Not applicable.
This invention relates to a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) switch device, and its method of manufacture.
Microelectromechanical systems are devices often having moveable components which are manufactured using lithographic fabrication processes developed for producing semiconductor electronic devices. Because the manufacturing processes are lithographic, MEMS devices may be made in very small sizes, and in large quantities. MEMS techniques have been used to manufacture a wide variety of sensors and actuators, such as accelerometers and electrostatic cantilevers.
MEMS techniques have also been used to manufacture electrical relays or switches of small size, often using an electrostatic actuation means to activate the switch. MEMS devices often make use of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafers, which are a relatively thick silicon “handle” wafer with a thin silicon dioxide insulating layer, followed by a relatively thin silicon “device” layer. In the MEMS devices, a thin cantilevered beam of silicon may be etched into the silicon device layer, and a cavity is created adjacent to the thin beam, typically by etching the thin silicon dioxide layer below it to allow for the electrostatic deflection of the beam. Electrodes provided above or below the beam may provide the voltage potential which produces the attractive (or repulsive) force to the cantilevered beam, causing it to deflect within the cavity.
One known embodiment of such an electrostatic relay is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,486,425 to Seki. The electrostatic relay described in this patent includes a fixed substrate having a fixed electrode on its upper surface and a moveable substrate having a moveable electrode on its lower surface. Upon applying a voltage between the moveable electrode and the fixed electrode, the moveable substrate is attracted to the fixed substrate such that an electrode provided on the moveable substrate contacts another electrode provided on the fixed substrate to close the microrelay.
However, to fabricate the microrelay described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,486,425, the upper substrate must be moveable, so that the upper substrate must be thin enough such that the electrostatic force may cause it to deflect. The moveable substrate is formed from a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer, wherein the moveable feature is formed in the silicon device layer, and the SOI wafer is then adhered to the fixed substrate. The silicon handle wafer and silicon dioxide insulating layer are then removed from the SOI wafer, leaving only the thin silicon device layer which forms the moveable structure.
Because the top substrate of the microrelay described in the '425 patent must necessarily be thin enough to be moveable, it is also delicate and susceptible to damage from contact during or after fabrication.
The systems and methods described here form an electrostatic MEMS plate switch using dual substrates, a first, lower substrate on which to form a deformable plate with at least one electrical shunt bar to provide an electrical connection between the contacts of a switch. These contacts may be formed on a second, upper substrate. After forming these structures, the two substrates are bonded together to form the switch. It should be understood that the designation of “upper” and “lower” is arbitrary, that is, the deformable plate may also be formed on an upper substrate and the contacts may be formed on a lower substrate.
The electrostatic MEMS plate switch design may have a number of advantages over cantilevered switch designs. One advantage may be that the plate may be lowered onto an adjacent electrode while remaining parallel to that substrate, so that there is less tendency for the electrostatic plates to arc at their position of closest approach. Also, multiple sets of switch contacts may be placed on a single deformable plate, whereas with the cantilevered design, only the area at the distal end of the cantilevered beam is generally appropriate for the placement of the switch contacts.
Accordingly, in the systems and methods described here, the deformable plate is attached to the first SOI substrate by one or more narrow spring beams formed in the device layer of the SOI substrate. These spring beams remain fixed at their proximal ends to the silicon dioxide dielectric layer and handle layer of the SOI substrate. A portion of the silicon dioxide layer adjacent to the deformable plate may be etched to release the plate, however, a silicon dioxide attachment point remains which couples the spring beams supporting the deformable plate to the silicon handle layer. The silicon dioxide layer therefore provides the anchor point for attachment of the deformable plate to the first, lower SOI substrate from which it was made. Because the remainder of the rigid, SOI wafer remains intact, it may provide protection for the switch against inadvertent contact and shock.
Because the rigid SOI wafer remains intact, it may also be hermetically bonded to a second, upper substrate at the end of the fabrication process. By forming the hermetic seal, the switch may enclose a particular gas environment which may be chosen to suit a particular purpose, such as increasing the breakdown voltage or altering the thermal properties of the gas environment within the switch. Alternatively, the environment surrounding the plate switch may be vacuum, which may increase the switching speed of the plate switch by decreasing viscous squeeze film damping which may arise in a gas environment. The hermetic seal may also protect the electrostatic MEMS switch from ambient dust and debris, which may otherwise interfere with the proper functioning of the device.
In one exemplary embodiment, the deformable plate formed on the first substrate may carry one or more shunt bars, placed at or near the nodal lines for a vibrational mode of the deformable plate. Points along these lines remain relatively stationary, even though the deformable plate may still be vibrating in a vibrational mode.
