The invention relates to a detector system with an optical function and a method for making the latter.
The field of the invention is that of detectors of electromagnetic radiation, more particularly of cooled infrared detectors, and the positioning of at least one optical component, for example of a matrix of microlenses, a zoom system, etc., as close as possible to one of these detectors, for example at a distance from 0 to a few hundred micrometers.
Cooled Infrared Detectors
A cooled infrared (IR) detector may be obtained by associating a material sensitive to infrared radiations, which transforms the received photons into electrons, and a readout circuit which allows processing of these electrons in order to form an image. The quality of the images provided by such a detector depends on the number of pixels which make it up and on the environment in which it is found. The number of pixels is determined by the number of electric connections between the photosensitive material and the readout circuit. Present infrared detectors may include about hundred thousand pixels with a pitch from 10 to 50 μm for an active surface of 1 to 2 cm2.
In order to reduce the noise in a detector, the latter may be confined in a cryostat in vacuo, for example at a temperature of 77 Kelvin (about −200° C.) The cryostats and their cooling systems determine the size of the infrared detection systems. In a sectional view of an infrared detector 10 in its cryostat, illustrated in
A cooled infrared detector is obtained by applying a so-called ball hybridization technique, called a “flip chip” technique, and described in the document referenced as [1] at the end of the description. This hybridization technique, illustrated in
The detector portion 21 may consist of two materials (“homo-substrate”) in order to form a substrate 25 (about 500 μm) and an active portion 26 (about 10 μm) as illustrated in
Thus, in the field of detection of infrared radiations, the detectors have to operate at low temperatures in order to minimize the background noises which are superimposed to the signal to be detected. In order to minimize the risks of mechanical and electrical failure of the connection balls 23 during the cooling of the detector, a technique from the prior art consists of placing an underfill 31 between the readout circuit 20 and the detector portion 21, for example by depositing epoxy drops on the readout circuit so that the underfill penetrates between the balls 23 and fills in the space between the readout circuit 20 and the detector portion 21. The placement of this underfill may be accomplished before or after hybridization of the components, as described in the document referenced as [3]. In both cases, the materials used for the underfill move up by capillarity on the sides of the detector portion 21, as illustrated in
These techniques for placing an underfill for minimizing the risks of failures of the balls 23 may be associated with the thinning of the detector portion 21 which may be carried out chemically by selective chemistry on the different substrates, or mechanically by polishing. Depending on the selected underfill configuration, with or without a protruding rim, two possible detector forms are obtained after such thinning, as illustrated in
Optical Components
The optical components used, for example a lens, zoom, etc., are developed by equipment manufacturers in order to obtain multifunctional infrared detectors. These components placed outside the cryostat, increase the size of the complete system formed by the cryostat, the cooling system and the optical components, as well as its weight.
Conventionally one has:
0<l3<30 cm
˜10 cm<l4<20 cm
˜10 cm<l5<20 cm
Given the miniaturization of the optical components, their size (surface of about 1 cm2) as well as their focusing distance, and of the electromagnetic detectors, the present positioning systems no longer meet positioning and alignment requirements of the order of a few micrometers between an optical component and a detector.
The object of the invention is to solve such a technical problem by proposing novel systems and a method for positioning and passively aligning at least one optical component as close as possible to an electromagnetic radiation detector.
The invention relates to a detector system with an optical function comprising:
The invention also relates to a method for making a detector system with an optical function comprising at least one optical component and one electromagnetic radiation detector including a readout circuit and a detector portion mechanically and electrically connected by means of hybridization balls and a filling material forming a protruding rim on the sides of the detector portion, characterized in that it comprises:
In a first embodiment, this method comprises the following steps:
Advantageously, holding balls may be used as an electrical connection between the optical component and the readout circuit.
In a second embodiment, this method comprises the following steps:
Advantageously, the step for attaching the optical component comprises the introduction of drops or seam of adhesive.
In a third embodiment, this method comprises the following steps:
By means of the system and method of the invention, the optical component(s) may be integrated into the cryostat, which allows considerable reduction in the size and weight of a multifunctional electromagnetic radiation detector.
The system and the method of the invention have the following advantages:
Many industrial applications are possible, for example:
The thereby obtained detectors may be used for multiple applications: biology, astronomy, medicine, etc.
