The present invention relates to surface acoustic wave devices, and in particular to surface acoustic wave filters having improved coupling coefficients while maintaining desirable filter characteristics.
Surface acoustic wave (SAW) filters typically comprise interdigital transducer elements deposited on a piezoelectric substrate. SAW filters are widely used in various telecommunication systems due to small size, low loss characteristics of the implemented SAW resonators. SAW filter performance is generally dependent upon the features of the piezoelectric substrate. Low loss, smooth broadband, good rejection and sharp shape factor filter characteristics may be achieved by providing a piezoelectric substrate which exhibits high coupling coefficient, temperature compensation, high resonant Q factor and strong suppression of plate modes. Lithium Tantalate (LT) and Lithium Niobate (LN) substrates exhibit a high coupling coefficient. Rotated Y-cuts of LT exhibit coupling coefficient in the range of 8% to 10% and have been described by Ueda et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 6,037,847 and by Naumenko et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 6,556,104, the disclosures of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. The coupling coefficient of LN has been shown to exhibit a coupling coefficient as high as 23%. However, these high coupling piezoelectric substrates typically exhibit an undesirably significant temperature drift.
Two approaches have been investigated to reduce the temperature drift of the high coupling substrates by bonding the high temperature coefficient expansion piezoelectric substrate to a low temperature coefficient expansion substrate. Taguchi et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 5,998,907, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety disclose a number of bonded SAW device structures for purpose of temperature compensation. Taguchi discloses combining two piezoelectric layers with one layer bonded directly to a second layer having a lower temperature coefficient of expansion (TCE). In another embodiment disclosed by Taguchi comprises of a thin film insulation layer of silicon dioxide of 1000 Angstrom joined directly with the piezoelectric substrate and a TCE carrier of Si for purpose of temperature compensation. While attempts to control temperature characteristics are sought, structures as proposed above lead to spurious and undesirable responses due to a direct capacitance coupling between the electrode pattern and carrier, typically a Silicon material. This results in a poor filter performance characteristics.
Abbott et al in U.S. Pat. No. 7,105,980 discloses a SAW composite device comprising a piezoelectric substrate, a surrogate carrier and a bonding film securing the piezoelectric substrate to the carrier wherein the bonding film is a silicon oxide layer with at least one micron thickness to reduce capacitance coupling.
Other known embodiments include bonded wafer SAW filters in which the piezoelectric substrate is bonded with an adhesive layer to a lower temperature coefficient expansion carrier wafer. The TCE material used may be Si or alumina. Unfortunately, and as will be detailed late in this specification, such device structures produce plate mode resonances that distort the response of the resonators. There is a need to overcome this disadvantage.
In view of the foregoing background and in keeping with the teachings of the present invention, a SAW filter may comprises an electrode pattern deposited on a piezoelectric substrate bonded directly to an anti-reflective layer, wherein the anti-reflective layer is bonded to a carrier through an adhesive layer.
One SAW filter may be described as comprising a piezoelectric substrate having first and second opposing surfaces, an electrode pattern deposited on the first surface of the piezoelectric substrate, an anti-reflective layer directly bonded to the second surface of the piezoelectric substrate, a carrier substrate, and an adhesive material securing the anti-reflective layer to the carrier substrate, wherein the anti-reflective layer is used for enhancing an acoustic match from the piezoelectric substrate to the adhesive layer.
The anti-reflective layer may comprise a layer of Silicon, Silicon Oxide, Aluminium Oxide, or a combination thereof. Yet further, the anti-reflective layer may comprise a Silicon Oxide layer having a thickness greater than 1.5 microns. The Silicon Oxide layer may comprise a thickness substantially equally to 1.8 microns+n*(5.2), where n takes on zero and positive integer values. Additionally, the anti-reflective layer having the characteristics exhibiting an acoustic impedance and wave velocity that lie between that of the piezoelectric substrate and the adhesive layer. The piezoelectric substrate may be Lithium Tantalate or Lithium Niobate. The adhesive layer may be glue, resinous material or an epoxy.