In another exemplary embodiment, referred to herein as the single contact MEMS plate switch embodiment, the deformable plate may have a shunt bar anchored to the moving, deformable plate to form a moving contact on the shunt bar, whereas the other end of the shunt bar is coupled to a stationary contact rigidly attached to a member other than the deformable plate. The shunt bar may flex between these contact points. When the switch is activated, the deformable plate may press the moving end of the shunt bar against a second contact thereby closing the switch. The first contact and second contact may be affixed to a second substrate. Thus, an electrical connection between an input line and an output line may be made with only one contact or junction. This may further reduce the contact resistance of the switch, because there is only a single junction between the input and output lines.
In order to allow the shunt bar to flex out of the plane of the deformable plate, voids may be formed in the deformable plate around or near the contacts. By removing material near the stationary contact in particular, the shunt bar is allowed to flex out of the plane of the deformable plate, to open or close the switch. One or more voids may be formed around or near each contact. Multiple voids, if present, may be separated by a thin isthmus of material remaining of the deformable plate. The isthmus may be coupled to the moving contact, and may be configured to move either laterally and/or rotationally as the switch is closed. Movement of the isthmus may therefore provide some scrubbing of the contact surfaces, which may further reduce the contact resistance of the switch, by clearing contamination and debris.
In one exemplary embodiment, a method for manufacturing the MEMS plate switch may include forming a first plate suspended adjacent to a first substrate by least one spring beam, coupling at least one shunt bar to the first plate at one location on the at least one shunt bar, coupling the at least one shunt bar to a first contact, the first contact not on the first plate, at another location on the at least one shunt bar, and configuring the first plate to activate the switch by pressing the at least one shunt bar against a second contact. The switch formed by this method may include a first plate suspended adjacent to a first substrate and coupled to the first substrate by at least one spring beam, at least one shunt bar coupled to the first plate at one location on the at least one shunt bar, and coupled to a first contact at another location on the at least one shunt bar, the first contact not on the first plate, wherein the first plate is configured to activate the switch by pressing the at least one shunt bar against a second contact.
In one exemplary embodiment, the deformable plate is coupled to the first, SOI substrate by four flexible spring beams which are anchored to the dielectric layer of the SOI substrate at the proximal end of each spring beam. The other end of the spring beams may be contiguous with the deformable plate. The spring beams may include a bend of at least ninety degrees, so that each spring beam on one side of the deformable plate extends in an opposite direction from the other. This embodiment may be referred to as the symmetric embodiment, as the two spring beams on each side of the deformable plate may have the same shapes and orientations as the two spring beams on the other side of the deformable plate. In another “asymmetric” embodiment, the spring beams on one side of the deformable plate may extend in one direction, and the spring beams on the other side of the deformable plate may extend in the opposite direction. The asymmetric embodiment may therefore be capable of twisting during vibration, which may provide additional scrubbing action to the deformable plate. The scrubbing action may clear contamination and debris, thus reducing the contact resistance between the shunt bar on the deformable plate and the contact between the shunt bar and the input contact.
In one exemplary embodiment, etch release holes may be placed between the nodal lines of the deformable plate, so that the deformable plate may be made more flexible in critical regions. The etch release holes may thereby encourage vibration in a particular vibrational mode over vibrations in other modes. In other exemplary embodiments, the etch release holes may be placed uniformly about the deformable plate in a close-packed hexagonal array. This arrangement may reduce the mass of the deformable plate, and allow ambient gas to flow through the etch release holes and thus reducing squeeze film damping and increasing the switching speed of the deformable plate.
A hermetic seal may enclose the dual substrate MEMS plate switch. The hermetic seal may be made by forming a metal bond between the substrates, the bond being an alloy of gold and indium, AuInx, where x is about 2. The alloy may be formed by melting a layer of indium deposited over a layer of gold. The hermetic seal is therefore also conductive, and may provide electrical access to the deformable plate, for example. The hermetic seal may be particularly important for switching applications involving relatively high voltage signals, wherein an insulating gas may be needed to prevent electrical breakdown of the environment between the high voltage electrodes. In such cases, the insulating gas, or vacuum, may need to be sealed hermetically to create an environment for the MEMS switch which can withstand higher voltages without breaking down or alter the thermal properties of the switch, without allowing the gas to leak out of, or into, the MEMS switch seal.
In another exemplary embodiment, electrical access to the switch may be gained using through hole vias formed through the second substrate. By providing electrical access through the second substrate, the hermetic seal may not be compromised by the presence of electrical leads being routed under the bond line of the seal.
The systems and methods described herein may be appropriate for the fabrication of an RF electrostatic MEMS plate switch which is capable of operating in the range of DC to at least 10 GHz, and having an actuation voltage in the range of 35-50V.
These and other features and advantages are described in, or are apparent from, the following detailed description.
Various exemplary details are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which however, should not be taken to limit the invention to the specific embodiments shown but are for explanation and understanding only.
