The present disclosure relates generally to pressure sensing, and more specifically to pressure sensing in a harsh and/or electrically conducting pressurized medium at high temperature.
Diaphragm-based pressure sensors have been used for a variety of applications, where pressure exerted by a pressurized medium deflects a diaphragm, and sensing elements (such as strain gauges) coupled to the diaphragm sense the deflection and provide a signal correlating the deflection of the diaphragm with the amount of pressure.
There are two major types of pressure sensors. The first type is called a gauge pressure sensor, which measures pressure with respect to atmospheric pressure. The second type is called an absolute pressure sensor, which typically measures pressure with respect to a vacuum or zero pressure.
The gauge pressure sensor reads pressure with respect to atmospheric pressure. Atmospheric pressure varies over elevation and weather conditions. Thus, an absolute pressure sensor is often preferred where high accuracy is needed. For example, gauge pressure reading can change by 2-3 psi due to variations in atmospheric pressure. Thus, it can contribute to 2% to 3% error in the pressure reading if the full scale is 100 psi. Most new pressure sensor applications below 500 psi require +/−1% accuracy over operational temperature range, pressure range, and over the life of the product. Thus absolute pressure sensing is becoming very important in such applications.
Another problem encountered by pressure sensor 200 is failure to withstand high temperature because of electrical leakage in the sensing elements. Pressure sensor 200 uses piezoresistors as sensing elements (configured as a strain gauge). In a typical piezoresistive strain gauge, four piezoresistors are connected in a Wheatstone bridge configuration (see
In the previously discussed examples, a silicon diaphragm is used with integrated sensing elements. Silicon diaphragms and integrated sensing elements are popular because of ease of manufacturing using batch processing. However, depending on particular applications, in some conventional pressure sensors, the diaphragm and the sensor may be separated. This may be useful from a harsh pressurized media compatibility standpoint, as the diaphragm can be made of a corrosion-resistant material, such as stainless steel, and the sensing element can be made of silicon and can be kept isolated from pressurized medium exposure in a sealed chamber filled with an additional pressure transfer medium. One example of this type of sensor is referred to as an oil-filled sensor, where the pressure transfer medium is oil. This process can be relatively expensive, as the oil filling has to be performed in a vacuum. Errors arise in this approach because there is usually a small amount of residual air in the chamber after sealing. Thermal effects on the oil volume and air bubble also act to increase the error in the pressure reading. For reference, readers are encouraged to read U.S. Pat. No. 6,311,561 to Bang et. al.
In the case of a corrosion-resistant metal diaphragm, strain gauges are usually defined by depositing and patterning thin metal films on the diaphragm. For example, a titanium oxy nitride (TiON) strain gauge layer may be deposited on a silicon dioxide coated stainless steel diaphragm. However, typically, this type of strain gauge has lower gauge factors than micromachined silicon piezoresistive strain gauges, affecting pressure measurement accuracy.
By adopting a hybrid configuration, where a micromachined silicon piezoresistive strain gauge is bonded to an oxide-coated metal diaphragm, one can address the low gauge factor problem. However, the hybrid pressure sensor suffers from a thermal expansion mismatch problem between the sensing elements and the diaphragm. Moreover, the hybrid construction may not be efficient for batch processing. Adding a vacuum sealed cavity on top of the sensing elements can be prohibitively expensive. Even depositing oxide on the stainless-steel diaphragm requires an expensive fine polishing process. The operating temperature is typically limited to 140° C. in the hybrid pressure sensor.
Absolute pressure sensors, where the sensing elements are enclosed in a sealed reference cavity, offer the advantage of protection of sensing elements from harsh pressurized media. However, special design and processing steps are required to bring out electrical connections from the sensing elements to outside the sealed chamber, i.e. packaging of the sensor becomes costly. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,929,497 and 6,109,113 show one way of bringing out electrical connections from a vacuum cavity. The process is complicated and uses capacitive sensors and poly-silicon connections. Wafers are bonded using an electrostatic bonding technique. The same technique with additional circuits is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,713,828. These techniques are suited for ambient and sub-atmospheric pressure levels in motor vehicle applications.
Accordingly, a new pressure sensor, that offers a combination of a plurality of desired features, including, but not limited to, high accuracy absolute pressure sensing, wide pressure range, chemical and electrical compatibility with harsh pressurized media, reliable operation at all ranges of temperature including high temperatures, ease of manufacturing and packaging, compact size, and low cost would be desirable.