Embodiments of the invention are described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a, 4b and 4c illustrate a variation in plate mode suppression for different Y-rotations in a Lithium Tantalate substrate used with a filter as illustrated in
a and 5b illustrate variations of a leaky SAW (LSAW) coupling and slow shear bulk acoustic wave (BAW) coupling, respectively, for various electrode thicknesses and cut angle of Lithium Tantalate;
a and 7b illustrate velocity as a function of angle, and angle as a function of frequency for three BAW modes;
a and 9b diagrammatically illustrate a wave pattern at an interface of Lithium Tantalate to a Silicon Oxide layer for various incident shear angles;
a and 10b illustrate angles for shear wave transmission from Lithium Tantalate to SiO2 and shear wave reflection at the interface, respectively;
a and 12b illustrates simulation results of a vertical shear BAW coupling and Q factor for various angle cuts of Lithium Tantalate over different thicknesses of a silicon dioxide layer; and
a and 13b illustrate a resonator response of one preferred embodiment for a 42° and 46° cut angle of Lithium Tantalate, respectively.
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
With reference initially to
Before continuing with details regarding features of the embodiment herein presented by way of example, and for an better appreciation of problems in the art solved by the present invention, consider one known embodiment of a bonded wafer SAW filter 26 in which the piezoelectric substrate 12 is bonded with an adhesive layer 22 to a lower temperature coefficient expansion carrier wafer 24, as illustrated with reference to
The degree to which the plate modes distort the response of the resonators is dependent upon multiple physical factors. Two prominent factors are metal thickness 28 of the electrodes 30 and the angle Y-rotation of the substrate 12. Known devices show much evidence as to what the thicknesses of the electrodes must be in order to obtain high performance SAW resonators on Y-rotations of LT and LN. For example, for 36-48° Y rotated LT the relative thickness of Al electrodes 30 is generally in the range of 0.16<h/p<0.22 where h is the thickness 28 and p is the periodicity 32. By way of example,
Referring again to
For LSAW devices on YX orientations of LT, the shear wave transmission into the adhesive material 22 or glue is relatively weak while the reflected shear wave is relatively strong. As adhesive materials 22, such as glues and/or epoxies, have low acoustic impedances and low acoustic velocities, an interface between the piezoelectric substrate 12 or plate and the adhesive material 22 will produce large acoustic reflections which will result in the guiding of plate modes in the piezoelectric plate. These plate modes will produce spurious resonance which destructively interference with the desired SAW mode. Suppressing these reflections will result in suppressing the spurious plate modes. Embodiments of the invention provide methods and structures to reduce/suppress spurious acoustic modes which accompany the desired acoustic response of an IDT constructed on a thin piezoelectric plate which is adhesively bonded to a carrier substrate.
With reference again to
As a result, one embodiment of the acoustic wave filter 10 having desirable characteristics as above described comprises the electrode pattern 18 deposited on a high coupling piezoelectric substrate 12 as described earlier with reference to
By way of further example, the carrier substrate 24 may be the Al2O3 as above illustrated, Si, SiO2, or any other material which meets the desirable requirements of a low TCE as compared to the piezoelectric substrate material, sufficient thickness and Young's Modulus so at to produce a compressional strain in the piezoelectric plate as the temperature is increased, and a tensile stress as the temperature is decreased.
By way of example,
Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4234859 | Ikushima et al. | Nov 1980 | A |
4364017 | Tokunaga et al. | Dec 1982 | A |
4494091 | Goll | Jan 1985 | A |
4500807 | Yuhara et al. | Feb 1985 | A |
5998907 | Taguchi et al. | Dec 1999 | A |
6037847 | Ueda et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6556104 | Naumenko et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
7105980 | Abbott et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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56-152316 | Nov 1981 | JP |
9-98055 | Apr 1997 | JP |
2003-142985 | May 2003 | JP |