Infrared imager using room temperature capacitance sensor

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 5844238
  • Patent Number
    5,844,238
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, March 27, 1996
    28 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, December 1, 1998
    26 years ago
Abstract
An infrared imager includes an array of capacitance sensors that operate at room temperature. Each infrared capacitance sensor includes a deflectable first plate which expands due to absorbed thermal radiation relative to a non-deflectable second plate. In one embodiment each infrared capacitance sensor is composed of a bi-material strip which changes the position of one plate of a sensing capacitor in response to temperature changes due to absorbed incident thermal radiation. The bi-material strip is composed of two materials with a large difference in thermal expansion coefficients.
Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Instruments for the measurement of infrared (IR) radiation are becoming increasingly important for a variety of commercial and non-commercial applications. Research into the development of uncooled sensors with response throughout the infrared spectrum has been particularly important due to the limitation on the operation of cooling systems. Uncooled infrared sensors would have important applications for space-based remote-sensing of thermal sources, night vision, target identification, thermal mapping, event detection, motion detection, and others. The limitations of the performance of the existing uncooled sensors often are the primary constraints to the performance of infrared imaging systems for many applications. As a result, there has been considerable investment in the development of uncooled infrared sensors.
A broad assortment of infrared detectors has been developed over the last 40 years. In most cases, they may be classified as either quantum or thermal detectors, depending upon whether the incoming radiation is converted to excitations which are collected, or is converted to heat and detected through changes in temperature. In general, a quantum detector which operates at detector temperatures T.sub.d is usually superior to a thermal detector at the same temperatures for infrared frequencies in which hv >>k.sub.B T.sub.d, where h is Planck's constant and k.sub.B is Boltzmann's constant. However, for infrared frequencies in which hv <<k.sub.B T.sub.d, thermal detectors represent the only functional technology. The operation of quantum detectors is limited by the availability of efficient photon conversion mechanisms, while the operation of thermal detectors is limited by the availability of sensitive thermometers. Only thermal infrared sensors operate in the mid-to-far infrared range (.lambda.>10 .mu.m) at room temperature.
The pneumatic infrared detector, which was originally developed by Golay, is classified as a thermal detector. Golay's detector consists of a small cavity filled with gas at room temperature. The cavity is separated from the surroundings by a window and a thin, flexible membrane. The membrane is coated on one side with a thin metallic film, which has significant absorption throughout the infrared spectrum whenever the sheet resistance of the film is approximately half of the impedance of free space. The trapped gas in the Golay cell is heated by contact with the membrane and expanded thermally, which forces the membrane to deflect outward. This deflection is usually detected with optical or capacitive displacement transducers. At present, these detectors are bulky, fragile, difficult to fabricate, and expensive. Nevertheless, they have been widely used, primarily because of their improvement in sensitivity over all other room-temperature detectors in the mid-to-far infrared range. Attempts to miniaturize the Golay cell for incorporation into focal plane arrays have been unsuccessful because of scaling laws which relate the sensitivity of conventional displacement transducers and their active area. The need for focal-plane arrays of uncooled detectors stimulated the development of pyroelectric detector arrays, the best of which are 5-10 times less sensitive than the Golay cell.
Current state-of-the-art uncooled IR focal plane arrays use many different thermal detection mechanisms such a bolometric (sensor resistance is modulated by temperature), pyroelectric (dielectric constant is modulated by temperature), and thermoelectric effects. As discussed above, thermo-mechanical effects have been explored using modifications of the Golay cell. The performance of IR imagers based on these technologies is limited compared with imagers based on direct photon conversion, such as PtSi detectors operated 77K, and also is considerably worse than the theoretical background limited performance. In all approaches, the fundamental limits to the performance are controlled by the ability to thermally isolate the detector from its surroundings, the detector sensitivity to a change in temperature, and the introduction of extraneous noise sources. One of the reasons for degraded performance is the parasitic thermal resistance paths inherent in the supporting structures of the sensing elements. Another reason is the electronic noise present in the readout scanning circuitry.
With the above considerations in mind, the present invention is based on the development of an IR capacitance structure that deflects the position of a plate in response to temperature changes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a high-performance infrared imager that operates at room temperature. More specifically, this invention uses an infrared (IR) capacitance structure to sense changes in temperature. Thermal energy deforms the structure of the present invention resulting in a deflection that determines a capacitance which is then sensed.
The present invention provides an infrared capacitance sensor composed of a bi-material strip which changes the position of one plate of a sensing capacitor in response to temperature changes due to absorbed incident thermal radiation. The physical structure of this capacitance sensor provides high thermal radiation resistance and high thermal sensitivity by utilizing a bi-material strip composed of two materials with a large difference in thermal expansion coefficients (e.g., Si.sub.3 N.sub.4 and Al) mechanically supported by a long strip of material with high thermal resistance (e.g., Si.sub.3 N.sub.4).
Additional embodiments within the scope of this invention are also possible. These embodiments are extensions of the basic IR capacitance structure and include (1) a bridge structure with a bi-material element for increased structural stability, (2) a bridge structure without a bi-material element, relying only on the thermal expansion and the "beam buckling concept" in which the two ends of the structure are pinned for increased process simplicity, and (3) variations where the support arms may be parallel or co-linear with the bi-material element.
Another aspect of this invention is the design and operation of a readout multiplexer for a focal plane imager made up of an array of these capacitance sensors.
Another aspect of this invention is the use of a correlated double sampling (CDS) circuit to reduce the 1/f noise and dc offset of the pixel amplifiers.
Another aspect of this invention is the use of 2.times. over-sampling for both the reference and signal samples in the CDS readout circuit so that the mechanical resonant frequency of the capacitance sensor is at the Nyquist frequency of the samples.
Another aspect of this invention is that the readout method does not remove the signal which is stored as a change in capacitance.





The foregoing and other aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
FIG. 1 illustrates a physical structure of an exemplary bi-material capacitance sensor in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 2 illustrates a cross-section of a pixel showing the various elements that FIG. 1 comprises.
FIG. 3 (a) is a top view of a linear array of pixels.
FIG. 3(b) is a top view of a 2-dimensional array of pixels.
FIG. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram which is useful to describe pixel addressing.
FIG. 5(a) illustrates a stylized cross-section of the pixel of FIG. 2.
FIGS. 5(b)-5(m) illustrate the processing steps for the formation of the pixel of FIG. 2.
FIG. 6 is a geometric diagram of the exemplary device of FIG. 1.
FIG. 7 illustrates a cross-section of an excited pixel showing the displacement of the capacitor.
FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram of an exemplary front-end capacitance network in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 9 is a schematic diagram of an exemplary thermal circuit which is useful for describing the thermal behavior of the structure shown in FIG. 2.
FIG. 10 is a measured amplifier noise diagram which is useful for describing the operation of the circuitry shown in FIG. 4.
FIG. 11 illustrates a cantilever pixel with folded support in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 12 illustrates a bridge style pixel with extended support in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 13 is a circuit diagram of an exemplary embodiment of a pixel sensor according to the present invention as incorporated into a sensor array.
FIG. 14 is a timing diagram of the signal levels applied to the embodiment of FIG. 13.
FIG. 15 is a layout design diagram of an array of symmetric bridge style pixels in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 16 is an enlarged view of one of the pixels of the exemplary embodiment of FIG. 15.
FIG. 17 is a layout design diagram of a cantilevered style pixel in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 18 is a circuit representation of an exemplary transmission gate for use in the embodiment of FIG. 13.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
The present invention relates to a room temperature infrared imaging sensor which can reach a performance level, known as NE.DELTA.T, in the range of 1 millikelvin (mK), which approaches the theoretical Limit of 0.36 mK. This invention, which is 100% compatible with silicon IC foundry processing, utilizes a novel combination of surface micromachining and conventional integrated circuit manufacturing techniques to produce a bi-material thermally sensitive element that controls the position of a capacitive plate coupled to the input of a low noise MOS amplifier. This combination is able to produce a room temperature imager with sensitivity and imagery comparable to today's best cooled imagers at a cost comparable to visible imagers used in camcorders. This invention achieves the high sensitivity, the low weight and the low cost necessary for equipment such as helmet mounted IR viewers and IR rifle sights.
