an operational voltage differential between the cathode array and the screen of at least 1,000 volts is required. As the voltage differential increases, so does the life of the phosphor coating on the screen. Phosphor coatings on screens degrade as they are bombarded by electrons. The rate of degradation is proportional to the rate of impact. As fewer electron impacts are required to achieve a given intensity level at higher voltage differentials, phosphor life may be extended by increasing the operational voltage differential. In order to prevent shorting between the cathode array and screen, as well as to achieve distortion-free image resolution and uniform brightness over the entire expanse of the screen, highly uniform spacing between the cathode array and the screen must be maintained. During tests performed at Micron Display Technology, Inc. in Boise, Id., it was determined that, for a particular evacuated flat panel field emission display utilizing glass spacer columns to maintain a separation of 250 microns (about 0.010 inches), electrical breakdown occurred within a range of 1100–1400 volts. All other parameters remaining constant, breakdown voltage will rise as the separation between screen and cathode array is increased. However, maintaining uniform separation between the screen and the cathode array is complicated by the need to evacuate the cavity between the screen and the cathode array to a pressure of less than 10−6 torr, so that the field emission cathodes will not experience rapid deterioration.
Small area displays (e.g., those which have a diagonal measurement of less than 3.0 cm) may be cantilevered from edge to edge, relying on the strength of a glass screen having a thickness of about 1.25 mm to maintain separation between the screen and the cathode array. Because the displays are small, there is no significant screen deflection in spite of the atmospheric load. However, as display size is increased, the thickness of a cantilevered flat glass screen must increase exponentially. For example, a large, rectangular television screen measuring 45.72 cm (18 in.) by 60.96 cm (24 in.) and having a diagonal measurement of 76.2 cm (30 in.) must support an atmospheric load of at least 28,149 newtons (6,350 lbs.) without significant deflection. A glass screen or face plate (as it is also called) having a thickness of at least 7.5 cm (about 3 inches), might well be required for such an application. But that is only half the problem. The cathode array structure must also withstand a like force without significant deflection. Although it is conceivable that a lighter screen could be manufactured so that it would have a slight curvature when not under stress and be completely flat when subjected to a pressure differential, the fact that, atmospheric pressure varies with altitude and as atmospheric conditions change, makes such a solution impractical.
A more satisfactory solution to cantilevered screens and cantilevered cathode array structures is the use of closely spaced, load-bearing, dielectric spacer structures, each of which bears against both the screen and the cathode array plate, thus maintaining the two plates at a uniform distance between one another, in spite of the pressure differential between the evacuated chamber between the plates and the outside atmosphere. By using load-bearing spacers, large area displays might be manufactured with little or no increase in the thickness of the cathode array plate and the screen plate.
Load-bearing spacer structures for field emission displays must conform to certain parameters. The spacer structures must be sufficiently nonconductive to prevent catastrophic electrical breakdown between the cathode array and the anode (i.e., the screen). In addition to having sufficient mechanical strength to prevent the flat panel display from imploding under atmospheric pressure, they must also exhibit a high degree of dimensional stability under pressure. Furthermore, they must exhibit stability under electron bombardment, as electrons will be generated at each pixel location within the array. In addition, they must be capable of withstanding “bakeout” temperatures of about 400° C. that are likely to be used to create the high vacuum between the screen and the cathode array back plate of the display during the manufacture of the display. Also, the material from which the spacers are made must not have volatile components which will sublimate or otherwise outgas under low pressure conditions present in the display.
For optimum screen resolution, the spacer structures must be carefully aligned or nearly perfectly aligned to array topography and must be of sufficiently small cross-sectional area so as not to be visible. Cylindrical spacers typically must have diameters no greater than about 50 microns (about 0.002 inch) if they are not to be readily visible. For a single cylindrical lead oxide silicate glass column having a diameter of 25 microns (0.001 in.) and a height of 200 microns (0.008 in.), a buckle load of about 2.67×10−2 newtons (0.006 lb.) has been measured. Buckle loads, of course, will decrease as height of the cylindrical spacer is increased with no corresponding increase in diameter. It is also of note that a cylindrical spacer having a diameter d will have a buckle load that is only about 18 percent greater than that of a spacer of square cross-section and a diameter d, although the cylindrical spacer has a cross-sectional area about 57 percent greater than the spacer of square cross-section. If lead oxide silicate glass cylindrical column spacers having a diameter of 25 microns and a height of 200 microns are to be used in the 76.2 cm diagonal display described above, slightly more than one million spacers will be required to support the atmospheric load. To provide an adequate safety margin that will tolerate foreseeable shock loads, that number would probably have to be doubled.
