CMUT Arrays.
Capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducers (CMUTs) offer many potential advantages over piezoelectric transducers, and hold promise for cost-effective 2D arrays. Fully-wired 2D arrays are cost-prohibitive due to large channel counts. A common difficulty in implementing 2D arrays for 3D ultrasound imaging is the problem of large channel counts. A fully-wired array of N×N elements would require N2 transmit/receive channels, introducing significant system complexity and cost, especially if N is large. Fabrication and interconnect schemes are non-trivial. Capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducers (CMUTs) are miniature membrane structures typically manufactured on silicon wafers using microfabrication technology. They offer a natural solution for 3D imaging, and provide a number of potential advantages over traditional piezoelectric transducer materials including inherently broadband immersion operation for tissue imaging, exceptional sensitivity, and potential for improved mass fabrication and integration with on-chip high-density electronics. Systems with sufficient portability and reduced cost could revolutionize the medical practice. Despite these potential advantages, the problems of system complexity still exist for CMUTs.
Many CMUT designs use a bottom doped wafer as a common ground-plane, while metalized top membranes serve as signal electrodes. Others use the top membrane as the ground plane, however, provide no way of electrically addressing bottom electrodes. These architectures are not amenable to the low-channel-count imaging schemes we propose. We recently presented a double-SOI wafer-bonded (D-SOI-WB) architecture similar to that of Kupnik et al, presented at the same conference. This architecture permits top electrodes to be routed and connected independent of the bottom electrode routing and connection schemes.
There is provided an ultrasound array comprising plural capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducers (CMUTs), each CMUT having a top electrode and a bottom electrode, the respective top electrodes of the CMUTs being connected in plural top electrode strips (TES), and the respective bottom electrodes of the CMUTs being connected in plural bottom electrode strips (BES), the BES being oriented at an angle to the TES, the angle being substantially different from zero; transmit electronics connected to the TES or BES; and receive electronics connected to the TES or BES.
There is provided in a further embodiment an ultrasound array comprising plural ultrasound transducers, each ultrasound transducer having a top electrode and a bottom electrode, the respective top electrodes of the ultrasound transducers being connected in plural top electrode strips (TES), and the respective bottom electrodes of the ultrasound transducers being connected in plural bottom electrode strips (BES), the BES being oriented at an angle to the TES, the angle being substantially different from zero; control electronics connected to the BES or to the TES, the control electronics controlling the response of the ultrasound transducers; and transmit electronics and transmit electronics connected to the other of the TES or BES.
In various embodiments, there may be included any one or more of the following features: the ultrasound transducers may be capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducers; and the control electronics may control the response of the ultrasound transducers by controlling bias and or modulation voltages.
These and other aspects of the device and method are set out in the claims, which are incorporated here by reference.
Embodiments will now be described with reference to the figures, in which like reference characters denote like elements, by way of example, and in which:
The 2D array designs we propose may be implemented using a D-SOI-WB architecture, or other possible architectures. We present one possible embodiment, based on a modified sacrificial release fabrication scheme: one using a patterned SOI wafer with doped device-layer serving as bottom electrode.
TOBE 2D CMUT arrays permit 3D ultrasound imaging using N transmit channels and N receive channels rather than N2 transmit/receive channels. Two imaging schemes are described presently. Scheme 1 permits 3D image formation with only N transmit events, but provides only one-way focusing, whereas Scheme 2 permits 2-way focusing but requires N2 transmit events, similar to mechanically-wobbled linear arrays, but without the need for mechanical scanning Scheme 1 permits the top electrode to serve as ground (beneficial for patient safety) but this is not possible in Scheme 2 in the present embodiment, hence a passivation layer would be required. We believe that TOBE CMUTs offer significant promise for high-density 2D ultrasound arrays. Besides the imaging schemes presented here numerous other possible imaging schemes are possible using proposed transducer architectures and interfacing schemes as would be understood by a person of average skill in the art.
Capacitive micromachined ultrasound transducers (CMUTs) offer many potential advantages over piezoelectric transducers, and hold promise for cost-effective 2D arrays. Fully-wired 2D arrays are cost-prohibitive due to large channel counts. We present what we call Top-Orthogonal-to-Bottom Electrode (TOBE) 2D CMUT arrays with the potential to perform 3D imaging with an N×N 2D array using only N transmit channels and N receive channels. Candidate fabrication technologies are discussed and a modified sacrificial release process is used to fabricate a prototype. Performance of two imaging schemes is discussed.