Table 1 shows a device characteristic comparison of the current invention versus conventional pyroelectric and bolometric devices.
TABLE 1______________________________________Comparsion Summary Sensitivity Isolation ResponsivityType (V/K) (K/W) (V/W) NE.DELTA.T (mK)______________________________________Pyroelectric 0.425 5 .times. 10.sup.5 8.5 .times. 10.sup.4 47Bolometric 0.0056 1.25 .times. 10.sup.7 7 .times. 10.sup.4 40Bi-material 1.08 1 .times. 10.sup.7 1 .times. 10.sup.7 2.6______________________________________
The pixel design of the present invention has the following benefits: 1) an order of magnitude improvement in NE.DELTA.T due to extremely high sensitivity and low noise, 2) low cost due to 100% silicon IC compatibility, 3) high image quality at increased yield due to the ability to do pixel-by-pixel offset and sensitivity corrections on the imager, 4) no cryogenic cooler and no high vacuum processing are needed, and 5) applicability to commercial applications such as law enforcement and transportation safety.
Infrared Capacitance Sensor
A physical structure of an exemplary bi-material capacitance sensor in accordance with the present invention is shown in FIG. 1. The capacitor plate 100 is mechanically supported in free-space (vacuum) by a bi-material strip 110 connected to a thermal isolation strip 120 which is anchored to the substrate on one end. The length/area ratio of the thermal isolation strip 120 is large to maximize the thermal resistance of this support. The bi-material strip 110 is composed of a bottom metal layer (e.g., aluminum) and a top layer (e.g., silicon nitride) which has a much lower thermal coefficient of expansion than the bottom layer. The top plate 100 of the capacitor is covered by a thermal radiation absorbing material 130 which causes temperature changes of the plate 100 in response to incident IR radiation. The heat absorbed in the plate 100 is conducted to the bi-material strip 110 by the bottom metal layer which has a relatively high thermal conductivity. The bi-material strip 110 and the capacitor plate 100 are linearly placed in order to maximize the displacement sensitivity.
FIGS. 2, 3(a) and 3(b) show the essential features of a single pixel in a cross-section and multiple pixels in top view pictorial representations, respectively. In practice, the actual structure, positioning of the elements, and electronic addressing may vary considerably.
The sensor part of the pixel comprises three elements: the absorbing area 130 formed from a photon absorbing material 210 which overlays an electrically conductive plate 220, the area 130 converts IR radiation into heat; the bi-material element 110 that converts heat into mechanical movement (as in a home thermostat); and the thermally isolating support element 120 to prevent heat from being shunted down to the substrate 200. The electrically conductive plate may, for example, be aluminum, polysilicon or indium-tin oxide.
As described above, the bi-material element 110 is composed of two layers that differ greatly in their thermal linear expansion coefficient (described in Riethmuller, W. and Benecke, W., "Thermally Excited Silicon Microactuators", IEEE Trans. Electr. Dev. v35, n6, p758, June 1988, and which is hereby incorporated by reference for its teachings on thermal linear expansion coefficients). Since the two layers are bonded to one another, strain is built up and the structure bends, thereby moving the top plate of the capacitor with a sensitivity of .alpha.=(1/C)(.DELTA.C/.DELTA.T).apprxeq.40%/.degree. C. This is approximately 20 times greater than the sensitivity of vanadium oxide (having a sensitivity of approximately 2%/.degree. C.) which is currently used in the most sensitive bolometers.
The simplified circuit shown in FIG. 4 illustrates three applied signals, V.sub.A, V.sub.B and V.sub.R and three transistors: the reset transistor M.sub.1, the source follower amplifier M.sub.2, and the row select transistor M.sub.3. There are additional transistors (not shown) associated with V.sub.A and V.sub.B for controlling the submicrosecond sense pulses of opposite polarity applied to C.sub.1 and C.sub.2. If C.sub.2 V.sub.B =-C.sub.1 V.sub.A then the nominal signal applied to the amplifier transistor is zero. Thus, the relative amplitudes of V.sub.B and V.sub.A can be used to adjust the offset at each pixel. Furthermore, V.sub.A can be used to adjust the gain at each pixel. Gain and offset correction at each pixel are desirable for optimizing image quality and increasing yield.
The manufacturing techniques used to manufacture the bi-material detectors include surface micro-machining steps as well as silicon IC processing which is compatible with, and transferable to standard silicon foundries.
FIG. 5(a) illustrates a stylized cross-section of a single pixel element with the uppermost layers of the IC at the bottom of the drawing. FIGS. 5(b)-5(m) illustrate the processing steps for the formation of the single pixel element. Note that the pixel element in FIGS. 5(a)-5(m) is a single, cantilever type pixel element. The IR pixel elements are surface micromachined above the surface of a single level metal CMOS IC.
The fabrication of a pixel begins in FIG. 5(b) with the planarization of a metal-1 layer of an IC. The preferred planarization material 580 is a flowable oxide (FOX), approximately 800 nm thick. FIG. 5(c) shows an etch step used to define the via that will interconnect the pixel cantilever beam and the bottom plate of the sense capacitor C.sub.1 540.
The fabrication of the surface pixel continues in FIG. 5(d) with the deposition and patterning of a metal-2 layer, for example, aluminum. The metal-2 layer is patterned to form a capacitor plate 510 and vias 515. It is desirable for the metal-2 layer to be 800 nm to 1000 nm thick with a 20 nm to 50 nm Ti layer (not shown) to suppress the formation of hillocks. In FIG. 5(e), a second planarization material 582 with a plasma etch-back is deposited to provide a uniformly planar surface for the top level capacitor definition.
A dielectric overcoat layer 520 of silicon nitride or silicon carbide approximately 500 nm thick is then deposited in FIG. 5(f) and patterned to act as a "stop" layer to prevent electrical contact between the cantilevered capacitor plate 220, formed in metal-3 (e.g., aluminum), and the underlying plate 510 formed in metal-2.
It is desirable that the metal-1, metal-2 and metal-3 layers be electrically conductive. It should be noted that these layers can be aluminum, polysilicon or indium-tin oxide.
Fabrication continues in FIG. 5(g) with the deposition and patterning of a release layer 530 for the micromachined pixel element. The release layer 530 is typically an oxide layer between 200 and 500 nm thick, depending on the desired trade-off between thermal sensitivity and mechanical ruggedness. The release layer 530 can also be composed of polysilicon. The release layer 530 functions as both a spacer layer for the capacitor structure and the sacrificial material that will be etched completely away at the end of processing. Therefore, the properties of the release layer 530 should be chosen to be compatible with the other pixel structural layers.
It should be noted that the overcoat layer 520 and the release layer 530 thicknesses determine the gap of the sense capacitor C.sub.1 540 and therefore the thermal sensitivity. In FIG. 5(h), the overcoat layer 520 and the release layer 530 are etched to form the anchor structure for the pixel cantilever beam. This is a key process procedure since this anchor structure desirably has not only the correct wall profile, but also open a sufficiently large and clear opening to the metal-2 level below.
Fabrication continues in FIG. 5(i) with the deposition and patterning of the first bi-material component. This metal-3 layer is preferably 300 nm of aluminum and forms part of the bi-material structure 110, the top plate 220 of the sense capacitor 540, and the thermal conduction layer from the absorption area to the bi-material element.
The next layer to be deposited and patterned is the second component 560 of the bi-material structure, as shown in FIG. 5(j). This layer can be silicon carbide or silicon nitride, approximately 300 nm, and acts as the thermal isolation element between the pixel and the substrate.
FIG. 5(k) illustrates the deposition and patterning of a very thin interconnect metal layer 570, 20 nm to 40 nm thick, which makes an electrical connection between the via/anchor structure and the top plate of the sense capacitor 540. Platinum, titanium, titanium nitride or indium tin oxide are desirable materials for this step. This layer is desirably thin to provide only low levels of thermal conductivity.
Note that the two layers of the bi-material structure may be reversed with the deposition of the interconnection metal 570 placed between the nitride or carbide layer and the aluminum layer. However, this processing is more difficult.
