1. Field of the Invention
The invention concerns a flat panel detector of the type having a substrate carrying a transistor matrix and a photodetector.
2. Description of the Prior Art
With a flat panel detector, light striking the flat panel detector is transduced into electrical signals that can be converted into an image data set with a suitable evaluation device. The image associated with the image data set can be visualized with a viewing apparatus.
Current flat panel detectors are a combination of a pixelated photodetector and a transistor matrix.
The pixelated photodetector essentially has two electrodes and a semiconductor layer arranged between the two electrodes. One of the electrodes is structured such that it comprises a plurality of sub-electrodes insulated from one another that are respectively associated with a pixel of an image to be acquired with the flat panel detector.
For acquiring an image with the flat panel detector, the light distribution associated with the image thus penetrates the electrode facing toward the light distribution, so the electrode is therefore produced from material that is at least semi-transparent. Furthermore, the semiconductor layer in connection with the two electrodes transduces the light distribution into electrical signals that are present at the individual sub-electrodes of the structured electrode.
The transistor matrix is embedded in a substrate. Each of the individual transistors of the transistor matrix is in turn associated with one of the pixels of the image to be acquired with the flat panel detector and is respectively electrically connected with one of the sub-electrodes of the structured electrode. The transistors of the transistor matrix are controlled and read out with a control device. The read signals are relayed to the evaluation device.
Prevalent flat panel detectors are produced by the structured electrode being directly applied on the substrate embodying the transistor matrix. One disadvantage of this embodiment is that the structure of the laminar photodetector must be adapted to the structure of the substrate, which is determined by the transistors of the transistor matrix. Thin-film transistors typically are used as transistors for the transistor matrix. However, if a transistor matrix with transistors based on a different transistor technology is used, the process for the application of the laminar photodetector must be adapted to this transistor technology.
An object of the invention is to provide a flat panel detector for which manufacture is simplified even given the use of different substrates for the transistor matrix.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention by a flat panel detector having a substrate with a transistor matrix; a photodetector with a structured first electrode that includes a number of sub-electrodes, the detector further having a second electrode and a photoactive layer arranged between the two electrodes; and a passivation layer arranged between the first electrode and the substrate.
The basis of the inventive flat panel detector is thus to not build the photodetector directly on the substrate with the transistor matrix, but rather to initially provide the substrate with the passivation layer and to build the photodetector on this passivation layer. The photodetector is spatially separated from the substrate via the passivation layer. It is thus possible for the photodetector to be arranged vertically above the individual transistors, so the surface of the photodetector is enlarged. The filling factor of the photodetector thus can be increased.
Capacitive couplings between the transistors of the transistor matrix and the structured first electrode and/or the electrical conductor traces can also be reduced by the vertical design. FET panels from the LCD industry are preferably used as substrates with transistor matrices.
Due to the passivation layer it is possible to achieve a design of the photodetector surface that is designed identically, with the design being substantially independent of the employed substrate or, respectively, from the employed technology for the transistor matrix. The passivation layer therefore enables the photodetector to be executed independent of the employed substrate or independently of the employed technology for the transistor matrix, to the greatest possible extent. The surface of the substrate in particular does not to be compatible with the chemistry of the photodetector.
The passivation layer is preferably applied on the substrate by means of printing techniques. The inventive flat panel detector can thereby be manufactured in a particularly cost-effective manner.
The photodetector can then be applied particularly simply on the passivation layer when, according to a variant of the inventive flat panel detector, the passivation layer can be planarized and/or structured (in particular photostructured) on the side facing towards the first electrode. For example, the passivation layer can be provided particularly simply with vias with which the individual sub-electrodes of the first electrode are contacted through the passivation layer with a respective transistor of the substrate possessing the transistor matrix. A via is a vertical opening filled with an electrically-conductive material that electrically connects different layers with one another.
An inorganic semiconductor material is typically used for the photoactive layer. However, according to a particularly preferred embodiment of the inventive flat panel detector, the photodetector is an inorganic photodetector having a photoactive layer formed of an organic semiconductor material. Organic photodetectors can be produced relatively simply by the organic semiconductor being applied with printing technology methods. Semiconductor materials for organic photodetectors include photoresists, PBO, BCB etc. Moreover, organic photodetectors exhibit a relatively high compatibility with various technologies of the transistor matrix of the substrate Various technologies of the transistor matrix comprise a-Si, LTpolySi, pentacene, polymers, ZnO or chalcopyrite FETs. The corresponding semiconductors from the solution are processed for the manufacture of a chalcopyrite FET.
An organic photodetector normally has an electron/hole-blocking layer in addition to the photoactive layer (that, for example, with P3HT/PCBM, CUPc/PTCBI, ZNPC/C60, conjugated polymer components or fullerene components. Electron/hole-blocking layers are known from the technology for organic LEDs. A suitable organic material for the electron- blocking layer is, for example, TFB.
A critical parameter for the image detection is what is known as the dark current of a photodetector.
A passivation layer 3 (shown in
A laminar electrode 5 (shown in
As shown in
Although the present invention was described using a preferred exemplary embodiment, the invention is not limited to this but rather can be modified in many ways. In particular, substrates with other transistors than the a-Si FETs shown in
Although further modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted heron all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art,
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 037 290.2 | Aug 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/065063 | 8/4/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/17/2008 |