In the systems and methods described here, an electrostatic MEMS switch is fabricated on two substrates. A deformable plate carrying at least one shunt bar is formed on the first substrate, and the electrical contacts of the switch, which will be connected via the shunt bar on the deformable plate when the switch is closed, are formed on the other substrate. The words “shunt bar” as used herein should be understood to mean any shape of conductive material which is used to transmit electrical signals from one point to another. In one exemplary embodiment, the shunt bar is a relatively long but thin layer of conductive material deposited on the deformable plate. The two substrates may then be sealed hermetically by a gold-indium seal. Electrical access to the switch may be afforded by a set of through hole vias, which extend through the thickness of the second substrate. Although the systems and methods are described as forming the deformable plate first on the first substrate followed by the electrical contacts on the second substrate, it should be understood that this embodiment is exemplary only, and that the electrical contacts may be formed first, or in parallel with, the formation of the deformable plate.
In one embodiment, each shunt bar is designed to span two contact points, 2110 and 2120, which are through wafer vias formed in the via substrate 2000, and covered by a layer of contact material 2112 and 2122, respectively. The deformable plate may be actuated electrostatically by an adjacent electrostatic electrode 2300, which may be disposed directly above (or below) the deformable plate 1300, and may be fabricated on the via substrate 2000. The deformable plate 1300 itself may form one plate of a parallel plate capacitor, with the electrostatic electrode 2300 forming the other plate. When a differential voltage is placed on the deformable plate 1300 relative to the adjacent electrostatic electrode 2300, the deformable plate is drawn toward the adjacent electrostatic electrode 2300. The action moves the shunt bar 1100 into a position where it contacts the contact points 2110 and 2120, thereby closing an electrical circuit. Although the embodiment illustrated in
However, another vibrational mode exists as illustrated by
As a result, the deformable plate vibrates substantially in the third vibrational mode, with the node lines of the vibration located substantially at the locations of the supporting spring beams. These node lines indicate points on the deformable plate which remain relatively stationary, compared to the ends and central region which are deflected during the vibration. The existence of these node lines indicate advantageous locations for the placement of electrodes for a switch, because even when the plate is vibrating, there is relatively little deflection of the plate along the node lines. Accordingly, if a shunt bar is placed at the node lines, the shunt bar may provide electrical conductivity between two electrodes located beneath the shunt bar, even if the plate continues to vibrate.
In the embodiment shown in
The two nodal lines for the third vibrational mode are shown in
The tendency of deformable plate 1300 to vibrate in the third vibrational mode may be enhanced by placing etch release holes 1320 along the latitudinal axis passing through the center of the deformable plate, between the nodal lines, as shown in
In another alternative embodiment, the etch release holes are disposed in a close-packed hexagonal array over the entire surface of the deformable plate 1300. Such an embodiment may be advantageous in that the mass of the deformable plate is reduced, and multiple pathways are provided for the flow of the ambient gas to either side of the deformable plate. Both of these effects may improve the switching speed of the device by reducing the inertia of the deformable plate 1300 and reducing the effects of squeeze film damping.
Also as shown in
The embodiment shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Since the deformable plate 1300 may be made from the device layer 1010 of the SOI plate substrate 1000, it may be made highly resistive, of the order 20 ohm-cm. This resistivity may be sufficient to carry the actuation voltage of about 40 volts, but may too high to support the higher frequency alternating current voltages associated with the first vibrational mode at about 72 kHz. Accordingly, the resistivity may electrically dampen capacitive plate vibrations, especially the whole-body first mode plate vibration.
The electrostatic plate switch design illustrated in
In addition, the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 may be made more compact than a cantilevered switch, because a long length of cantilevered beam is not required to have a sufficiently flexible member to actuate with modest voltages. For example, the plate design illustrated in
Because the restoring force of the switch is determined by the spring beam 1330 geometry, rather than the plate 1300 geometry, modifications may be made to the plate 1300 design without affecting the kinematics of the spring beams 1330. For example, as mentioned above, a plurality of etch release holes 1310 may be formed in the deformable plate 1300, without affecting the stiffness of the restoring spring beams 1330. These release holes 1310 may allow air or gas to transit readily from one side of the deformable plate 1300 to the other side, thereby reducing the effects of squeeze film damping, which would otherwise reduce the speed of the device. These etch release holes 1310 may also reduce the mass of the deformable plate 1300, also improving its switching speed, without affecting the restoring force acting on the deformable plate 1300 through the spring beams 1330.