The next step, shown in FIG. 5(l), is the deposition and patterning of the IR absorption layer 210 at the end of the cantilever beam assembly. This material can be evaporated black platinum, carbon black, black aluminum or other materials that have superior absorption properties. This layer may be patterned using conventional lift-off techniques. The layer thickness is determined by the extent to which the material "loads" the end of the pixel element.
The final step, illustrated in FIG. 5(m), is the wet chemical etching of the release layer 530 to free the pixel element. A conventional etchant is used to remove the release layer 530. It is desirable to use an etchant that will not significantly remove any of the layers contacting the release layer 530. The element is then ready for bonding in a suitable package and testing.
In operation, thermal energy deforms the structure, thereby resulting in a deflection of the cantilever beam causing a change in the capacitance of the sense capacitor. As the deflection increases, the space between the plates of sense capacitor C.sub.1 540 increases, thereby decreasing the capacitance of the sense capacitor 540. The reversal of this thermal interaction, or vibration or electrostatic interaction between the plates 220 and 510 of the sense capacitor 540 may cause the top plate 220 of the sense capacitor 540 to crash into the overcoat layer 520 covering the lower plate 510 of the sense capacitor 540. This problem is mitigated by the addition of dimples to the structure.
Dimples are added to the structure by etching wells approximately one-third through the release layer 530 after the release layer 530 is deposited and patterned in FIG. 5(g). Then, when the first bi-material component is deposited in FIG. 5(i), the first bi-material component fills these wells, resulting in dimples on the side of the bi-material structure 110 contacting the release layer 530.
The vertical displacement of the center of the capacitor plate due to the bi-material affect can be shown to vary approximately as dx/dt=0.72(.alpha..sub.Al -.alpha..sub.sin)L.sup.2 /t, where L is the length of the element, t is the thickness of each material, and .alpha..sub.x is the linear thermal expansion coefficient for material x. For t=0.2 .mu.m and L=50 .mu.m, dx/dT=0.18 .mu.m/.degree. C. For a 0.4 .mu.m gap between metal-3 and the overlay and for a 0.4 .mu.m overlay composed of Si.sub.3 N.sub.4, the effective capacitor gap between metal-3 and metal-2 is 0.5 .mu.m. Thus, the thermal sensitivity of the detection mechanism is .alpha.=(.DELTA.x/x.DELTA.T)(.DELTA.C/C.DELTA.T)=36%/.degree. C. The process and material design rules are compatible with current silicon foundries at 1 .mu.m, which is three generations behind the state of the art. The use of these relaxed design rules results in low cost and high yield manufacturing. Analysis of the sense circuit of FIG. 8 (described in detail below) shows that the voltage response of the amplifier to a temperature change with V.sub.A =10 V is dV/dT=(.alpha./3)V.sub.A .apprxeq.1.2 V/.degree. C., where .alpha. is the thermal sensitivity. Alternative approaches such as vanadium oxide have a voltage response that is several orders of magnitude less than this.
A geometric representation of the structure of FIG. 1 is shown in FIG. 6 and is used for calculating the thermally induced deflection of the capacitor plate 100. The total displacement of the capacitor plate 100 is calculated as follows. For this analysis assume that the capacitor plate 100 remains planar and all of the bending occurs in the bi-material strip 110 connected to one end of the plate 100. This would occur if the absorber is very thin or if it has approximately the same thermal expansion coefficient as the aluminum layer that forms the upper plate of the sense capacitor C.sub.1. The total displacement is taken from the center (average) distance of the capacitor plate 100 to a reference x-axis. This displacement d equals d.sub.1 +d.sub.2 where d.sub.1 is the displacement at the end of the bi-material strip 110 (given by equations (1) and (2)) and d.sub.2 is the additional displacement at the center of the capacitor plate 100 (given by equation (3)). From FIG. 6:
d.sub.1 =R(1-cos.theta.) (1)
where .theta. is the angle of deflection above the horizontal, in radians;
for .theta.<<1, cos .theta.=1-.theta..sup.2 /2 and sin .theta.=.theta.,
d.sub.1 =R.theta..sup.2 /2=(where .theta.=L.sub.1 /R)L.sub.1.sup.2 /2R(2)
d.sub.2 =(L.sub.2 /2) sin .theta.=(L.sub.1 L.sub.2)/(2R) (3)
From an analysis of a bi-material strip (described in Shanley, F. R., "Strength of Materials", McGraw-Hill. 1957, p. 321, and which is hereby incorporated by reference for its teachings on bi-material strip analysis), equation (4) is obtained:
1/R=K.DELTA.T (.alpha..sub.2 -.alpha..sub.1)/t, (4)
where:
K is a correction factor due to the different Young's moduli of the two materials;
.DELTA.T is the temperature differential:
.alpha..sub.2 -.alpha..sub.1 is the difference in thermal expansion coefficients of the two materials; and
t=t.sub.1 =t.sub.2 is the thickness of each layer.
Substituting (4) in (2) results in equation (5):
d.sub.1 =L.sub.1.sup.2 K.DELTA.T(.alpha..sub.2 -.alpha..sub.1)/2t(5)
For the case where L.sub.1 =L.sub.2, the total displacement is given by equation (6):
d=d.sub.1 +d.sub.2 =L.sub.1.sup.2 K.DELTA.T(.alpha..sub.2 -.alpha..sub.1)/t(6)
As a practical example, d is calculated for the following conditions: the bi-material strip is aluminum/silicon nitride, .alpha.(Al)=23.times.10.sup.-6, .alpha.(Si.sub.3 N.sub.4)=2.8.times.10.sup.-6, L.sub.1 =L.sub.2 =50 .mu.m, t=0.5 .mu.m, and K=0.72. Thus, d=0.073 .mu.m /.DELTA.T.
FIG. 7 shows a cross-section pictorial representation of a single cantilever type pixel that is at a slightly elevated temperature relative to its nominal value. The bi-material effect (described in Shanley and which is hereby incorporated by reference for its teachings on bi-material effects) predicts the displacement at the end of the element due to a unit change in temperature to be K.DELTA..alpha.L.sub.b.sup.2 /2t.sub.b. For the cantilevered sensor, there is an additional displacement of the center of the absorber that doubles the sensitivity, e.g., .DELTA.x/.DELTA.T=K.DELTA..alpha.L.sub.b.sup.2 /t.sub.b. Table 2, which contains design parameters, summarizes the high performance and low cost dimensions of the structure.
TABLE 2______________________________________Pixel Design Parameters High LowSymbol Definition Performance Cost Units______________________________________A Pixel area 2500 2500 .mu.m.sup.2L Pixel length 50 50 .mu.mt.sub.b Bi-material layer thickness 0.2 0.4 .mu.mt.sub.r Release layer thickness 0.5 0.5 .mu.mt.sub.c Cap layer thickness 0.3 0.5 .mu.ms Spacer 1 3 .mu.mw.sub.s Support width 2 4 .mu.mt.sub.vn Absorber-via connect thickness 250 250 .ANG.V.sub.A Sensing voltage 10 10 Volt______________________________________
The voltage response of the pixel can be analyzed through the use of the equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 8. This circuit contains a sense capacitor C.sub.1, a reference capacitor C.sub.2, and the capacitance, C.sub.3, at the gate node of the source follower amplifier (not shown). The voltage at the gate, V.sub.G is given by equation (7):
V.sub.G =(C.sub.1 V.sub.A +C.sub.2 V.sub.B)/(C.sub.1 +C.sub.2 +C.sub.3)(7)
The differential response (.DELTA.V.sub.G /.DELTA.C.sub.1) due to a change in the sense capacitor is given by equation (8):
.DELTA.V.sub.G /.DELTA.C.sub.1 =((C.sub.2 +C.sub.3)V.sub.A -C.sub.2 V.sub.B)/(C.sub.1 +C.sub.2 +C.sub.3).sup.2 (8)
If C.sub.1 V.sub.A =-C.sub.2 V.sub.B so that V.sub.G =0 when the pixel is at its nominal temperature, then .DELTA.V.sub.G /.DELTA.C.sub.1 =V.sub.A /C.sub.T where C.sub.T =C.sub.1 +C.sub.2 +C.sub.3 is the total capacitance at the node.