In an aspect, a method for manufacturing a Micro-Electro-Mechanical System pressure sensor. The method includes forming a gauge wafer including a diaphragm and a pedestal region. The method includes forming an electrical insulation layer disposed on a second surface of the diaphragm region and forming a plurality of sensing elements patterned on the electrical insulation layer disposed on the second surface in the diaphragm region. The method includes forming a cap wafer with a central recess in an inner surface and a plurality of through-wafer embedded vias made of an electrically conductive material in the cap wafer. The method includes creating a sealed cavity by coupling the inner recessed surface of the cap wafer to the gauge wafer, such that electrical connections from the sensing elements come out to an outer surface of the cap wafer through the vias. The method includes attaching a spacer wafer with a central aperture to the pedestal region with the central aperture aligned to the diaphragm region.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate one or more examples of aspects and, together with the description of example aspects, serve to explain the principles and implementations of the aspects.
In the drawings:
Those of ordinary skill in the art will realize that the following description is illustrative only and is not intended to be in any way limiting. Other aspects will readily suggest themselves to skilled artisans having the benefit of this disclosure. Reference will now be made in detail to implementations of the example aspects as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The same reference indicators will be used throughout the drawings and the following description to refer to the same or like items.
In accordance with this disclosure, the components and process steps described herein may be implemented using various types of semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
The present disclosure describes pressure sensors that can be used for a wide range of temperature and pressure, including automobile applications, as described with respect to
Although silicon is often shown as the material of choice for making a micromachined gauge wafer including the diaphragm, and a cap wafer that creates a reference cavity on top of the diaphragm, the scope of the present disclosure is not limited by the choice of material. Similarly, although a spacer as shown can be made of silicon or Pyrex or other types of glasses or ceramic materials, the present disclosure is not intended to be limited by the choice of spacer material.
Persons of ordinary skill in the art will now appreciate that aspects of the present disclosure are likely to have better thermal performance and longetivity if the material of the gauge wafer and the material of the sensing elements have similar coefficients of thermal expansion.
Sensing elements 502 may be piezoresistors arranged in an electrical configuration to act as a piezoresistive strain gauge. Alternatively, other types of strain gauges may be used without departing from the scope of the disclosure.
Sensing elements 502 may be made of single-crystalline or poly-crystalline silicon or thinned down bulk silicon, or other types of strain gauge material, such as TiON. However, for a silicon gauge wafer 518, silicon sensing elements 502 are the logical choice of material. Poly-crystalline silicon (for the sensing element 502 layer) can be formed on top of the thermally grown silicon dioxide layer 504 by using a low pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) process. Typically, single crystal silicon has a higher gauge factor compared to poly-silicon. The gauge factor of poly-silicon depends on its grain size. To make a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) gauge wafer, single-crystal silicon film can be formed either by the separation by Implantation of oxygen (SIMOX) process or by fusion bonding. In the SIMOX process, oxygen ions are implanted through a thin layer of silicon, and then heat treated to convert to silicon dioxide with a thin film of single crystal silicon on top. The silicon-on-oxide (SOI) can also be formed by bonding a sacrificial silicon wafer to another oxide coated silicon wafer using fusion bonding (direct bonding). The sacrificial wafer is later ground, lapped and/or polished to a relatively thin film on top of the oxide insulator layer. The thin single-crystal or poly-crystalline silicon is then doped with boron (or other dopants) using ion implantation or thermal diffusion to achieve the necessary sheet resistance. Photolithography and reactive ion etching (RIE) are used to pattern the single-crystal or poly-crystalline silicon film to form the sensing elements 502. Patterned metal film (not shown) connects the sensing elements 502 to form a Wheatstone bridge. The temperature expansion of the sensing element 502 is thus well matched with the silicon diaphragm 506 so that there are no significant thermally induced stresses.