By placing the shunt bars near the nodal lines of a vibrational mode, the switching speed may be improved because the shunt contact interferes with vibratory motion in other modes. This effectively damps the vibrations in other modes. By placing the shunt bars at the nodal lines of a vibrational mode, the movement of the shunt bar is minimal, even if the plate is still vibrating in this mode. Therefore, although the deformable plate may be made exceptionally light and fast because of its small size and plurality of etch release holes, it vibrates only minimally because of its damping attributes. Accordingly, the electrostatic MEMS plate switch illustrated in
Because through wafer vias are used to route the signal to and from the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, the electrostatic MEMS switch 100 may be particularly suited to handling high frequency, RF signals. Without the through wafer vias, the signal would have to be routed along the surface of the second via substrate 2000, and under the hermetic bond line. However, because the hermetic bond line is metallic and grounded, this allows substantial capacitive coupling to occur between the surface-routed signal lines and the ground plane of the device, which lies directly adjacent to, and narrowly separated from the signal lines in the bonding area. The through wafer vias allow this geometry to be avoided, thus reducing capacitive coupling and substantially improving the bandwidth of the device. The through wafer vias may also act as heat sinks, leading the heat generated in the switch to be directed quickly to the opposite side of the wafer and to the large bonding pads 2115 and 2125 on the backside of the device for dissipation.
After etching the release holes 1310 in the device layer 1030, a thin multilayer of 15 nm chromium (Cr) and 100 nm nickel (Ni) may be sputtered onto the backside of the plate substrate 1000, for use as a plating base for the plating of a thicker layer of protective material, such as copper (Cu) or nickel (Ni). This protective layer of copper or nickel may protect the native oxide 1040 existing on the backside of the handle layer 1030 of the SOI substrate during the hydrofluoric acid etch to follow. The protective layer of copper or nickel may be about 4 μm thick, and may also minimize the wafer bow during further processing.
The dielectric layer 1020 may then be etched away beneath and around the etch release holes 1310, using a hydrofluoric acid liquid etchant, for example. The liquid etch may remove the silicon dioxide dielectric layer 1020 in all areas where the deformable plate 1300 is to be formed. The liquid etch may be timed, to avoid etching areas that are required to affix the spring beams 1330 of the deformable platel 300, which will be formed later, to the handle layer 1030. Additional details as to the dry and liquid etching procedure used in this method may be found in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/359,558 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-SOI Release), incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The next step in the exemplary method is the formation of the dielectric pads 1200, 1210, and 1220, and dielectric standoffs 1230 as depicted in
The dielectric structures 1200, 1210, 1220 and 1230 may be silicon dioxide, which may be sputter-deposited over the surface of the device layer 1010 of the SOI plate substrate 1000. The silicon dioxide layer may be deposited to a depth of, for example, about 300 nm. The 300 run layer of silicon dioxide may then be covered with photoresist which is then patterned. The silicon dioxide layer may then be etched to form structures 1200, 1210, 1220 and 1230. The photoresist may then be removed from the surface of the device layer 1010 of the SOI plate substrate 1000. Because the photoresist patterning techniques are well known in the art, they are not explicitly depicted or described in further detail.
Each of the Cr and Au layers may be sputter-deposited using, for example, an ion beam deposition chamber (IBD). The conductive material may be deposited in the region corresponding to the shunt bar 1100, and also the regions which will correspond to the bond line 1400 between the plate substrate 1000 and the via substrate 2000 of the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. This bond line area 1400 of metallization will form, along with a layer of indium, a seal which will hermetically seal the plate substrate 1000 with the via substrate 2000, as will be described further below.
While a Cr/Au multilayer is disclosed as being usable for the metallization layer of the shunt bar 1100, it should be understood that this multilayer is exemplary only, and that any other choice of conductive materials or multilayers having suitable electronic transport properties may be used in place of the Cr/Au multilayer disclosed here. For example, other materials, such as titanium (Ti) or titanium tungsten (TiW) may be used as an adhesion layer between the Si and the Au. Other exotic materials, such as ruthenium (Ru) or palladium (Pd) can be deposited on top of the Au to improve the switch contact properties, etc. However, the choice described above may be advantageous in that it can also participate in the sealing of the device through the alloy bond, as will be described more fully below.
Preparation of the plate substrate 1000 is thereby completed. The description now turns to the fabrication of the via substrate 2000, as illustrated in
Blind trenches may first be etched in the substrate 2000, for the formation of a set of vias 2110, 2120, 2210, 2220, 2400 and 2450 which will be formed in the trenches by plating copper into the trenches. A “blind trench” is a hole or depression that does not penetrate through the thickness of the via substrate 2000, but instead ends in a dead end wall within the material. The etching process may be reactive ion etching (RIE) or deep reactive ion etching (DRIE), for example, which may form blind trenches, each with a dead-end wall. The etching process may be timed to ensure that the vias 2110, 2120, 2210, 2220, 2400 and 2450 extend substantially into the thickness of the via substrate. For example, the vias 2110, 2120, 2210, 2220, 2400 and 2450 may be etched to a depth of about 60 μm to about 150 μm deep into the via substrate 2000. When the vias are completed as described below, via 2450 may provide electrical access to the deformable plate 1300, and provide a voltage for one side of the parallel plate capacitor which may provide the electrostatic force required to close the switch; via 2400 may provide electrical access to the electrostatic plate 2300 which forms the other side of the parallel plate capacitor; via 2110 may provide electrical access to one of the contact electrodes 2112 of the switch; via 2120 may provide electrical access to the other contact electrode 2122 of the switch, and so forth. After etching the blind trenches 2100-2450, the via substrate may be cleaned with a solvent to remove any polymers that may remain on the walls of the blind trenches after the dry etch procedure.