Here we present a novel CMUT architecture along with some potential schemes to implement 3D imaging with only N transmit channels and N receive channels. We use novel CMUT architectures permitting independent addressability of both top and bottom CMUT electrodes. CMUT top electrodes are connected in strips along the x-direction, while CMUT bottom electrodes are connected in strips along the y-direction. With this architecture, different 3D imaging schemes are proposed, simulated, and discussed. Simple devices are tested to demonstrate proof of principle.
CMUT Architectures and Fabrication
Key novel aspect of the CMUT architectures we will present include (1) top electrodes being addressable and connected separately and independently from bottom electrodes, which have their own connectivity. (2) Top electrodes are connected in strips, with bottom electrodes connected in strips in the orthogonal direction from top electrode strips. We recently presented a double-SOI wafer-bonded (D-SOI-WB) architecture similar to that of Kupnik et al, presented at the same conference. This architecture permits top electrodes to be routed and connected independent of the bottom electrode routing and connection schemes. The 2D array designs we present may be implemented using this double-SOI CMUT architecture. We also present for the first time to our knowledge an alternate architecture, based on a modified sacrificial release fabrication scheme: one using a patterned SOI wafer with doped device-layer serving as bottom electrode. We will call this process our patterned-SOI sacrificial-release process (P-SOI-SR). In either process (D-SOI-WB or P-SOI-SR), top electrodes may be connected in strips which are orthogonal to bottom electrode strips. Alternate fabrication schemes are possible to realize embodiments of the TOBE architecture described here as would be understood by a person of average skill in the art.
For the top membrane structural material a sandwich structure is proposed: a few nm of stoichiometric Si3N4 then a thick layer of low-stress (<100 MPa) LPCVD nitride, then a final few nm of stoichiometric Si3N4. The KOH etch selectivity between polySi (fast etching) and nitride (negligible etching) is higher for stoichiometric compared to low-stress nitride with our films, and these thin layers will not significantly add to the membrane stress. High etch-selectivity is important because our membranes can be larger than 100 microns across for low-frequency devices, and erosion of the nitride material could be catastrophic if KOH etch-selectivity were low. After sandwich nitride layers are deposited in (g), then sacrificial etching holes are formed (h) in the nitride layers down to the oxide etch-stop layer using ICP-DRIE. Sacrificial etching is next performed in (i) using KOH wet-etching until membranes are released. Although the etch-rate of oxide is much slower than PolySi, the oxide layer beneath the gap and etch-channel areas will be completely etched away during the long sacrificial etches. There is danger of H2 release during KOH etching rupturing large membranes and there is danger of membrane stiction during drying—especially for large-membrane (>100 microns-wide) structures. Membranes as large as 82 μm-wide (2 MHz resonant frequency in air) were successfully etched and released without problems. Etch-holes are sealed in (j) using low-stress PECVD TEOS which forms sealing plugs without coating CMUT gap. The gap would be coated if LPCVD were used, which has conformal coating. The TEOS is removed everywhere except the etch-hole region with a BOE etch step. This is done to prevent differing dielectric layers in the membrane as this could be a source of charge-trapping due to Maxwell Capacitor surface-charge accumulation at the dielectric interface. Additionally, there is no need to make the membrane any thicker than necessary, and a thick layer of TEOS is preferred to ensure sealing reliability and to maintain vacuum hermaticity long-term. CMUT cavity formation and sealing is complete after this step. Next, an access hole to the bottom electrode is formed in (k) by ICP-DRIE. This step may etch into the device layer (which is several microns thick) but this is inconsequential as the device layer is doped throughout the entire thickness. Finally metallization and patterning is performed in (l) to form the top membrane, top interconnects, top electrode bond-pad, and bottom-electrode bond-pad. With this design, wafer-level testing is easy to perform and the complexity of through-wafer-vias is avoided.
This process is similar to but different than the original sacrificial release fabrication schemes. Advantages of this method include an etch-stop for each important etching step, permitting high-etch-rate high-throughput ICP-DRIE to be used in an industrial fab without optimizing the etch-depths and without worrying about consequences of over-etching. This P-SOI-SR architecture also permits independent patterning of top and bottom electrodes, key to the success of the proposed device.