The sensor capacitance is given by equation (9):
C.sub.1 =.epsilon..sub.o A/x.sub.e (9)
where A is the pixel area and x.sub.e is the equivalent thickness of the capacitor gap, and x.sub.e =t.sub.r +t.sub.c /.epsilon..sub.c where t.sub.r is the thickness of the release layer, and t.sub.c and .epsilon..sub.c are the thickness and relative permittivity of the cap layer (the dielectric overcoat layer 520 in FIG. 5(a)), respectively. The change in capacitance induced by a displacement .DELTA.x is given by equation (10):
.DELTA.C.sub.1 =-.epsilon..sub.o A.DELTA.x/x.sup.2 =-C.sub.1 .DELTA.x/x(10)
Therefore, the voltage response to a change in temperature, R.sub.v =.DELTA.V.sub.G /.DELTA.T, at the detector is given by equation (11):
R.sub.v =(.DELTA.V.sub.G /.DELTA.C.sub.1)(.DELTA.C.sub.1 /.DELTA.x)(.DELTA.x/.DELTA.T) (11)
The results are shown in Table 3.
TABLE 3______________________________________Pixel Performance High LowSymbol Definition Performance Cost Units______________________________________L.sub.p L - s absorber length 49 47 .mu.mW.sub.p5s absorber widths 37 19 .mu.mA.sub.p5s (L - s))4w.sub.s 1813 893 .mu.m.sup.2 absorber area.function. A.sub.p /A fill factor 0.725 0.357x.sub.c t.sub.r + t.sub.c /.epsilon..sub.SiN 0.54 0.567 .mu.mC.sub.1 .epsilon..sub.o A.sub.p /x.sub.c sense capacitance 29.7 31.2 fFL.sub.b, L.sub.s L.sub.p bi-material and support length 49 47 .mu.m.DELTA.x/.DELTA.T K.DELTA..mu.L.sub.b.sup.2 /t.sub.b 0.174 0.08 .mu.m/KC.sub.T 3C.sub.1 total capacitance 89.1 93.6 fFR.sub.v V.sub.A K.DELTA..alpha.L.sub.b.sup.2 /3.chi..sub.e t.sub.b 1.078 0.472 V/K______________________________________
The pixel thermal response can be analyzed through the aid of the equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 9. The radiation resistance from the scene to the detector is R.sub.thr. The radiation resistance between the detector and the substrate is R'.sub.thr. The lumped thermal capacitance, C.sub.th, is proportional to the mass, specific heat, and the volume of the absorbing element that consists of the aluminum plate and a layer of silver black that has an area density of 50 .mu.gm/cm.sup.2 (described in Lang, W,. et al. "Absorbing Layers for Thermal Infrared Radiation", Sensors & Actuators A, 34, (1992) 243-248, and which is hereby incorporated by reference for its teachings on absorbing layers). The total conductive thermal resistance to the silicon substrate is given by equation (12):
R.sub.c =R.sub.bm .parallel.R.sub.bi +R.sub.sm .parallel.R.sub.si(12)
where R.sub.bm is in parallel with R.sub.bi and R.sub.sm is in parallel with R.sub.si, and R.sub.a, R.sub.bi, R.sub.bm, R.sub.si, and R.sub.sm are the equivalent lumped thermal resistances of the absorber element (neglected), the insulator and metal layers of the bi-material element, and the insulator and metal layers of the support isolation element, respectively. Note that the metal layer of the support element is the absorber-via metal interconnect. The results are shown in Table 4.
TABLE 4______________________________________Pixel Thermal Performance High LowSymbol Definition Performance Cost Units______________________________________R.sub.thr 1/4.sigma..epsilon..sub.b L.sub.p W.sub.p B.sub.i T.sup.3 1.32 .times. 10.sup.8 1.83 .times. 10.sup.8 K/WattR.sub.thr 1/4.sigma..epsilon..sub.b L.sub.p W.sub.p B.sub.i T.sup.3 0 1.65 .times. 10.sup.9 K/WattC.sub.th (p.sub.Al t.sub.s c.sub.Al + m.sub.Ag c.sub.Ag)L.sub.p W.sub.p 1.66 .times. 10.sup.8 1.25 .times. 10.sup.8 joule/KR.sub.si L.sub.s /2K.sub.SiN t.sub.s w.sub.s 1.22 .times. 10.sup.7 2.94 .times. 10.sup.6 K/WattR.sub.sm L.sub.s /2K.sub.Ti t.sub.va w.sub.s 4.25 .times. 10.sup.7 2.04 .times. 10.sup.7 K/WattR.sub.bi L.sub.b /2K.sub.Si t.sub.s w.sub.s 1.22 .times. 10.sup.7 2.94 .times. 10.sup.6 K/WattR.sub.brn L.sub.b /2K.sub.Al t.sub.s w.sub.s 4.65 .times. 10.sup.5 1.15 .times. 10.sup.5 K/WattR.sub.c 9.96 .times. 10.sup.6 2.67 .times. 10.sup.6 K/WattT.sub.th (R.sub.c .parallel.R.sub.thr)C.sub.th 16.5 3.34 msec______________________________________
In the fabrication of the surface micromachined pixels in an IC facility, the newly developed design rules are applied to generate a mask set that contains two distinct pixel structures. The surface is integrated and pixels are fabricated in an IC facility.
More than a dozen possible pixel configurations, three of which are shown in FIGS. 11, 12 and 15, have been postulated. The variation in shading in FIGS. 11 and 12 show the finite element analysis calculated temperature distribution and mechanical movement due to heating at the absorber. Note that the absorber and bi-material elements are nearly at constant temperature. It is not possible to experimentally explore all of these structures at a reasonable time or cost. Therefore, the modeling has been performed on a few most promising structures. For example, the two pixel structures shown in FIGS. 11 and 12 work well. The performance of the cantilever style pixel with folded support of FIG. 11 and bridge style pixel with extended support of FIG. 12 is summarized in Table 5. FIG. 15 shows a symmetric bridge style pixel.
TABLE 5______________________________________FEM Modeling ResultsParameter Cantilever Bridge Units______________________________________Spacer 1 1 .mu.mSupport width 3 3 .mu.mSupport thickness 0.4 0.4 .mu.mSensitivity 0.072 0.052 .mu.m/KThermal resistance 1.9 .times. 10.sup.7 1.7 .times. 10.sup.7 K/WattThermal time constant 14.9 13.5 msec1st natural frequency 18.2 27.1 kHz2nd natural frequency 99.6 60.8 kHzSpring constant 0.038 0.087 N/mEffective dynamic mass 2.9 .times. 10.sup.-9 3.0 .times. 10.sup.-9 grams______________________________________
Other embodiments of the infrared capacitance sensor are also possible. These include (1) a bridge structure with a bi-material element for increased structural stability, (2) a bridge structure without a bi-material element, relying only on the thermal expansion of the "beam buckling concept" in which the two ends are pinned for increased process simplicity, and (3) variations of the structure where the support arms may be parallel or co-linear with the bi-material element. An example of a bridge structure without a bi-material element is shown in FIG. 15.
Infrared Imaging Array
The room temperature IR imaging array of the present invention involves standard IC processes. The present invention achieves NE.DELTA.T in the range of 1 to 10 mK even after accounting for imperfect isolation, limited spectral bandwidth, imperfect absorption, read out transistor noise, and mechanical compromises.
A readout multiplexer for a focal plane imager is made up of an array of the exemplary capacitance sensors. The multiplexer may be fabricated using a standard single-poly double-level-metal CMOS process sequence, on which the capacitance sensor is then formed using planar deposition and etching techniques. Since the sensor is capacitively coupled to the readout multiplexer, no direct electrical connection is required by a capacitive voltage divider circuit which includes a compensation capacitor (with approximately the same value as the sensing capacitor) and in which the sensor and compensator plates are driven with complementary, bi-polar, high-voltage pulsed bias waveforms in order to maximize the signal voltage component and cancel the dc bias components. The capacitive divider is coupled to a low-noise MOS amplifier (e.g., a source follower) located in each pixel. Horizontal and vertical CMOS scanning registers are used to address and read out the signal from each pixel amplifier.