After formation of the blind trenches 2100-2450 and cleaning thereof, the substrate 2000 may be allowed to oxidize thermally, to form a layer of silicon dioxide 2050, which electrically isolates one via from the next, as shown in
In order to fill the blind trenches 2100-2450 completely with the conductive material, the seed layer may be plated using reverse-pulse-plating, as described in more detail in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/482,944 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-RPP Vias), incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The blind trenches 2110-2450 may then be plated with copper, for example, or any other suitable conductive material that can be plated into the blind trenches, such as gold (Au) or nickel (Ni), to create vias 2110-2450. To assure a complete fill, the plating process may be performed until the plated material fills the blind trenches to a point up and over the surface of the substrate 2000. The surface of the substrate 2000 may then be planarized, using, for example, chemical mechanical planarization, until the plated vias 2110-2450 are flush with the surface of the substrate 2000, as shown in
A standoff 2500 may then be formed on the substrate 2000, as shown in
Another metallization layer is then deposited over the substrate 2000, as shown in
Although the metallization layer is described as consisting of a thin adhesion layer of Cr, and an optional antidiffusion layer of Mo, followed by a relatively thick layer of Au, it should be understood that this embodiment is exemplary only, and that any material having acceptable electrical transport characteristics may be used as metallization layer 2600. In particular, additional exotic materials may be deposited over the gold, to achieve particular contact properties, such as low contact resistance and improved wear.
Photoresist may then be deposited on metallization layer, and patterned to provide features needed to form contacts 2112, 2122, 2212, 2222, 2300 and 2600. The photoresist is exposed and developed to correspond to regions 2100-2300 and 2600. The substrate with the Cr/Au conductive material may then be wet etched to produce the conductive features 2100-2300 and 2600. A suitable wet etchant may be iodine/iodide for the Au and permanganate for the Cr.
Photoresist may then again be deposited over metallization layer 2600, and patterned to provide features for the plating of an indium layer 2700, as shown in
It may be important for gold metallization 2600 be wider in extent than the plated indium layer 2700. The excess area may allow the indium to flow outward somewhat upon melting, without escaping the bond region, while simultaneously providing for the necessary Au/In ratios cited above.
The two portions, the plate substrate 1000 and the via substrate 2000 are now ready to be assembled to form the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. The two portions may be first aligned, such that the metallization layers 1400 of plate substrate 1000 are registered with the metallization layers 2700 of the via substrate 2000. This places the plated indium layer 2700 between gold metallization layers 1400 and 2600.
Methods and techniques for forming the alloy seal are further described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/211,625 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-Interconnect) and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/211,622 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-Preform), each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
For MEMS switches that benefit from a defined ambient environment, the two portions 1000 and 2000 of the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 may first be placed in a chamber which is evacuated and then filled with the desired gas. For example, for MEMS switches to be used in telephone applications using relatively high voltage signals, the desired gas may be an insulating gas such as sulfur hexafluoride (SF6), CO2 or a freon such as CCl2F2 or C2Cl2F4. The insulating gas may then be sealed within the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 by sealing the plate substrate 1000 with the via substrate 2000 with the alloy bond formed by layers 1400, 2600 and 2700. Alternatively, an evacuated or sub-ambient or super-ambient environment may be sealed in the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 with a substantially hermetic seal. The term “substantially hermetic” may be understood to mean that the environment sealed with the device at manufacture retains at least about 90% of its original composition over the lifetime of the device. For a device sealed with a sub-ambient or super-ambient environment, the pressure at its end-of-life may be within about 10% of its pressure at manufacture.
To form the alloy bond between layers 1400, 2600 and 2700, plate substrate 1000 may be applied to the via substrate 2000 under pressure and at elevated temperature. For example, the pressure applied between the plate substrate 1000 and the via substrate 2000 may be from 0.5 to 2.0 atmospheres, and at an elevated temperature of about 180 degrees centigrade. This temperature exceeds the melting point of the indium (157 degrees centigrade), such that the indium flows into and forms an alloy with the gold. As mentioned above, the stoichiometry of the alloy may be about 2 indium atoms per one gold atom, to form AuInx where x is about 2. In contrast to the low melting point of the indium metal, the melting point of the alloy is 541 degrees centigrade. Therefore, although the alloy is formed at a relatively low temperature, the durability of the alloy bond is outstanding even at several hundred degrees centigrade. The bond is therefore compatible with processes which deposit vulnerable materials, such as metals, on the surfaces and in the devices. These vulnerable materials may not be able to survive temperatures in excess of about 200 degrees centigrade, without volatilizing or evaporating.
