The present invention relates to a micromechanical pressure sensor and a method for manufacturing a micromechanical pressure sensor, in which a sensor element in a housing is covered by a passivating agent.
For the protection of a sensor from damaging environmental influences, the sensor element is able to be covered using a special passivating layer. This is done in such a way, for example, that the sensor element or the (electrical and/or mechanical) components required for detecting and/or evaluating a sensor signal are mounted in a housing and are subsequently covered by a passivating agent. Usually this passivation is achieved by filling the housing. The filling in this context is used to passivate the sensor element or to protect the components against media such as water, air, gasoline, salt etc.
Thus it is possible to prevent sensitive elements of the sensor from corroding. What is problematic about the passivation, however, is the interaction of the passivating agent and the damaging medium.
Micromechanical pressure sensors, in which, for system-related reasons, the pressure is supplied from the front side of the sensor chip, are normally protected from environmental influences by a gel such as, for example, a fluorosilicone gel. This gel covers the surface of the chip and the bonding wires and prevents corrosive media from coming into contact with the chip. When selecting the gel, however, one must be mindful of the fact that the gel transmits the pressure of the medium for detecting a pressure variable to the pressure sensor diaphragm in the sensor chip.
For the application of pressure sensors in a highly corrosive environment, as can, for instance, be found in the exhaust branch of a motor vehicle, even the best of the currently available gels cannot prevent corrosive components of the medium from diffusing through the gel over time and resulting in corrosion of the sensor element or of other components on the sensor chip.
An expensive structural variant for protecting the pressure sensor is to install the sensor element made up of a sensor chip and bonding wires in a chamber filled with silicone oil, which maintains contact with the surroundings via a steel diaphragm. A change of the ambient pressure is transmitted via the steel diaphragm directly to the silicone oil and thus to the sensor element or the sensor chip.
In order to increase the protective action of the passivating gel, it is known that one may admix to the passivating gel a chemical buffer in the form of low acid and/or alkali quantities, in response to which the pH value in the passivating gel is held constant to the greatest extent, and thereby the service life of the sensor element is prolonged. If buffers made up of a mixture of acid-binding and alkali-binding substances are used, then, in response to an appropriate environment, in each case only one of the two components is active, whereas the other half of the mixture does not contribute to the protective effect.
The present invention provides a device having a housing and at least one electrical component, the housing having at least one of the electrical components being filled at least partially with a passivating agent. Furthermore, it is provided that the electrical component is covered at least partially with passivating agent. The present invention provides that an additional material layer is applied on top of the passivating agent. Using this additional material layer, a device is able to be implemented in a simple and cost-effective construction, that is resistive to environmental damages. This makes possible using electrical components in corrosive environments.
In one example embodiment of the present invention, it is provided that the electrical component has especially a micromechanical sensor element. In this context, the micromechanical sensor element is able to record a pressure variable, a temperature variable, an air mass, a resistance variable and/or a concentration of at least one medium. A medium favorably surrounds at least a part of the device and/or of the micromechanical sensor element, in this instance.
What is particularly advantageous in this context is that, because of the selection of the passivating agent in combination with the material of the additional material layer, an optimized sealing of the electrical component or of the sensor element is achieved. Consequently, damage to the sensor element by corrosive media can be prevented. In addition to that, because of the construction according to the present invention, use of the pressure sensor is also possible in liquid media, since the material of the additional material layer is selected so that the liquid medium is separated from the passivating agent.
Beyond that, the electrical component, and especially the sensor element, has areas that are sensitive to corrosion. These may be, for example, contacting surfaces or elements such as bonding pads and/or bonding wires. Therefore, at least these areas that are sensitive to corrosion are covered with the passivating agent.
In one example embodiment of the present invention, the surrounding medium is separated from the passivating agent by the additional material layer. However, it may also be advantageously provided that the additional material layer protects against the corrosive components of the surrounding medium, which would otherwise corrode the electrical components, by an appropriate chemical reaction. A further possibility of increasing the service life of the electrical components, and thus the duration of utilization of the sensor, is to reduce the diffusion speed of the corrosive components of the surrounding medium, using suitable materials. It has proven to be particularly advantageous to use corrosion resisting materials and/or materials impervious to water in the additional material layer.