There are a number of drawbacks associated with certain types of spacer structures which have been proposed for use in field emission cathode array type displays. Spacer structures formed by screen or stencil printing techniques, as well as those formed from glass balls, lack a sufficiently high aspect ratio. In other words, spacer structures formed by these techniques must either be so thick that they interfere with display resolution or so short that they provide inadequate panel separation for the applied voltage differential. It is impractical to form spacer structures by masking and etching deposited dielectric layers in a reactive-ion or plasma environment, as etch depths on the order of 0.250 to 0.625 mm would not only greatly hamper manufacturing throughput, but would result in tapered structures (the result of mask degradation during the etch). Likewise, spacer structures formed from lithographically defined photoactive organic compounds are totally unsuitable for the application, as they tend to deform under pressure and to volatize under both high-temperature and low-pressure conditions. The presence of volatized substances within the evacuated portion of the display will shorten the life and degrade the performance of the display. Techniques which adhere stick-shaped spacers to a matrix of adhesive dots deposited at appropriate locations on the cathode array back plate are typically unable to achieve sufficiently accurate alignment to prevent display resolution degradation, and any misaligned stick which is adhered to only the periphery of an adhesive dot may later become detached from the dot and fall on top of a group of nearby cathode emitters, thus blocking their emitted electrons. In addition, if an organic epoxy adhesive is utilized for the dots, the epoxy may volatize over time, leading to the problems heretofore described. For spacers formed in a mold, the need to extract the spacers from the mold requires either tapered spacers or a selectively etchable mold release compound. If the spacers are tapered, maximum spacer height is limited by the conflicting goals of maintaining compression strength (a function of the spacer's cross-sectional area at the thinnest, weakest portion) while maintaining near invisibility (a function of the spacer's cross-sectional area at the thickest, strongest portion). The use of mold release compounds, on the other hand, may greatly increase production processing times.
The present invention employs certain elements of a process disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,486,126 (“the '126 Patent”). The '126 Patent, which is hereby incorporated in this document by reference, teaches the fabrication of an evacuated flat panel display from specially formed spacer slices. Each spacer slice may be characterized as a matrix which includes permanent, bondable glass fiber strands imbedded in a filler material that is selectively etchable with respect to the permanent glass fiber strands. The spacer slices are fabricated by forming a fiber strand bundle having an ordered arrangement of permanent glass fiber strands and filler material strands. The bundle, or a closely packed array of multiple bundles, is sawed into laminar slices and polished to have a final thickness corresponding to a desired space height. Multiple spacer slices are positioned on either a display base plate or a display face plate (for a field emission display, the face plate is a transparent laminar plate that will be coated with phosphor dots or rectangles; the base plate incorporates the field emitters, as well as the circuitry required to activate the field emitters), to which adhesive dots have been applied at desired spacer locations thereon. Once the adhesive dots have set up, the filler material within the spacer slices is etched away. Any unbonded permanent spacer columns are also washed away in the etch process. An array of permanent spacer columns remains on the base plate or face plate. The other opposing display plate is then positioned on top of the display plate to which the spacers have been affixed, the cavity between the face plate and the base plate is evacuated, and the edges of the face plate and base plate are sealed so as to hermetically seal the cavity.
In contrast to the prior art, a new method of manufacturing dielectric, load-bearing spacer structures for use in field emission cathode array type displays is needed. Ideally, the resulting spacer structures will resist deformation under pressure, have high aspect ratios, constant cross-sectional area throughout their lengths, near-perfect alignment on both the screen and backplate, and require no adhesives which may volatize under conditions of very low pressure.
The invention includes a process for anodically bonding silicate glass elements to larger assemblies in a flat panel video display. The invention is disclosed in the context of bonding an array of spacer columns to one of the inner major faces on one of the generally planar plates of a flat panel field emission video display. The process includes the steps of: providing a generally planar plate having a plurality of spacer column attachment sites; providing electrical interconnection between all attachment sites; coating each attachment site with a patch of oxidizable material; providing an array of unattached glass spacer columns, each unattached spacer column being of uniform length and being positioned longitudinally perpendicular to a single plane, with the plane intersecting the midpoint of each unattached spacer column; positioning the array such that an end of one spacer column is in contact with the oxidizable material patch at each attachment site; and anodically bonding the contacting end of each spacer column to the oxidizable material layer.
For a preferred embodiment of the process, the spacer column attachment sites are located on the inner major face of a transparent glass face plate. Electrical contact between all attachment sites is made by depositing a layer of a transparent, solid conductive material, such as indium tin oxide or tin oxide, on the entire surface of the inner major face. A silicon layer is deposited on top of the transparent conductive layer and patterned to form the oxidizable material patches. Additionally, a silicon layer is deposited on the glass spacer columns to form an oxidizable material to aid in the bonding of the glass spacer columns to the transparent conductive layer.