Upon exceeding the melting point of the indium, the indium layers 2700 flows outward, and the plate substrate 1000 and the via substrate 2000 are pushed together, until their approach is stopped by the polymer standoff 2500. As the alloy forms, it may immediately solidify, sealing the preferred environment in the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100.
While the systems and methods described here use a gold/indium alloy to seal the MEMS plate switch, it should be understood that the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 may use any of a number of alternative sealing methodologies, including different constituent metals for the bond line and cross-linked polymers. For example, the seal may also be formed using a low-outgassing epoxy which is impermeable to the insulating gas.
In order to apply the appropriate signals to contact pads 2112, 2122, 2212, 2222, 2400 and 2450, electrical access may need to be achieved to vias 2112, 2122, 2212, 2222, 2400 and 2450. As described earlier, vias 2110, 2120, 2210, 2220, 2400 and 2450 may begin as blind trenches formed in one side of the substrate, and plated with a conducting material. To provide access to the conducting vias formed in the front side, material from the opposite, back side of substrate 2000 may be removed until the dead-end walls of the blind trenches 2110-2450 have been removed, such that electrical access to the vias may be made from the back side. In one exemplary embodiment, the original 500 μm thick silicon wafer is background until it has a thickness of about 80 μm, and the vias 2110, 2120, 2210, 2220, 2400 and 2450 extend through the entire thickness of the remaining silicon. The technique for removing the excess material may be, for example, grinding. The processes used to form the vias is described in more detail in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/211,624 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-Blind Trench) and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/482,944 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-RPP Vias), incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
The via substrate 2000 may then be coated with an oxide 2200, which may be SiO2, for example, at a thickness sufficient to isolate the vias 2110-2220 one from the other. The oxide may be deposited by a low temperature dielectric deposition process, such as sputtering or plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) to a thickness of about 1 μm. The oxide-coated substrate 2000 may then be covered with photoresist and patterned to form openings at the locations of the vias 2110-2145. The substrate 2000 may then be etched through the photoresist to remove the oxide 2200 from the backside openings of the vias 2110-2450. The photoresist may then be stripped from the substrate 2000. Since these processes are well known in the art, they are not described or depicted further.
The rear surface of substrate 2100 may then be covered with a conductive layer. In some exemplary embodiments, the conductive layer may be a Cr/Au multilayer, chosen for the same reasons as multilayers 1900 and 2600, and deposited using the same or similar techniques. Alternatively, the conductive layer may be any conductive material having acceptable electrical and/or thermal transport characteristics. In one exemplary embodiment, the conductive material may be a multilayer of 15 nm chromium, followed by 800 nm of nickel, and finally 150 nm of gold. The nickel may give the multilayer better wear and durability characteristics than the gold alone over the chromium layer, which may be important as these features are formed on the exterior of the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100.
The conductive layer is then covered once more with photoresist, which is also patterned with features which correspond to pads 2115, 2125, 2405 and 2455 on the backside of the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. Alternatively, the metal may be deposited through a shadow mask, allowing for the possibility of thicker layers and eliminating the need for further processing.
The conductive layer on the rear of the substrate 2000 is then etched or ion milled, for example, to remove the conductive layer at the openings of the photoresist, to form isolated conductive bonding pads 2115, 2125, 2405 and 2455. Conductive bonding pad 2115 may provide electrical access to the contact points 2110 and 2120 of the switch; conductive bonding pad 2125 may provide electrical access to the contact points 2210 and 2220 of the switch; conductive bonding pad 2405 may provide electrical access to via 2400 and adjacent electrode 2300 of the switch; and conductive bonding pad 2455 may provide the ground signal to the dual substrate MEMS electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. These bonding pads 2115, 2125, 2405 and 2455 are shown in the plan view of the back side of the via substrate in
Exemplary thicknesses of various layers of the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 are shown in
A single contact plate switch 300 may also be fabricated using a process very similar to the one described above for the dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. The single contact plate switch 300 may have only a single junction or contact between the input line and the output line, compared to dual substrate electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, which may have at least two junctions spanned by a movable shunt bar. The single junction or contact can be opened or closed by activating the switch. The single contact plate switch 300 may have the advantage of lower contact resistance, because there is only a single junction between the input line and the output line. In addition, the single contact plate switch 300 may have superior current handling characteristics, because heat built up in the shunt bar may be efficiently dissipated into the via substrate, as there is no high resistance junction impeding this heat flow out of the shunt bar. Furthermore, since there are no longer two contacts, the deformable plate need not flex or gimbal to accommodate any mismatch between the elevations of the contacts. Finally, since only one contact needs to be closed rather than two, the electrostatic force needed to close the switch may be reduced by a factor of two. This may allow the single contact plate switch 300 to be reduced in size compared to electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. Accordingly, the single contact plate switch 300 may have a number of improved performance attributes relative to the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, while retaining all the manufacturing advantages of the electrostatic MEMS plate switch outlined above.