The invention system is a positioning and passive alignment system, i.e. without any adjustment during the positioning of at least one optical component, for example lenses, zooms, etc., as close as possible to a detector, for example at between 0 and 800 μm therefrom. In this system, supporting wedges are used for Z positioning of the optical component as close as possible to the detector, and X and Y alignment means by means of holding wedges and/or holding balls, X, Y and Z being axes perpendicular to each other as illustrated in
Advantageously, the detector is a cooled infrared detector obtained by a standard manufacturing method.
By means of the invention system, the optical component may be integrated into the cryostat, which allows considerable reduction in the size and weight of a multifunctional electromagnetic radiation detector.
The method for positioning and passively aligning at least one optical component as close as possible to an electromagnetic radiation detector according to the invention therefore comprises:
The method of the invention has three embodiments.
This first embodiment comprises:
In order to achieve this mechanical thinning of the detector up to the intended height (along the Z axis), the height of the hybridization or connection balls 23 (about 10 μm), the height of the detector portion 21 (about 10 μm) and the desired space e between the outer surface of the detector portion 21 and the optical component 35 (about 20 μm) are taken into account in order to determine the height (about 40 μm) at which mechanical thinning should be stopped relatively to the readout circuit 20. This space e may thus be modulated from a few μm to a few hundred μm.
A selective chemical etching step is then carried out, as illustrated in
A step for attaching the optical component 35 with mechanical balling may then be carried out as illustrated in
Holding wedges, other than balls 36, may also be used for external mechanical support or support by an adhesive.
With this first embodiment it is possible to obtain direct advantages:
With it, indirect advantages may also be obtained:
This second embodiment comprises a step for etching “grooves” 44 at the periphery of a detector 40 (for example along two orthogonal directions X and Y). This detector, illustrated in
The shaped detector (40) is then recovered, as illustrated in
With the groove 44, it is possible by shape transfer, to create a support for the optical component in the protruding rim 45. Thus, the space, for example of about 20 μm, between the optical component and the surface of the detector, is directly defined by the depth of the groove of about 30 μm minus the thickness of the detector of about 10 μm.
In a step for positioning the optical component 49, the latter will be housed on the support created by the protruding rim 30 as illustrated in
The groove shape 50 is therefore used as a Z support for the optical component 49. As the underfill 46 has moved up by capillarity after having filled this groove 44, holding wedges 71 are formed along the shape 50 of the groove 44 after chemical thinning. These holding wedges 71 allow X and Y alignment of the optical component 49.
With this second embodiment, it is possible to obtain direct advantages:
With it, indirect advantages may also be obtained:
This third embodiment consists of exploiting the architecture of the detector and of the thinning method in order to produce positioning structures intrinsic to the component.
The epitaxy of the active layer 53, for example in CdHgTe, of an infrared detection array on a substrate 51 (Ge, for example), is preceded with the making of a growth buffer (intermediate substrate) 52 required for adapting the crystal lattice cell as illustrated in
In a step for thinning the detector after a hybridization step, the substrate 51 is removed by a selective chemical route on the buffer as illustrated in
A step for depositing at least one optical component 61 is then carried out. The supporting wedge 57 is therefore used as an Z abutment for the positioning of any optical component useful for the detection system or for the intended application: simple or staged optics or micro-optics, obturators, masks, analyzed objects or useful for analysis, etc.
In the case of a component which would not allow exploitation of selective chemistry, a polishing step is carried out, which is controlled with regard to its stopping at a predetermined level, for example to within +/−2.5 μm. The method is then the one illustrated in
As illustrated in
With this third embodiment it is possible to obtain direct advantages:
Indirect advantages may also be obtained with it:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 57856 | Nov 2008 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4041314 | Oppelt | Aug 1977 | A |
5574285 | Marion et al. | Nov 1996 | A |
6465344 | Barton | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6566170 | Marion et al. | May 2003 | B1 |
6942396 | Marion et al. | Sep 2005 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0662721 | Jul 1995 | EP |
2780200 | Dec 1999 | FR |
Entry |
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International Search Report Jul. 8, 2009. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100123899 A1 | May 2010 | US |