The micromachined gauge wafer 518 is bonded to a spacer wafer 520 using fusion bonding, anodic bonding, eutectic bonding, solder preform bonding, glass frit bonding or an alternative bonding technique. The bonding should be able to survive high-temperature operation or any subsequent processing or packaging steps that occur after bonding. As shown in
Pressure sensor 600 comprises three main structural components: gauge wafer 518, cap wafer 530, and spacer wafer 520. Example dimensions for the thickness of the gauge wafer b=0.4 mm, thickness of the spacer wafer c=0.5 mm, thickness of the cap wafer a=0.5 mm. Other dimensions, i.e. width of the gauge wafer g, inner and outer diameters of the spacer wafer (e and (e+2f) respectively), width of the diaphragm region d etc. are also typically in the millimeter range. An example thickness of the thinned down silicon diaphragm is 27 microns. Other dimensions are possible depending on the materials and configurations.
Gauge wafer 518 may include silicon interconnectors 503, planarization/passivation layer 558, barrier metal layer 556 and bonding metal layer 554. Interconnectors 503 are typically made of the same material as the sensing elements 502. Typical composition and thickness of layer 554 is 1 um gold. Barrier metal layer 556 may be 2000 A Ti/Pt or Ti/W. In the aspect shown in
An external metal layer 560 can be deposited at the bottom of diaphragm 506. For example, a Ti/Pt/Au 500 Å/1000 Å/1500 Å metal layer can be deposited if spacer wafer 520 is blanket coated for bonding to a housing/package (not shown) that houses the pressure sensor 600. The housing may be made of Kovar or other materials, compatible to the pressurized medium.
Cap wafer 530, when bonded to gauge wafer 518, creates reference cavity 535. Cap wafer 530 has a bottom surface 537 that includes a recess 532. The position and dimension of the recess 532 is such that it encloses sensing elements 502. Cap wafer 530 includes embedded vias 550 that are electrically conductive. Vias 550 may have insulating sidewalls 552 if the cap wafer is made of an electrically conducting material. As will be described with respect to
In the example shown in
Spacer wafer 520 has a central hole 562 to give access to the pressurized medium to the diaphragm. Hole 562 may be of any geometric shape, including circular, square, rectangular, polygonal etc.
Variations of the structure and the process steps are possible within the scope of the disclosure. For example, in step 3 of
Although not shown in
In the above process, only one set of example steps are shown and described. Intermediate steps may be added or deleted, as required. The sequence of the processing steps is not limiting to the scope of the disclosure. For example, persons skilled in the art will appreciate that the gauge wafer 518 and the cap wafer 530 may be bonded first, and then the cap-gauge combination may be bonded to the spacer wafer 520. In that case, cap wafer and gauge wafer may be bonded using a higher temperature bonding process (for example, eutectic bonding), that remains intact while the gauge and the spacer wafers are bonded using a relatively lower temperature bonding process (for example, solder preform bonding). However, the lower temperature bonding process should still be able to sustain the operational temperature of the pressurized media. Also, wet etching of the gauge wafer (to define the diaphragm) may be done after the cap wafer is bonded to the gauge wafer.
Like pressure sensor 600 and 700, pressure sensor 800 also does not employ any p-n junction, and is suitable for high-temperature applications. Additionally, as sensing elements 502 are away from direct contact with the pressurized medium, this configuration is compatible with harsh pressurized media, similar to pressure sensor 600 and 700.
As described before, the sequence of bonding does not limit the scope of the disclosure, but the process steps need to be designed to support the bonding techniques and sequences.
Persons of ordinary skill in the art will now appreciate that a double SOI gauge wafer (as shown in
Aspects of the present disclosure may be used in automotive applications, such as in an intake manifold, in transmission lines, in exhaust pipes, in or near tires, in or near engines, and the like. It can also be applied in biomedical instrumentations, aerospace, defense and other fields as will now be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.
The environments for automotive electronic products differs depending on location within the vehicle. In general, these environments are harsher than the consumer electronic products that are used in more benign home or office environments. The harshness stems from higher temperature, high humidity, vibration, and the like.
Table-1 in
While aspects and applications have been shown and described, it would be apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure that many more modifications than mentioned above are possible without departing from the inventive concepts disclosed herein. The disclosure, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the appended claims.
The present application is a divisional application of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/397,253 filed Mar. 3, 2009, in the name of inventors James Tjanmeng Suminto and Mohammad Yunus entitled, “Media-Compatible Electrically Isolated Pressure Sensor For High Temperature Applications”, commonly owned herewith.
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Child | 12855528 | US |