The manufacturing technology required for the readout multiplexer is a standard CMOS 1-.mu.m integrated circuit technology. Off-chip electronics have been developed in order to demonstrate the operation of the bi-material detectors as an imaging system. The required manufacturing technology is standard printed circuit board technology.
Since what is being sensed is the relative position of the capacitor plates and since this is not affected by the readout method, the readout noise may be reduced by performing N reads on the same pixel. This technique can reduce noise by a factor of .sqroot.N. Tradeoffs exist, however, between resolution, field size and SNR. For example, a small field of the wide field of view used for tracking targets may be read multiple times to increase the local SNR.
The read out circuit is a CMOS device that is integrated on a silicon substrate supporting the micromachined IR detector pixels. FIG. 13 shows a schematic diagram of the sensing capacitor C1 and the readout circuit and FIG. 14 shows an illustrative timing diagram. A current mirror consisting of PMOS devices 740 and 742 provides the pixel load current of 0.4 mA for the PMOS source follower 752 located in the selected pixel. This current may be set via an external resistor 746 which has a nominal value of 40 k.OMEGA.. In the IR pixel, C1 represents the thermally sensitive variable capacitance 760. The top plate of capacitor 760 is connected to the readout circuit by a thin film metal resistor 764. The other components shown in FIG. 13 are integrated in the silicon substrate. A column driver circuit is used to multiplex the common signals V.sub.A and V.sub.B onto one column. This circuit generates the signals COL.sub.-- VA(X) 770 and COL.sub.-- VB(X) 772 under the control of the output COL.sub.-- SELECT(X) 730 which is derived from a conventional horizontal scanning CMOS shift register (not shown). The ROW.sub.-- SELECT(Y) line 710 is generated by a conventional vertical scanning CMOS shift register (not shown). This signal is inverted to generate the ROW.sub.-- SEL.sub.-- N(Y) signal 700 so that the pixels in unselected rows are always in a state with the sense node V.sub.G 775 clamped to a reset potential V.sub.R 776 which is close to ground. The COL.sub.-- READ(X) line 720 is a vertical signal line which is multiplexed to a common signal bus via an NMOS transistor 780 and is further buffered by a PMOS source follower 744 to provide an analog signal output SIGOUT. The output SIGOUT is provided to a CDS circuit 800 which includes a clamp circuit 802, an op-amp voltage follower 804, a sample-and-hold circuit 806, and an op-amp voltage follower 808.
The readout architecture allows the imager array to easily be partitioned into N multiple vertical sections with separate outputs, thereby making it possible to make design tradeoffs between improved readout noise level and more signal outputs. To describe the detailed operation of the readout multiplexer, assume an imager of 320.times.244 format operating at 30FPS having two 1.25 MHz output ports derived from alternating columns.
In nonselected rows of the imager array, the ROW.sub.-- SELECT(Y) line 710 is low (e.g., 0 V) and the ROW.sub.-- SEL.sub.-- N(Y) line 700 is high (e.g., +5 V). This turns on the NMOS reset transistor 750 which clamps the common sensing node V.sub.G 775 between capacitors 760 and 762 to the reset potential V.sub.R 776. Transistor 750 is a minimum geometry device (e.g., W=1 .mu.m and L=1 .mu.m) which has a source-drain channel resistance of approximately 5 k.OMEGA. under these biased conditions. The ROW.sub.-- SELECT(Y) line 710 is connected to the gates of the MOS transistors 754 and 756 and turns both of these devices off. Transistor 754 is used to isolate the COL.sub.-- READ(X) signal line 720 from the pixel PMOS source follower device 752. Transistor 756 is used to isolate the top plate of capacitor 760 from the COL.sub.-- VA(X) line 770.
The readout of signals from two pixels (one pixel is shown in FIG. 13) in a selected row is described below with respect to FIG. 14. At the beginning of the readout period, t.sub.1, the column select line 730, COL.sub.-- SELECT(1), of the first pixel, switches to a high level which connects the signal bus and load current source 742 to the column read line 720, COL.sub.-- READ(1), of the first pixel, as well as to the pixel PMOS source follower 744. The row select line 710, ROW.sub.-- SELECT(1), remains high and the inverted row select line 700, ROW.sub.-- SEL.sub.-- N(1), remains low for an entire line time during which all the pixels in a row are read out. The signal output at t.sub.1, represents the reference level (SIGOUT=V.sub.ref) which is used during the clamp period by the external CDS processor 800. The next operation is to pulse the signals V.sub.A and V.sub.B for the first pixel; namely, at time t.sub.2, COL.sub.--VA(1) switches from low to high and COL.sub.-- VB(1) switches from high to low. The transitions have relatively slow rise and fall times (about 50 ns) to limit the transient charge displacement current in the reference capacitors 762 located in unselected pixels on the same column. The complementary nature of the V.sub.A and V.sub.B pulses cancels the first order clock transient coupled onto the sensing node while providing a signal component proportional to the variation of the detector capacitor 760 of the form dV.sub.out =dC1*(V.sub.A /CT) where CT is the total node capacitance on the sensing node. After a settling time of about 200 ns, the signal is sampled at time t.sub.3 (SIGOUT=V.sub.ref +V.sub.p1) by the external CDS circuit 800 and the V.sub.A and V.sub.B pulses return to their respective original levels. The width of the V.sub.A and V.sub.B pulses is minimized in order to limit the mechanical motion induced in the detector capacitor top plate due to electrostatic attractive forces present during the sensing pulse.
After the signal for the first pixel has been sampled and processed by the CDS circuit 800, the signal for the second pixel is read out. At time t.sub.4, the column select line 730 of the first pixel, COL.sub.-- SELECT(1), switches low and the column select line 730 of the second pixel, COL.sub.-- SELECT(2), switches high. At time t.sub.5, the signals V.sub.A and V.sub.B are pulsed for the second pixel; namely, COL.sub.-- VA(2) switches from low to high and COL.sub.-- VB(2) switches from high to low. After a settling time of about 200 ns, the signal of the second pixel is sampled at time t.sub.6 (SIGOUT=V.sub.ref 30 V.sub.p2) by the external CDS circuit 800 and the V.sub.A and V.sub.B pulses return to their respective original levels.
The operation of the CDS circuit 800 with respect to the first pixel in the row is now described. Transmission gates 814 and 816 are represented by switches in FIG. 13. A circuit representation of an exemplary transmission gate 810 for use in the present invention is shown in FIG. 18.
The switching cycles of clocks SW1 and SW2 which control transmission gates 814 and 816, respectively, and the magnitude of the CDS input (SIGOUT) and output signals during the clock cycles are shown in FIG. 14. An input signal of V.sub.ref is held by capacitor C.sub.A to establish a clamp level in the clamp circuit 802 when SW1 closes transmission gate 814 at time t.sub.c. The stored signal remains at this level after SW1 opens transmission gate 814 at time t.sub.2. After SW1 opens transmission gate 814, and SW2 closes transmission gate 816 at time t.sub.s, the held input signal, V.sub.ref, is subtracted from the current input signal, V.sub.ref +V.sub.p1, to give an output signal of V.sub.p1. This output signal is held in the sample-and-hold circuit 806 and, so, remains V.sub.p1 after SW2 opens transmission gate 816 at time t.sub.3. This signal does not change until SW2 closes transmission gate 816 again. A similar analysis can be performed for the second pixel in the row.
A preliminary analysis of the readout noise sources in this design indicates that the predominant noise source is the thermal and trapping noise associated with the pixel source follower transistor 752. The kTC noise generated by resetting the sense node capacitance as well as the 1/f noise in the pixel source follower can be suppressed by correlated double sampling. The thermal noise generated in the transistor switches 754 and 780 is negligible compared to the pixel source follower because these devices are operating in their linear region as switches with low Vds levels and have a much lower channel resistance. Using a conservative value for the CDS clamp and sample-and-hold time constants of 25 ns, the noise bandwidth of the CDS circuit is about 6.4 MHz. The measured noise level of the PMOS transistor used in the design of a Sarnoff 640.times.480 element PtSi imager which is similar in size to the proposed pixel source follower is shown in FIG. 10. At frequencies above the 1/f knee of 0.1 MHz, the equivalent input gate noise for the PMOS transistor is about 10 nV/.sqroot.Hz. Integrating this value over a noise bandwidth of 6.4 MHz results in a total estimated noise voltage of 25 .mu.V-rms. The results of the NE.DELTA.T calculation is given in Table 6.