Like dual substrate MEMS plate switch 100, the single contact plate switch 300 may also include a deformable plate 3300 which is shown in
The deformable plate 3300 of the single contact MEMS plate switch may have etch release holes 3310, similar in design and function to etch release holes 1310 in electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, and may be made using similar processes to those described above with respect to etch release holes 1310.
The plate 3300 may also have a plurality of dielectric standoffs 3230, which are again of similar form and function to dielectric standoffs 1200, 1210, 1220 and 1230 of electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, and may be made using processes described above with respect to dielectric standoffs 1200, 1210, 1220, and 1230. These dielectric standoffs may prevent the plate 3300 from shorting to an adjacent electrode when the switch is closed.
An important difference between the deformable plate 3300 and deformable plate 1300 of electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100 is with respect to the design of the shunt bar 3100. As with deformable plate 1300, the shunt bar 3100 may be disposed over a dielectric layer 3200 which may isolate signals traveling in the shunt bar 3100 from the deformable plate 3300. However, in the case of the single contact plate switch 300, the shunt bar 3100 may be attached mechanically to the deformable plate 3300 only at one end 3110. The other end 3120 of the shunt bar 3100 may be attached to a second electrode (not shown in
In the exemplary embodiment described below, the stationary end 3120 is affixed to a second electrode formed in a second, via substrate 4000 disposed adjacent to the plate substrate 3000. This embodiment is analogous to dual substrate MEMS switch 100, wherein the deformable plate 1300 is formed in a plate substrate 1000, and the vias are formed in an adjacent via substrate 2000. The two substrates are then mated to form the single contact MEMS plate switch 300.
Accordingly, when the switch is open, the shunt bar 3100 spans its two ends which are secured to different members: moving end 3110 which is secured to the moving, deformable plate 3300, and stationary end 3120 which is secured to the second electrode 4122 on the adjacent via substrate 4000. In the open, quiescent state, a gap exists between the moving contact 3110 and the first electrode 4112 formed in the via substrate. When the switch 300 closes, the electrostatic force pulls the deformable plate 3300 toward an adjacent electrostatic plate located on the second substrate to close the gap. The deformable plate thereby pushes the moving contact 3110 against the first electrode 4112 formed in the via substrate 4000 to close the switch, and allow a signal to flow from the first electrode 4112 in the via substrate to the second electrode 4122 in the via substrate.
To allow this flexing of the shunt bar 3100 out of the plane of the deformable plate 3300, the material of the deformable plate 3300 may be removed in areas 3340 near the contacts 3110 and 3120, where the shunt bar 3300 needs to flex. This cut-out area, or void 3340 is shown in
In other embodiments, void 3340 may actually include two voids, a first formed around the stationary end 3120 and a second formed near the moving end 3110, wherein the first void is separated from the second void by a narrow isthmus of material. The isthmus of material may remain at least partially under the moving contact 3110, in order to urge the moving contact 3110 against the first electrode via 4110 formed in the via substrate 4000, in the deflected, closed position. Such embodiments are described in further detail with respect to
A three-dimensional perspective view of the deformable plate 3300 and shunt bar 3100 of single contact plate switch 300 is shown in its deflected, closed position in
The single contact plate switch 300 is shown in its entirety, including both the plate substrate 3000 and the via substrate 4000 in cross section in
This same layer of gold as used for contact layers 4112 and 4122 may form a part of the AuIn hermetic bond as in the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, and may be formed as described above with respect to the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100. The vias 4110 and 4120 and contact layers 4112 and 4122 may be formed using similar methods to those used to form the corresponding features 2110 and 2120 and layers 2112 and 2122 of the electrostatic MEMS plate switch 100, described above.
The standoffs 3500 in the single contact MEMS plate switch 300 embodiment, however, may be formed on the plate substrate 3000 rather than the via substrate 4000. It should be understood that this is exemplary only, and that the standoff 3500 may be formed on either substrate. These standoffs 3500 may then participate in the bonding of the stationary end 3120 of the shunt bar 3100 to the via substrate 4000, as well as forming the hermetic seal around the device. Otherwise, processes for forming the insulating layer 4050, vias 4120 and 4110 may be formed as described above with respect to features 2050, 2120 and 2110 of electrostatic plate switch 100, with the thicknesses as described above for these features.
