Reference is made to commonly-assigned copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/881,301, filed Jun. 30, 2004, entitled FORMING ELECTRICAL CONDUCTORS ON A SUBSTRATE, by Yang et al.; the disclosure of which is incorporated herein.
This invention relates in general to the production of thin film transistors (TFTs) and in particular to fabrication of transistors on a curved flexible surface.
Manufacturing of thin film transistors (TFTs) is a complicated, time consuming, expensive process. The typical process involves fabrication of multiple layers on a batch-by-batch photolithography basis by a glass substrate. To reduce the manufacturing cost, some of photolithography steps in the TFT fabrication process can be replaced by a low-cost, printing method. U.S. Pat. No. 6,080,606 (Gleskova et al.) uses a toner-based printing method for photomask and etch or lift-off mask on glass substrates for back plane of low-cost, large-area LCD display applications. U.S. Pat. No. 6,274,412 (Kydd et al.) uses an electrostatic printing method for gate, data, and possibly indium tin oxide pixel on glass substrates for back planes for displays, detectors, and scanners applications. U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. 2003/0027082 and 2004/0002225 (both to Wong et al.) use an inkjet printing method for etch-mask that is based on wax and surface treatment. All the printing methods for the TFT fabrication are applied on flat, not-curved substrates.
Some uses require fabrication of TFTs on a flexible, curved background. TFTs on flexible curved surfaces have important uses in many fields, for example in the medical field, particularly mammography. Currently, fabrication of TFTs on a flexible, curved surface can be accomplished by manufacturing the TFT on a flexible substrate and bending it to the desired shape as P. I. Hsu reported in “Thin-film transistor circuits on large-area spherical surfaces,” Applied Physics Letters, Vol. 81, No. 9, pp. 1723-1725, 2002. A drawback with this type of manufacturing is that the thin metal layers that comprise the TFT are often cracked or broken during the bending process. In addition, all the thin film layers of TFT are patterned in island forms to reduce any film strain effect on TFT performance and cracks of the thin film itself. This method, while an improvement, still has associated cracking problems.
An object of this invention is to provide a predetermined shaped substrate which results in less stress and cracking of thin-film devices. Another object is to develop a printing apparatus for printing onto curved (hollow) surface of the substrate (metal and etch-mask printing) for low-cost process. Yet another object is to provide a improved position accuracy and printing speed with drop-on-demand or continuous printing method to improve process speed and yield.
Briefly, according to one aspect of the present invention a method for in-line fabrication of curved surface transistors forms a flexible substrate into a predetermined shape. A first passivation layer is deposited and a first metal layer in a first pattern is deposited. An insulator layer in a second pattern is deposited. A first semiconductor in a third pattern and a second semiconductor in a fourth pattern are deposited. A second metal layer in a fifth pattern is deposited and a second passivation layer in a sixth pattern is deposited.
The invention and its objects and advantages will become more apparent in the detailed description of the preferred embodiment presented below.
a-3f are cross-sections of each step of the conventional photolithography-based amorphous silicon thin-film transistor process flow.
The present invention will be directed in particular to elements forming part of, or in cooperation more directly with the apparatus in accordance with the present invention. It is to be understood that elements not specifically shown or described may take various forms well known to those skilled in the art.
Description of Standard a-Si Process
A standard back-channel-etch-type (BCE) hydrogenated amorphous silicon thin-film transistor (a-Si:H TFT) fabrication process consists of four mask steps: first metal layer pattern (gate), first and second semiconductor layer pattern (active island), insulator layer pattern (gate via), and second metal layer pattern (source and drain). A cross-section view of a typical BCE a-Si:H TFT fabricated on a flat substrate is shown in
A detailed process flow 30 is described in
The first metal layer 66 is deposited 36 on the first passivation layer 64 by thermal or electron-beam evaporation, or sputtering methods. The deposited first metal layer 66 is patterned by a conventional photolithography method 38, which consists of photoresist (PR) material coating, soft-bake curing of coated PR, ultra-violet (UV) light exposure through a photo-mask that has a specific pattern, development in PR developer solution, hard-bake curing of patterned PR, etching of the first metal layer by using the patterned PR as an etch mask, and removing of PR patterns that has been used as etch masks. The first metal layer 66 can be etched by either a wet-etching or dry-etching method, preferably, wet-etching method. The patterned first metal layer is used as a gate for a conventional a-Si:H TFT,
An insulator layer 68, first 70 and second 72 semiconductor layers are consecutively deposited by a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method, preferably, a plasma enhanced CVD (PECVD) method 40. The insulator layer 68 acts as a gate dielectric layer, which is typically an a-SiOx layer, an a-SiNx layer, or double layer consisting of both layers. The first 70 and second 72 semiconductor layers are active and doped semiconductor layers, respectively. An electrically conducting channel is formed in the active semiconductor layer 70, especially close to the interface between the active semiconductor layer 70 and the insulator layer 68 when a positive bias voltage is applied to the first metal layer 16 with respective to one of the patterned second metal layers, 74a or 74b. The doped semiconductor layer 72 will provide an ohmic contact between the active semiconductor 20 and the following second metal layers 74a and 74b.