TABLE 6______________________________________Thermal Performance High LowSymbol Definition Performance Cost Units______________________________________.epsilon..sub.b Bottom emissivity 0 0.1.epsilon..sub.t Top emissivity 1 0.9.lambda. Upper wavelength 30 14 .mu.mB.sub..lambda. Spectral bandwidth factor 1.328 2.6491 + .epsilon..sub.b /.epsilon..sub.t Bottom radiation effect 1 1.111 + R.sub.thr /R.sub.c Thermal shunting due to 13.2 68.5 support element.beta. Thermal transfer function 70.1 806.DELTA.T.sub.rms Photon shot noise 31.6 27.3 .mu.KNE.DELTA.T Thermal 1.91 22 mKNE.DELTA.T Amplifier 1.75 20.1 mKNE.DELTA.T Total 2.59 29.8 mK______________________________________
Shot noise is common to all IR imagers and limits the ultimate capability of an uncooled IR imager. Table 7 shows the specification of an ideal imager which has perfect thermal isolation from the supporting substrate. Table 8 shows the ultimate performance based on photon shot noise.
TABLE 7______________________________________Ideal Imager SpecificationsQuantity Value Units______________________________________Frame rate 30 1/secThermal time constant, .tau..sub.th 10 msecAbsorber top side emissivity, .epsilon. 1Absorber bottom side emissivity 0IR spectral band 1 to 100 .mu.mFill factor, f 100 %Pixel area, A 2500 .mu.m.sup.2F number, F 1______________________________________
TABLE 8__________________________________________________________________________Ultimate Performance LimitQuantity Formula Value Units__________________________________________________________________________Radiation thermal resistance R.sub.thr = 1/4gerfAT.sup.3 6.53 .times. 10.sup.7 W/KThermal Capacitance C.sub.th = .tau..sub.th /R.sub.thr 1.53 .times. 10.sup.-10 J/KPhoton shot noise ##STR1## 9.09 .times. 10.sup.-5 KOptical-thermal transfer coefficient .beta. = dT.sub.s /dT.sub.d = 4F.sup.2 B.sub..lambda. 4NE.DELTA.T ##STR2## 0.36 mK__________________________________________________________________________
T.sub.s, is the scene temperature, T.sub.d is the detector temperature and B.sub..lambda. is the inverse of the fractional portion of the spectral excitance of the scene received by the absorber. All approaches to an uncooled IR imager are limited by the factors shown. However, uncooled IR imagers differ in the level of thermal isolation, emissivity of the absorber, B.sub..lambda. and sensitivity of the thermal sensing mechanism. The first two mechanisms affect the optical thermal transfer coefficient, given by equation (13):
.beta.=4F.sup.2 B.sub..lambda. (1+.sup.R.sbsp.thr /.sub.R.sbsb.th)(1+.sup..epsilon..sbsp.b /.sub..epsilon..sbsb.t)(13)
which prefixes all of the contributors to NE.DELTA.T including that of the sensor, given by equation (14): ##EQU1##
There are two ways improve imager NE.DELTA.T: 1) reduce .beta. by increasing isolation and IR absorption, and 2) increase sensitivity, dV/dT. Methods to reduce .beta. are common to all imager approaches, but the singular advantage of the current approach over other approaches utilizing thermistors or ferroelectrics is the sensitivity of the detection mechanism. Here, an order of magnitude improvement is shown without having to discover new materials.
A unique feature of the IR detector readout multiplexer is that gain and offset variations in the signal read from each pixel may be compensated directly on the imager by modulating the amplitude of the V.sub.A and V.sub.B pulses applied to the pixels. The modulation may be implemented by driving the high level of V.sub.A and the low level of V.sub.B with the output of two D/A converters. The digital input data for the D/A converters is obtained from RAM or ROM stored offset values for each pixel. Therefore, the local nonuniformity in offset can be canceled. Similarly, since the detector response is proportional to V.sub.A, the overall gain can also be adjusted. These corrections are desirable because they allow the device to retain a good dynamic range while achieving high sensitivity.
The signal voltage, V.sub.out, produced at the gate of the pixel source follower may be calculated from the superposition components due to V.sub.A and V.sub.B, as shown in equation (15):
V.sub.out =(C1V.sub.A +C2V.sub.B)/CT (15)
where CT is the total capacitance on V.sub.out.
As an example of a gain offset correction, if the D/A converter modulation on the V.sub.A and V.sub.B amplitude is chosen such that dV.sub.B =-dV.sub.A (C1/C2), then a gain change of dV.sub.A /V.sub.A will result without introducing any change in the offset voltage.
FIGS. 15 and 16 show a CMOS design layout at different zoom levels for an exemplary CMOS readout circuit for an array of symmetric bridge style pixels. FIG. 17 shows a CMOS design layout for a cantilevered style pixel which can be incorporated into an array of pixels similar to that shown in FIG. 15.
The key to calculating NE.DELTA.T is the determination of the change of detector temperature with respect to a change in scene temperature (described in Jensen, A. S., "Limitations to Room Temperature IR Imaging Systems", SPIE Vol. 2020 Infrared Technology XIX (1993), and which is hereby incorporated by reference for its teachings on NE.DELTA.T). Defining the thermal transfer coefficient as .beta.=dT.sub.s /dT.sub.d where T.sub.s and T.sub.d are the scene and detector temperatures, respectively, NE.DELTA.T for any system can be computed from the quadrature addition of individual contributions, as shown in equation (16):
NE.DELTA.T.sub.k =.beta.N.sub.rms /S.sub.k (16)
where N.sub.rms is the rms value of the noise source associated with S.sub.K, the signal sensitivity per K at the detector. For example, the component due to amplification electronics is given by equation (17): ##EQU2## where .sqroot.v.sup.2.sub.a is the rms value of the equivalent input noise voltage to the source follower amplifier. Similarly, equation (18) gives the thermal component of NE.DELTA.T: ##EQU3## where .sqroot..DELTA.T.sup.2.sub.n is the thermal fluctuation of photon shot noise; in this case, the signal sensitivity coefficient is composed of several factors such as the imaging optics, the spectral bandwidth, and the thermal shunting due to parasitic thermal resistance to the ambient. Thus, as stated above, the thermal transfer coefficient is given by equation (13):
.beta.=4F.sup.2 B.sub..lambda. (1+R.sub.thr /R.sub.c)(1+.epsilon..sub.b /.epsilon..sub.t) (13)
where 4F.sup.2 is due to the imaging optics. If the absorption in the path between the source and the absorber and the spectral efficiency of the absorber are modeled as a rectangular spectral band pass function, then the spectral bandwidth factor is given by equation (19): ##EQU4## where the lower wavelength limit is set at 8 .mu.m due to atmospheric absorption. The upper wavelength Limit will be set by the absorber spectral properties and IR lens used by the imager. B.sub..lambda. is assumed to be relatively independent of temperature. The photon shot noise can be shown to be given by equation (20): ##EQU5## (described in Hanson, C., "Uncooled Thermal Imaging at Texas Instruments", SPIE Vol. 2020 Infrared Technology XIX (1993), and which is hereby incorporated by reference for its teachings on shot noise).