Using this P-SOI-SR process, we developed unique 2D arrays. Each element in the 2D array structure consists of 1×1 or 2×2 (or 3×3 etc.) CMUT cavities. Top electrodes are connected in strips orthogonal to bottom electrode strips as shown in
Imaging Schemes
The TOBE-2D CMUT array offers some interesting possibilities for 3D imaging with low-channel count. We describe some proposed schemes and simulate their imaging performance using Field II simulation software, comparing their performance with mechanically wobbled linear arrays.
Scheme 1
In scheme 1 we adopt a method proposed by J. Yen et al for 3D imaging using hybrid peizo-polymer/PZT arrays, where horizontal strips of PZT were used to transmit ultrasound, while vertical strips of PVDF were used to receive ultrasound. With this method, one-way focusing in the x-direction and one-way focusing in the y-direction could be accomplished. This scheme is implementable in straightforward way using our TOBE-2D-CMUTs, as illustrated in
Using scheme 1, a 3D image may be formed using only N transmit events, and with N transmit channels and N-receive channels. One disadvantage of scheme 1 is that only one-way x-focusing and one-way y-focusing can be implemented. Additionally single-element control is not possible for more complex imaging schemes.
Scheme 2
In scheme 2, as shown in
Scheme 2 makes unique use of the nonlinear transmit and receive response of CMUTs as a function of the bias voltage. With zero bias voltage, a given transmit pulse will produce negligible membrane oscillation, however, when a bias voltage is applied that is near the collapse voltage (for pre-collapse operation) or above the collapse voltage (for collapse-mode operation) the transmit response can be significantly higher. This is illustrated in
Simulations
ANSYS Simulations
The membrane was modeled by 3-D elements (SOLID45) for simulation of resonant frequencies. For simulation of coupled electrical & structural forces, the membrane was meshed by SOLID95 elements, a higher-order version of SOLID45 elements. Electrostatic interactions for 3-D coupled-field simulations due to electrode biasing are added to the model using SOLID226. ANSYS simulations were used to estimate collapse and snapback voltages and to predict CMUT resonant frequencies. Designed devices have ˜5 MHz resonant frequency in air (data not shown).
Field II Simulations
The ultrasound simulation software Field II was used to model the imaging performance of a 192-element by 192 element TOBE-2D-CMUT array. Element widths were 0.87 λ and kerfs were 0.087 λ in both x- and y-directions. A walking aperture rectilinear scanning approach with zero-steering angle was used with 64 active elements (assuming 3× MUX). The maximum amplitude projection C-scan image of two points located at an imaging depth of 104-wavelengths from the array surface after O1-DTRF processing using scheme 1 was obtained, and compared to a similar image obtained using O2-DTRF with scheme 2.
Device and Experiments
A feasibility 7×7 mm TOBE 2D array was constructed with 64×64 elements, each composed of 2×2 CMUT cells, similar to
TOBE CMUTs were fabricated using a modified sacrificial release process on a patterned SOI wafer. Two imaging schemes were proposed and imaging performance was simulated using FIELD II. Their relative merits are compared with each other and with wobbled linear arrays in Table 1.
Although the example given is of perpendicular electrode sets, which is preferred in practice, in principle so long as the electrodes are at a sufficient non-zero angle to yield a useful signal, the electrode sets need not be exactly orthogonal. There needs however to be some degree of orthogonality, that is, a non-zero angle between the electrode sets. It should also be mentioned that when we refer to electrodes or electrode strips, this may mean conductive material is routed between electrodes of individual elements. It may also be generalized to include active or passive elements used to route elements together. These strips need not be monolithic with the transducers and may be implemented using a number of means.
Immaterial modifications may be made to the embodiments described here without departing from what is covered by the claims. In the claims, the word “comprising” is used in its inclusive sense and does not exclude other elements being present. The indefinite articles “a” and “an” before a claim feature do not exclude more than one of the feature being present. Each one of the individual features described here may be used in one or more embodiments and is not, by virtue only of being described here, to be construed as essential to all embodiments as defined by the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2795441 | Oct 2012 | CA | national |
This application claims the benefit under 35 USC 119(e) of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/716,205 filed Oct. 19, 2012.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61716205 | Oct 2012 | US |