The deposited first 70 and second 72 semiconductor layers are patterned by the conventional photolithography method 42 that is described above in detail,
After the active island is formed, the insulator layer 68 is patterned by the conventional photolithography method 44 to open windows through the insulator layer 68, which is not shown in the cross-section views in
A second metal layer 74 is deposited 46 by thermal or electron-beam evaporation, or sputtering methods. The deposited second metal layer 74 is patterned by the conventional photolithography method 48,
In
Hybrid Process
The present invention provides an apparatus for fabricating a-Si:H TFTs on pre-curved substrates, especially for printing all the metal layer patterns, which can be used in in-line curved (hollow) surface TFT process. Because conventional PEVCD and novel printing methods for a-Si:H TFT fabrication are combined, this process is called “hybrid a-Si:H TFT process” in the present invention. The details of the hybrid a-Si:H TFT process flow 80 are described in
First, a substrate is formed into a pre-curved shape 82, which can be a spherical or a cylindrical form 102 as shown in
In the case of particularly thin substrates, the base substrate may be mounted to a carrier substrate such as glass. The carrier substrate ensures that the surface profile is maintained during the deposition processes.
After cleaning 84 the pre-curved substrate 102, a first passivation layer is deposited 86. The first passivation layer is deposited by vacuum or solution process. On top of the first passivation layer, a first metal layer pattern is printed 88 by an inkjet printing based method, where drop-on-demand (DoD) or continuous stream printing head can be used.
On the printed first metal pattern, an insulator, a first semiconductor and a second semiconductor layer are consecutively deposited by CVD method, preferably by PECVD 90. The first and second semiconductor layers and the insulator layer are patterned by photolithography method 92 and 94. The second metal layer pattern is printed 96 by the same method as the first metal layer patterns 88. After the back channel etching 98 by using the patterned second metal layer as an etch mask, a second passivation layer is deposited 100 by the same method as the first passivation layer 86. The total number of required photolithography steps is reduced for the hybrid a-Si:H TFT process 80 because the photolithography steps for the first 66 and second 74 metal layer patterning in the conventional a-Si:H TFT process 30 are not needed. If this method is combined with the prior art (printing etch mask, U.S. Pat. No. 6,080,606; U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. 2003/0027082 and 2004/0002225), all the conventional photolithography steps can be removed. In these prior arts, the active island was patterned by printing etch mask material on the second semiconductor and then etching the first and second semiconductor layers through the etch mask.
To produce finer feature pattern with printing method, wax mask (U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2004/0002225 A1) can be used. In this method, the wax mask is printed on the blanket of material layers (metal, dielectric, or semiconductor layer) to be patterned. The printed wax mask is used as a negative resist for etch mask patterning; therefore, the space between printed wax patterns will determine the feature sizes of the patterns. Using this technique, feature sizes of devices smaller than the smallest droplet printed may be fabricated.
Another method for the finer feature pattern is polymeric mask lamination (“Invited Paper: Large area, High Performance OTFT Arrays,” Technical Digest of SID 2004, pp. 1192-1193, 2004). In this method, polymeric mask with negative images of patterns that is finer than those from directly printed material layer (metal, dielectric, or semiconductor layer) patterns is separately prepared. After it is laminated on the substrate, the material layer is printed through the polymeric mask, which will determine the feature sizes and enhance the accuracy of placement of printed droplets.
The inkjet head 120 consists of one or more ink exits or nozzles 122 and one or more control elements 124. The inkjet head 120 can be either a DoD-type or a continuous stream-type printhead. Since this method is a solution based method, the drying property of the drops is very important for printed feature size. Therefore, the temperature of pre-curved substrate 112 can be accurately controlled to produce a desired feature size.
To accurately place the drops on the desired places of the pre-curved substrate 112, both the pre-curved substrate 112 and the printhead 120 can relatively moved and rotated; preferably the printhead 120 moves and rotates for the fixed pre-curved substrate 112 so that the printing drop direction is normal to the tangential of the curved surface 126 as shown in
Trajectory Mapping
The printhead itself may follow a trajectory 128 defined by the curvature of the substrate in order to print the electronic material with regular features and sizes. An example of that trajectory 128 is shown in
Drip Containment
When using solutions or liquids, there are several issues that need to be addressed. The first issue is drip containment. In the case of drop on demand inkjet printing, drip containment is required for those drops that do not adhere to the surface as intended. A drop that does not adhere can drip, or spread to unwanted areas of the backplane. The drop may also release completely from the substrate and land elsewhere in the deposition equipment or back on the inkjet head. All of these situations are highly undesirable.
The most efficient method of drip containment is to simply place the drop where needed and ensure adhesion. One method for accomplishing this is to regulate the temperature of the substrate 112 by heating the mount 134 as is shown in
Another approach uses a barrier to contain the drop. If a mask is employed, the mask may act as a barrier preventing fluid from migrating to undesirable regions of the substrate. A drip containment max may be place in contact or in close proximity to the substrate. If a wax or polymeric mask is used during patterning, it may be left in place to contain drip, the process for which is shown in
If the mask is unnecessary for patterning, the requirements on line width and accuracy of the mask can be relaxed. As such a proximity mask become sufficient as is shown in
A proximity mask may be as simple as a moving bar 150 along an axis 154 where drip may occur as shown in
Ink recycling and disposal are an important part of the system particularly of a continuous inkjet based system. Consequently a guttering system, not shown, for collecting and removing non-adhered drops is desirable. The moving bar is an excellent approach. Alternatively a sink can be placed in the system to collect free ink.
Composite Process
An example of composite process is shown in
An alternate process is to contain the process within a curved enclosure 162 to allow uninterrupted motion 160 along the curve as is shown in
An alternate means by which to insert and remove substrate or equipment is to do so along the axis normal to the plane shown in
The hybrid or possible all-printed methods for TFTs on curved surface can be used for but not limited to back plane fabrication of curved active-matrix display and X-ray sensor arrays in digital radiography applications for curved body, such as dental radiography, mammography, etc.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the scope of the invention.