The additional material layer may be developed as a diaphragm layer, it being possibly provided that the diaphragm layer has a wave-shaped surface structure. This wave-shaped surface structure is able to compensate for a temperature-conditioned expansion of the passivating agent, without there being a crack in the diaphragm layer.
In a further refinement of the present invention, fluorosilicone gel is provided as the passivating agent and/or a layer made of a corrosion resistant material and/or a material that is impervious to water is provided as the additional material layer, such as teflon or a parylene. Furthermore, in an example embodiment of the present invention, it is provided that the passivating agent and the material of the additional material layer have temperature coefficients of expansion that are adjusted to reach other.
It is provided that the housing, in which the sensor is mounted, has a lower part of the housing having housing walls. In this context, the lower part of the housing is advantageously filled with the passivating agent up to the structural height of the housing walls.
In addition, in a further embodiment of the present invention, it is provided that the housing has an upper part of the housing having a housing cover. This housing cover, in this instance, may be the housing in such a way that it fixes the additional material layer on the passivating agent. It may be provided, in this context, that the housing cover is set upon the passivating agent only after applying the additional material layer. However, it is also conceivable that the additional material layer is applied directly into the housing cover, and that it covers the passivating agent only after the placing of the housing cover onto lower part of the housing.
In order to make possible the passing on of the pressure change of the medium to the sensor element, an opening is provided in the housing cover through which the medium is able to get in contact with the additional material layer.
It is provided, advantageously, to cover the electrical contacting surface and/or the electrical contacting element using at least one specifiable layer thickness of the passivating agent. Thus, it may be provided to apply the passivating agent over at least one bonding pad and/or one bonding wire at a thickness of at least 0.2 mm. It may be achieved by such a specifiable layer thickness of the passivating agent that components of the medium that trigger the corrosion do not reach, or reach with a time delay the areas that are susceptible to corrosion.
One possibility of reducing the speed at which the medium, or rather the components of the medium, penetrate into the passivating agent is to introduce, as an additional material layer, plate-like fillers such as mica foil into the passivating agent. Besides that, however, it is also conceivable to add plate-like fillers such as hydrotalcite, magnesium hydroxide, aluminum hydroxide, hydromagnesite or huntite to the passivating agent, in order to decrease the speed of diffusion and/or lengthen the diffusion path.
However, it may also be provided to render harmless the corrosive components of the medium which are able to diffuse into the passivating agent, by a suitable chemical reaction (neutralization or adsorption). Thus, for example, amino functionalized siloxanes are available as material for the additional material layer, in which the aminopropyl groups react as bases with corrosive acids to form ionic bonds. Acids may also be bound by monoalkylamines, dialkylamines or trialkylamines, silazanes or amino-terminated silicone oil or acid-binding fillers such as hydrotalcite, magnesium hydroxide, aluminum hydroxide or hydromagnesite.
Generally, it may be provided that the device represents an especially micromechanical sensor, for instance, for recording a pressure variable that represents the pressure of a surrounding medium. But beyond that, it is also conceivable that the device records a relative pressure variable of two media. Because of the embodiment according to the present invention, the use of such a pressure sensor in the exhaust gas stream or in the tank of a motor vehicle is possible. However, it is also conceivable, beyond this, that the device might represent a (hot) air mass sensor or a generator control device.
By a suitable selection of the passivating agent and the materials for the additional material layer, it is further possible to reduce the shaking stress of gel-treated bonding wires. Thus, for example, an inflexible barrier layer is able to reduce shift amplitudes of the passivating gel.
In using the sealing of the passivating agent according to the present invention, it is possible to eliminate hermetic housings or housings that are impervious to spray, which are installed to protect the gel spaces in electrical and/or electronic components. Moreover, because of the use of such sealing, one may consider again using oil-exuding gels in electronic components that are not supposed to come into contact with volatile, bleeding components of a passivating gel.
Using the embodiment of the device according to the present invention, a greater effectiveness of passivation with respect to the corrosive environment may be achieved compared to the addition of buffers, that is, acid or alkali binding substances.
By adding fillers to the passivating gel, the swelling up of the gel due to solvents contained in the exhaust gas can be reduced.
Organic, acid-binding fillers, having an optical refractive index adapted to the passivating gel (e.g. the combination silicone gel/polyamide), make possible optical analysis of the gel-treated sensor elements according to the present invention, because of lower optical scattering caused by small differences in the refractive indices.