When the capacitance is sensed by the voltage pulse of magnitude V.sub.A, the absorber plate is attracted to the matching electrically conductive (e.g., metal) plate buried in the substrate with a force equal to F=C.sub.1 V.sub.A.sup.2 /x and begins to move towards the substrate surface. This behavior can be modeled using a lumped element model as given by equation (21):
md.sup.2 x/dt.sup.2 =.epsilon.AV.sub.A.sup.2 /x.sup.2 -k(x.sub.o -x)(21)
where m and k are the lumped element equivalent mass and spring constant of the mechanical system. When the pulse is removed 0.1 .mu.sec later, a significant amount of energy has been imparted to the plate consisting of mechanical energy due to the motion of the plate and potential energy due to the elastic bending of the support. In the absence of any damping action, this results in the detector plate vibrating freely until the next sense pulse. An extreme estimate of this effect can be made by ignoring the nonlinearities and the spring constant. The approximate displacement and energy imparted during the sense pulse application are given by equations (22) and (23), respectively:
d=(C.sub.1 V.sub.A.sup.2 /2mx)t.sub.p.sup.2 (22)
E=(C.sub.1 V.sub.A.sup.2 /x).sup.2 t.sub.p.sup.2 /2m (23)
Since there is no natural mechanism to quench these vibrations, the mechanical system is coupled back into the electronic system during the reset period. In this case, the electromechanical system will follow equation (24): ##EQU6##
where I.sub.c is given by equation (25):
I.sub.C =d(C(V.sub.R -RI.sub.C))/dt (25)
An estimate of the behavior described is shown in Table 9. The residual resistance of the reset transistor and the series resistance in the support element combine to dissipate the stored energy.
TABLE 9______________________________________Mechanical BehaviorSymbol Definition High Performance Low Cost Units______________________________________m (.rho..sub.Al t.sub.s +m.sub.Ag)A.sub.p 1.89 .times. 10.sup.-9 1.41 .times. 10.sup.-9 gmt.sub.p sense pulse width 0.1 0.2 .mu.secd detector plate 0.015 0.061 .mu.m displacementE energy imparted 8.0 .times. 10.sup.-14 2.64 .times. 10.sup.-13 jouleV.sub.R reset voltage 0.1 0.1 VoltR reset circuit 1000 1000 .OMEGA. resistanceV.sub.R.sup.2 /R initial power 10.sup.-5 10.sup.-5 Watt dissipation______________________________________
Higher aspect ratios and further improvement in NE.DELTA.T can be achieved if the usual 4:3 display characteristic is ignored. For example, a 2:1 aspect ratio pixel with the 2500 .mu.m.sup.2 area has sides 70.7 .mu.m and 35.3 .mu.m and will yield a reduction in NE.DELTA.T by a factor of 2.83.
Although illustrated and described herein with reference to certain specific embodiments, the present invention is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the spirit of the invention.
Claims
  • 1. A transducer formed on a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate comprising:
  • a first electrically conductive plate formed on the substrate substantially parallel to a second electrically conductive plate along the xy plane;
  • a dielectric layer formed on the first plate, the first and second electrically conductive plates and the dielectric layer forming a capacitor;
  • a bi-material element comprising a top layer and a bottom layer;
  • an absorber element formed on a portion of the second electrically conductive plate;
  • a thermal conduction layer connecting the second electrically conductive plate and the bi-material element; and
  • a thermal isolation support element having a first side which is coupled to said bi-material element and a second side which is coupled to the substrate, the thermal isolation support element anchoring the bi-material element, the absorber element, the second electrically conductive plate and the thermal conduction layer to the substrate,
  • wherein the bi-material element, the absorber element, the second electrically conductive plate and the thermal conduction layer form a deflectable member.
  • 2. A transducer of claim 1, wherein each of said first and second electrically conductive plates are formed from one of a metal, polysilicon and indium-tin oxide.
  • 3. An infrared sensor formed on a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate comprising:
  • a reference capacitor comprising a top electrically conductive plate and a bottom electrically conductive plate;
  • a dielectric layer formed on the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor;
  • a sense capacitor comprising a top electrically conductive plate and a bottom electrically conductive plate, said top electrically conductive plate being formed above said dielectric layer and said bottom electrically conductive plate being the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor;
  • a bi-material element comprising a top layer and a bottom layer;
  • an absorber element formed on a portion of the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor;
  • a thermal conduction layer connecting the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor and the bi-material element; and
  • a thermal isolation support element having a first side which is coupled to said bi-material element and a second side which is coupled to the substrate for anchoring the bi-material element, the absorber element, the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor and the thermal conduction layer to the substrate,
  • wherein the bi-material element, the absorber element, the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor and the thermal conduction layer form a deflectable member.
  • 4. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein each of said top and bottom electrically conductive plates of the sense capacitor and said top and bottom electrically conductive plates of the reference capacitor are formed from one of a metal, polysilicon and indium-tin oxide.
  • 5. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein the bottom layer of the bi-material element is co-planar with the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor.
  • 6. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein the top electrically conductive plate and bottom electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor and the top electrically conductive plate and bottom electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor are aluminum.
  • 7. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein the top layer and the bottom layer of the bi-material element have respectively different thermal expansion coefficients.
  • 8. An infrared sensor of claim 7, wherein the thermal coefficient of expansion of the bottom layer of the bi-material element is greater than the thermal coefficient of expansion of the top layer of the bi-material element.
  • 9. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein the absorber element has an emissivity of approximately 1.
  • 10. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein the absorber element is one of black platinum and carbon.
  • 11. An infrared sensor of claim 3, further comprising capacitance measurement means for measuring the capacitance of the sense capacitor.
  • 12. An infrared sensor of claim 3, wherein the deflectable member changes its position in response to a temperature change due to absorbed incident thermal radiation.
  • 13. An infrared imager array including a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate, comprising:
  • a plurality of transducers arranged in rows and columns, each of said transducers separately comprising:
  • a first electrically conductive plate formed on the substrate substantially parallel to a second electrically conductive plate along the xy plane;
  • a dielectric layer formed on the first plate, the first and second electrically conductive plates and the dielectric layer forming a capacitor;
  • a bi-material element comprising a top layer and a bottom layer;
  • an absorber element formed on a portion of the second electrically conductive plate;
  • a thermal conduction layer connecting the second electrically conductive plate and the bi-material element; and
  • a thermal isolation support element having a first side coupled is to the bi-material element and a second side coupled to the substrate for anchoring the bi-material element, the absorber element, the second electrically conductive plate and the thermal conduction layer to the substrate,
  • wherein the bi-material element, the absorber element, the second electrically conductive plate and the thermal conduction layer form a deflectable member; and
  • a readout circuit comprising a plurality of source follower amplifiers, each source follower amplifier respectively coupled to the second electrically conductive plate of each transducer.
  • 14. An infrared imager array of claim 13, wherein said first and second electrically conductive plates are formed from one of a metal, polysilicon and indium-tin oxide.
  • 15. An infrared imager array of claim 13, wherein said readout circuit further comprises:
  • a reset transistor for clamping the first electrically conductive plate in each transducer to a reset potential;
  • a current mirror for providing a pixel load current to one of the plurality of source follower amplifiers;
  • a column driver circuit for providing a potential to each respective column of transducers, comprising a controller connected to the second electrically conductive plate for applying the potential to the transducer; and
  • a horizontal scanning shift register and a vertical scanning shift register for selecting one of the plurality of transducers to read out.
  • 16. An infrared imager array of claim 15, wherein said readout circuit further comprises:
  • a correlated double sampling (CDS) circuit, connected to said column driver circuit, for sampling and holding an output signal of each source follower amplifier and for suppressing kTC noise and 1/f noise of the transducers.
  • 17. An infrared imager array of claim 16, wherein each output signal is readout twice during a clock period.
  • 18. An infrared imager array including a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate, comprising:
  • a plurality of infrared sensors arranged in rows and columns, each of said infrared sensors separately comprising:
  • a reference capacitor comprising a top electrically conductive plate and a bottom electrically conductive plate;
  • a dielectric layer formed on the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor;
  • a sense capacitor comprising a top electrically conductive plate and a bottom electrically conductive plate, said top electrically conductive plate being formed above said dielectric layer and said bottom electrically conductive plate being the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor;
  • a bi-material element comprising a top layer and a bottom layer;
  • an absorber element formed on a portion of the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor;
  • a thermal conduction layer connecting the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor and the bi-material element; and
  • a thermal isolation support element, a first side contacting the bi-material element and a second side contacting the substrate for anchoring the bi-material element, the absorber element, the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor and the thermal conduction layer to the substrate,
  • wherein the bi-material element, the absorber element, the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor and the thermal conduction layer form a deflectable member; and
  • a readout circuit comprising at least a plurality of source follower amplifiers, each source follower amplifier respectively coupled to the top electrically conductive plate of each sense capacitor.