Additionally, for a preferred embodiment of the process, provision of the array of unattached glass spacer columns includes the steps of: preparing a tightly packed glass-fiber bundle which is a matrix of permanent glass fibers imbedded within filler glass which is selectively etchable with respect to the permanent glass fibers; sintering the glass-fiber bundle in order to fuse each glass fiber within the glass-fiber bundle to surrounding glass fibers; drawing the bundle in order to reduce the size of the permanent glass fibers and the surrounding filler glass; cutting the drawn bundles into shorter, intermediate bundles; tightly packing the intermediate bundles into a generally rectangular block; sintering the packed intermediate bundles into a rigid rectangular block; sawing the rigid blocks to form a uniformly thick laminar spacer slice having a pair of opposing major surfaces and with the permanent glass fiber sections embedded therein being longitudinally perpendicular to the major surfaces; and polishing both major surfaces of the laminar slice to a final thickness which corresponds to a desired spacer length. Additionally, a layer of silicon is deposited on the ends of the glass spacer columns of the fiber bundle to form an oxidizable material to aid in the bonding of the glass spacer columns to the transparent conductive layer on the transparent glass faceplate.
Also, for a preferred embodiment of the process, an anti-reflective layer is deposited on the glass face plate, followed by the deposition of an opaque, or nearly opaque, layer. The opaque layer, which may contain a material such as a colored transition metal oxide, is patterned to form a matrix which serves as a contrast mask during display operation. These deposition and patterning steps are performed prior to depositing the transparent conductive layer.
The invention also includes a flat panel display having spacer columns which are anodically bonded to an internal major face of the display, as well as a face plate assembly manufactured by the aforestated process.
It should be noted that, because of the great disparity in size between various features depicted in the same drawing, the following drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale; it is intended that they be merely illustrative of the process.
The present invention will be described in the context of a process for fabricating a face plate assembly, which includes a laminar face plate and an array of attached spacers, for an evacuated flat panel video display. The process of the present invention differs from that of the heretofore described '126 patent in at least several important respects. First, each of the spacers of the face plate assembly manufactured in accordance with the present invention is anodically bonded to the laminar face plate panel. Second, the fabrication of spacer slices has been extensively modified for use in the anodic bonding process, with glass material being utilized for both the spacers and the filler material. Third, an oxidizable material is used on either the laminar face plate or the ends of glass spacer columns forming the spacer slice, or both, to aid in bonding the glass spacer columns to the laminar face plate. The new process will be described with reference to a series of drawing figures in the following sequence: the preferred method of fabricating all-glass spacer slices; preparation of a face plate assembly for the anodic bonding operation; the actual process of anodically bonding the spacer slice to the prepared face plate assembly; and removal of the filler glass and unbonded spacers.
Preparation of the spacer slices requires a rather complex, multi-step process. For cylindrical spacer columns, a fiber strand bundle is prepared by hexagonally packing a large number of glass fiber strands of substantially identical diameter into a bundle of preferably hexagonal cross-sectional shape. With hexagonal packing, each glass fiber strand (except those at the peripheral surface of the bundle) is surrounded by six other glass fiber strands. Referring now to drawing
For spacer columns having a rectangular cross-section, preferably a square cross-section, the preferred embodiment fiber-strand bundles are produced by cubically packing permanent glass fiber strands within a matrix of filler glass fiber strands. With such an arrangement, both the permanent fiber strands and the filler fiber strands have identical square cross-sectional dimensions. Drawing
For what is presently considered to be the preferred embodiment of the invention, the glass materials used for the spacer slices have coefficients of expansion which are similar to the coefficient of expansion for the laminar glass panel from which the face plate is constructed. Such a condition, of course, ensures that stress will be minimized during the anodic bonding process. Currently, lead oxide silicate glasses are used for the permanent fiber strands, and have the following chemical composition: 35–45% PbO; 28–35% SiO2; balance K2O, Li2O and RbO. The most significant difference in the composition of the currently utilized filler strands is that the percentage of PbO is typically greater than 50%. The difference in lead composition is primarily responsible for the etch selectivity between the permanent fiber strands and the filler strands. However, there are many other known combinations of glass formulations that will provide both similar coefficients of expansion and selective etchability.