In
To protect the sensor element against damage, the sensor element is accommodated in a housing. To this end, as shown in
In strongly corrosive environments, such as for instance in the exhaust gas branch of an internal combustion engine, even the best currently available passivating gel is not able to protect the pressure sensor chip sufficiently from corrosion. Therefore, in accordance with the present invention, in addition to the passivating gel, a further material layer is applied directly onto the gel, as shown in
Teflon is available as a possible material for layer 200, because of its favorable properties. Moreover, in one example embodiment, layer 200 may be developed from a parylene, or at least contain some of it. Parylenes are substituted or unsubstituted polyparaxylenes or poly-[2,2]-paracyclophanes. Halogens, such as fluorine, chlorine and bromine particularly come into consideration as substituants, the parylenes being able to be mono-, di-, tri- or tetra-substituted. Layer 200 is developed to have a layer thickness of 1 to 50 μm.
As examples, silicone gels, for instance, based on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) or polyphenylmethylsiloxane, are used, or (per)fluorinated silicone gels, such as perfluorinated PDMS. Furthermore, gel systems are suitable that are based on possibly (per)fluorinated polyethers or vinyl polymers that contain cross-linking agents with hydridic siloxane units, fillers, possibly thixotropic agents, adhesion promoters, inhibitors and catalysts.
However, deviating from the illustration in
In a further exemplary embodiment, additional layer 300 is introduced directly into cover 355, before the cover is applied onto housing lower part 350 that is filled with passivating agent 140.
Because of the configuration of the pressure sensor according to the present invention, the sensor is suitable for both gaseous and for liquid media. In this connection, additional material layer 200 or 300 offers a protection that the passivating agent by itself is not able to offer. Thereby, pressure sensors that are produced surface-micromechanically are able to be used in liquid media.
Additional material layer 460, according to the example in
Corrosive agents that diffuse in, from which the electrical or electronic components have to be protected, may contain, for example,
In this context, the agents may attack the sensor both in gaseous form or as a condensate.
Besides the lengthening of the diffusion path, it may also be provided to develop the additional material layer using a material which renders the corrosive agents or components of the medium harmless, with the aid of a chemical reaction. Since the electrical and/or electronic components are attacked primarily by acid-containing components of the medium, in one example embodiment according to the present invention it is provided to fortify the material layer and/or the passivating agent with basic compounds. This is done, for instance, by using amino-functionalized siloxanes, the aminopropyl groups contained therein reacting with the acid while forming slats. In this instance, it is also advantageous that amino-functionalized siloxanes are able to be polymerized into the passivating agent. A further possibility is the use of highly viscous amino-terminated silicone oil, which also binds acids to form salts. Silazanes such as Fluorochem PS112, a cross-linked poly(1,1-dimethylsilazane), have a similar function.
Besides the materials mentioned so far for additional material layer 200, 300 and 460, acetamides, such as bis/trimethylsilylacetamide, may also be used which are able to react with alcohols, phenols and acids. A similar effect is achieved using carbamates such as N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl). However, in addition, organic bases such as polyethylenimines, polyamines or polyamides (PA6.6, PA11, PA6, PA3.6, etc.) are conceivable as components of the additional material layer. In this context, the compounds named may also be introduced in the form of fibers.
Fillers hydrotalcite, magnesium hydroxide, aluminum hydroxide, hydromagnesite and calcium carbonate are effective as acid binders, besides their effect in lengthening the diffusion path.
Possible protective layers may be formed by plasma polymerization of silicoorganic substances, e.g., hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS-N), hexamethyldisiloxane (HMDS-O), hexamethyldisilane (HMDS), bis-(trimethylsilyl)methane, decamethylcyclopentasiloxane, octamethyltrisiloxane, dimethylcyclosiloxanes of diverse chain lengths, methylphenylcyclosiloxanes of diverse chain lengths, dimethyldimethoxysilane, short-chained perfluoropolyethers, octamethylcyclotetrasilazane, octaphenylcyclotetrasiloxane or parylenes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102004006212.9 | Feb 2004 | DE | national |
102004015123.7 | Mar 2004 | DE | national |
102004033475.7 | Jul 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/50503 | 2/7/2005 | WO | 5/7/2007 |