  • 19. An infrared imager array of claim 18, wherein said readout circuit further comprises:
  • a reset transistor for clamping the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor in each capacitance sensor to a reset potential;
  • a current mirror for providing a pixel load current to the plurality of source follower amplifiers;
  • a column driver circuit for multiplexing a first potential and a second potential onto each respective column of capacitance sensors, comprising:
  • a first controller connected to the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor for applying the first potential to the sense capacitor; and
  • a second controller connected to the bottom electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor for applying the second potential to the reference capacitor, the first and second potentials having respectively different polarities; and
  • a horizontal scanning shift register and a vertical scanning shift register for selecting one of the sense capacitors to be read out.
  • 20. An infrared imager array of claim 19, wherein said readout circuit further comprises:
  • a correlated double sampling circuit, connected to said column driver circuit, for sampling and holding an output signal of each source follower amplifier and for suppressing kTC noise and 1/f noise of the sense capacitors.
  • 21. An infrared imager array of claim 20, wherein each output signal is readout twice during a clock period.
  • 22. A method of fabricating a transducer on a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate comprising the steps of:
  • forming a first electrically conductive plate on the surface of the integrated circuit substrate;
  • depositing a dielectric layer;
  • depositing a release layer over the dielectric layer;
  • forming a connection layer over a first portion of the release layer;
  • forming a bi-material element over a portion of the connection layer and over a second portion of the release layer;
  • forming a second electrically conductive plate over a third portion of the release layer;
  • forming a via through the release layer and the dielectric layer, said via contacting the connection layer and avoiding contact with the bi-material element;
  • forming an absorber layer over the second electrically conductive plate;
  • forming a thermal conduction layer between the second electrically conductive plate and the bi-material element;
  • forming a thermal isolation support element over the connection layer and the via and contacting the bi-material element; and
  • chemically removing the release layer.
  • 23. A method of fabricating an infrared sensor on a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate comprising the steps of:
  • forming a first capacitive electrically conductive plate on the surface of the integrated circuit substrate;
  • forming an insulating layer over the first capacitive electrically conductive plate;
  • forming a second capacitive electrically conductive plate over the insulating layer;
  • depositing a dielectric layer:
  • depositing a release layer over the dielectric layer:
  • forming a connection layer over a first portion of the release layer;
  • forming a bi-material element over a portion of the connection layer and over a second portion of the release layer;
  • forming a third capacitive electrically conductive plate over a third portion of the release layer;
  • forming a via through the release layer and the dielectric layer, said via contacting the connection layer and avoiding contact with the bi-material element;
  • forming an absorber layer over the third capacitive electrically conductive plate;
  • forming a thermal conduction layer between the third capacitive electrically conductive plate and the bi-material element;
  • forming a thermal isolation support element over the connection layer and the via and contacting the bi-material element; and
  • chemically removing the release layer.
  • 24. A method of reading an output signal provided by an infrared imager array which comprises a plurality of infrared capacitance sensors, each capacitance sensor comprising a sense capacitor and a reference capacitor coupled to a source follower amplifier, the method comprising the steps of:
  • clamping a top electrically conductive plate of each reference capacitor to a reset potential;
  • providing a load current to each source follower amplifier;
  • selecting, using a horizontal scanning shift register and a vertical scanning shift register, one capacitance sensor from the plurality of capacitance sensors to be read out; and
  • driving the sense capacitor of the selected capacitance sensor with a first potential and driving the reference capacitor of the selected capacitance sensor with a second potential, said first potential differing in polarity from said second potential;
  • reading a difference in potential between said sense capacitor and said reference capacitor as said output signal.
  • 25. A method of readout of an infrared imager array of claim 24 further comprising the step of:
  • reducing the 1/f noise and dc offset of the capacitance sensors by using a correlated double sampling (CDS) readout circuit which uses switching of the first potential and the second potential.
  • 26. A method of readout of an infrared imager array of claim 25, further comprising the step of:
  • two times oversampling the output of the CDS readout circuit.
  • 27. A infrared sensor formed on a monolithic semiconductor integrated circuit substrate comprising:
  • a reference capacitor comprising a top electrically conductive plate and a bottom electrically conductive plate;
  • a dielectric layer formed on the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor;
  • a sense capacitor comprising a top electrically conductive plate and a bottom electrically conductive plate, said top electrically conductive plate being formed above said dielectric layer and said bottom electrically conductive plate being the top electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor;
  • an absorber element formed on a portion of the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor;
  • a thermal conduction layer connecting the top electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor to the absorber element, a thermal isolation support element having a first side which is coupled to said thermal conduction layer and a second side which is coupled to the substrate for anchoring the absorber element, the second electrically conductive plate and the thermal conduction layer to the substrate,
  • wherein the absorber element, the second electrically conductive plate and the thermal conduction layer form a deflectable member.
  • 28. An infrared sensor of claim 27, wherein the top electrically conductive plate and bottom electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor and the top electrically conductive plate and bottom electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor are formed from one of a metal, polysilicon and indium-tin oxide.
  • 29. An infrared sensor of claim 27, wherein the top electrically conductive plate and bottom electrically conductive plate of the reference capacitor and the top electrically conductive plate and bottom electrically conductive plate of the sense capacitor are aluminum.
  • 30. An infrared sensor of claim 27, wherein the absorber element has an emissivity of approximately 1.
  • 31. An infrared sensor of claim 27, wherein the absorber element is one of black platinum and carbon.
  • 32. An infrared sensor of claim 27, further comprising capacitance measurement means for measuring the capacitance of the sense capacitor.
  • 33. An infrared sensor of claim 27, wherein the deflectable member changes its position in response to a temperature change due to absorbed incident thermal radiation.
US Referenced Citations (24)
Number Name Date Kind
2482440 Rylsky Sep 1949
3384749 Golay May 1968
3657644 Beam et al. Apr 1972
4287441 Smith Sep 1981
4652766 Wang et al. Mar 1987
4659928 Tew Apr 1987
4660090 Hynecek Apr 1987
4675739 Catchpole et al. Jun 1987
4681440 Burke et al. Jul 1987
4683580 Matsunaga Jul 1987
4779004 Tew et al. Oct 1988
4786831 Morse et al. Nov 1988
4875098 Yamamoto et al. Oct 1989
4902886 Smisko Feb 1990
4943491 Norton et al. Jul 1990
5118946 Smith Jun 1992
5144133 Dudley et al. Sep 1992
5182624 Tran et al. Jan 1993
5290102 Kaiser et al. Mar 1994
5420428 Bullington et al. May 1995
5436452 Kenny et al. Jul 1995
5449908 Wadsworth et al. Sep 1995
5471515 Fossum et al. Nov 1995
5623147 Baert et al. Apr 1997
Non-Patent Literature Citations (9)
Entry
Optical and Infrared Detection Using Microcantilevers, Oden et al., Proceedings of the SPIE-The International Society for Optical Engineering Conference, 8-12 Apr. 1996, USA.
Oden et al., "Optical and Infrared Detection Using Microcantilevers," Department of Physics, University of Tennessee, 10 pgs. (undated).
S. Horn and R. Buser, "Night Vision and Electronic-Sensors Directorate", SPIE, vol. 2020, Infrared Technology XIX, pp. 304-321, Apr., 1993.
R.A. Wood, "Uncooled thermal imaging with monolithic silicon focal planes", SPIE, vol. 2020 Infrared Technology XIX, pp. 322-329, Apr., 1993.
C. Hanson, "Uncooled thermal imaging at Texas Instruments", SPIE vol. 2020 Infrared Technology XIX, pp. 330-339, Apr., 1993.
A. Jensen, "Limitations to Room Temperature IR Imaging Systems", SPIE, vol. 2020, Infrared XIX, pp. 340-350, Apr., 1993.
P. W. Kruse, "Uncooled IR Focal Plane Arrays", SPIE, vol. 2552, pp. 556-563, Jul., 1995.
W. Riethmuller and W. Benecke, "Thermally Excited Silicon Microactuators", IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, vol. 35, No. 6, pp. 758-763, Jun., 1988.
W. Lang, K. Kuhl and H. Sandmaier, "Absorbing layers for thermal infrared detectors", Sensors and Actuators, vol. A, No. 34, pp. 243-248, 1992.