Once the fibers are tightly and accurately packed to form a bundle, the bundle is uniformly heated to the sintering temperature (i.e., the temperature at which all the constituent fibers fuse together along contact lines or contact surfaces). The bundle is then drawn at elevated temperature in a drawing tower, which uniformly reduces the diameter of all fibers, while maintaining a constant relative spacing arrangement between fibers. The bundle, after being drawn, may be cut into short intermediate lengths and redrawn. After drawing the bundle one or more times, the final drawn bundle is cut into equal length rods. After the final drawing, the permanent glass fibers within the drawn bundle have achieved the proper diameter or rectangular cross-section for the intended display, with the spacing between permanent glass fibers corresponding to the spacing between anodic bonding attachment sites of the intended display. The rods, all of which are virtually identical in shape, are then packed in a fixture to form a rectangular block. A single plane is perpendicular to and intersects the midpoint of each rod. As hexagonal rods will not pack perfectly to form a rectangular solid, partial filler rods may be used on the periphery of the rectangular block. The rectangular block is then heated to the sintering temperature in order to fuse all rods and partial filler rods into a rigid rectangular block. After cooling, the rigid block is sawed, perpendicular to the individual fibers, into uniformly thick rectangular laminar slices. For a 1,500 volt, flat panel, field emission display, spacers approximately 380 microns in length (about 0.015 inch) are required to safely prevent shorting between the face plate and the base plate. Thus, slices somewhat greater than 400 microns in thickness are cut from the rigid block and each slice is polished smooth on both major surfaces until the final thickness of each is 380 microns.
As certain temperature-related terms will be used hereinafter, a definition of each is in order. For a particular glass, the strain temperature (TS) is the temperature below which further cooling of the glass will not induce permanent stresses therein; the anneal temperature (TA) is the temperature at which all stresses are relieved in 15 minutes; and the transformation temperature (TG) is the temperature above which all silicon tetrahedra that make up the glass have freedom of rotational movement. At the transformation temperature, most network modifier atoms are ionized and atoms such as sodium, lithium, and potassium are able to diffuse throughout the glass matrix with little resistance. For glass materials, the following relationship is true: TS<TA<TG.
A laminar silicate glass substrate (soda lime silicate glass is presently the preferred material), which will be transformed into the face plate of the display, is subjected to a thermal cycle in order to dimensionally stabilize it. During a typical thermal stabilization process, the substrate is heated from 20° C. (room temperature) to 540° C. over a period of about 3 hours. The substrate is maintained at 540° C. for about 0.5 hours. Then, over a period of about 1 hour, it is cooled to 500° C., and then down to 20° C. over a period of about 3 hours. For the particular glass substrate used for the preferred embodiment of the invention, TS is approximately 528° C.; TA is approximately 548° C.; and TG is approximately 551° C. It should be noted that chemical reactivity of the glass substrate is of no consequence, as only a thin silicon layer that will be subsequently deposited on the substrate is responsible for the anodic bonding reaction.
Referring to drawing
The cross-sectional drawings as set forth in drawing
Referring now to drawing
Referring now to drawing
As illustrated in drawing
As illustrated in drawing
Referring again to drawing
Referring now to drawing
Referring now to
The remaining portion of the process, depicted by
Referring now to
Effectiveness of the anodic bonding process is highly dependent on the flatness of the two surfaces (i.e., those of the spacer slice 901 and those of the prepared face plate 902) which are in as intimate contact with one another as possible. In addition, the surfaces must be free of extraneous particles which would preclude contact over the entire surface. Upon contact, the two materials form a junction. Oxygen ions in the glass are drawn across the interface and form a chemically bonded oxide bridge between the glass columns in the spacer slice and whatever material overlies the transparent, conductive layer on the face plate. The anodic bonding process is self-limiting, and takes roughly 10–15 minutes to complete, depending on the strength of the applied field, the alkali metal (i.e., sodium, lithium, and potassium) content of the glass, and the prevailing temperature.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Finally, as depicted by
Referring now to
It should be evident that the heretofore described process is capable of forming a face plate for internally evacuated flat panel displays which have spacer support structures anodically bonded to the face plate. Such face plates are efficiently and accurately manufactured via this process.
Although only several variations of a single basic embodiment of the process are described, as are a single embodiment of a face plate and spacer assembly manufactured by that process and a single embodiment of a flat panel field emission display incorporating such a face plate and spacer assembly, it will be obvious to those having ordinary skill in the art that changes and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope and the spirit of the process and products manufactured using the process as hereinafter claimed. For example, although for a preferred embodiment of the process it is deemed preferable to anodically bond spacer support columns to the face plate, it would also be possible to anodically bond the spacer support columns to the base plate. The latter process, however, would require protection of the micro cathodes. The added complexity required to protect the micro cathodes during etch steps would make such a process alternatively inadvisable.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/631,003, filed Aug. 2, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,554,671, issued Apr. 29, 2003, which is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 09/302,082, filed Apr. 29, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,329,750 B1, issued Dec. 11, 2001, which is a division of application Ser. No. 08/856,382, filed May 14, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,980,349, issued Nov. 9, 1999.
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. DABT 63-93-C-0025 awarded by Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). The Government has certain rights in this invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040058613 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 08856382 | May 1997 | US |
Child | 09302082 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09631003 | Aug 2000 | US |
Child | 10423123 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09302082 | Apr 1999 | US |
Child | 09631003 | US |