The process for fabricating the plate substrate 3000 is also similar to that described above with respect to plate substrate 1000 except for formation of the shunt bar 3100. As described above, the shunt bar 3100 needs to be suspended in areas above the plate substrate 3000, and have dimensions which allow it adequate flexibility to open and close the switch 300. Exemplary dimensions for a shunt bar 3100 and deformable plate 3300 are given below for a switch which activates within a voltage range of about 35-50 V. An exemplary process for forming the suspended shunt bar 3100 is illustrated in
The suspended shunt bar 3100 may be formed by first inlaying a sacrificial material into the device layer 3300 of the SOI plate substrate 3000. The later removal of this inlaid material may form part of the void required to allow the shunt bar 3100 to flex out of the plane of the deformable plate. The sacrificial material may be any material which may be easily removed later in the processing by a suitable etchant, for example, Ni, Ni alloys or Cu. In one exemplary embodiment, the sacrificial layer may be plated nickel-iron (NiFe) which is plated into a hole 3350 left by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) a feature 3350 in the device layer 3300. The hole 3350 may be formed by applying photoresist to the plate substrate 3000, patterning the resist, and performing DRIE to the exposed areas. The DRIE may proceed until the depth of the hole reaches the underlying insulating layer of the SOI substrate.
The sacrificial material 3360 may then be deposited into the hole by, for example, plating onto a seed layer also deposited in the hole. The plated sacrificial material may then be planarized using, for example, chemical mechanical planarization (CMP). A CMP etch stop, using a very hard material, such as silicon nitride (Si3N4), titanium tungsten nitride (TiWN) or tantalum nitride (TaN) may be deposited over the wafer either before the initial cavity etch, or just prior to the seed layer deposition, to protect the SOI Si surface during the CMP process. The etch stop may be deposited using LPCVD, PECVD or PVD techniques, and then removed post CMP using reactive ion etching or wet etching. Additional details of the plating and planarizing techniques for the sacrificial layer may be found in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/705,739 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-M7), incorporated by reference in its entirety. The seed layer may be chromium (Cr) and/or nickel (Ni), deposited by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) or sputter deposition to a thickness of 100-200 nm. Photoresist may then be deposited over the seed layer, and patterned by exposure through a mask corresponding to the desired width and length of the sacrificial material 3360. The sacrificial material 3360 may then be plated into the trenches formed in the patterned photoresist. Such techniques are well know in the MEMS art, and thus additional details are not provided here. For an SOI wafer with a 5 μm device Si layer and 2 μm buried Sio2 layer, the dimensions of the inlayed, plated sacrificial material may be 40 μm wide by 80 μm long by 7 μm thick. The sacrificial thickness may be equal to the SOI device layer thickness plus the buried SiO2 layer thickness, as stated above. Another important aspect of the sacrificial layer is that it may completely surround islands of Si that may later form the fixed contact of the device. This island of silicon and underlying buried silicon dioxide may not be etched by the hydrofluoric acid (HF) processes that follow, thus the sacrificial material may also effectively function as an HF barrier.
After the deposition and planarization of the sacrificial material 3360, oxide features 3200 and 3230 may be formed on the plate substrate 3000. The methods for forming the oxide features 3200 and 3230 may be similar to those used to form oxide barriers 1230 for the dual substrate MEMS plate switch 100, described above. Oxide feature 3200 may serve to isolate the conductive shunt bar 3100 which will be deposited over oxide feature 3200 from the deformable plate 3300. Oxide features 3230 may prevent the deformable plate 3300 from shorting to the via substrate 4000 when the switch is activated. The oxide features are shown in the cross section of
A standoff material 3500 such as photoresist may then be formed in areas where it is needed for bonding. These areas include the bondline around the device and the region beneath what will be the stationary contact of the shunt bar 3200. This standoff is analogous to standoff 2500 shown in
The shunt bar conductive material 3100 may then be deposited over the oxide 3200, the standoff 3500 the sacrificial material 3360. A multilayer of 20 nm sputtered TiW/100 nm sputtered Au/1 μm plated AuPd may serve as the conductive material of the shunt bar 3100. This multilayer may also serve as the contact surfaces 4112 and 4212 of the through wafer vias 4110 and 4120, as well as participating in the bond line 3600 to form the hermetic seal around the device. It should be understood that these materials and thicknesses are exemplary only, and that any of a variety of other conductive materials and other thicknesses may be used for these features. Furthermore, other bonding materials, such as epoxy, cement, glue, or glass frit may be used in place of the metal alloy bond 3600.
After formation of the shunt bar, the sacrificial material under the shunt bar may be selectively etched out from under the shunt bar, using commercially available liquid etchants, such as ferric chloride for Ni and Ni alloys, and sulfuric acid and hydrogen peroxide for Cu. In another variation of the process, the sacrificial material etch may be done after the beam is etched in the next step below.
As a last step in the formation of the plate substrate 3000, the deformable plate 3300 may be formed by deep reactive ion etching through the thickness of the device layer 3010 of the SOI substrate, along the outline of the deformable plate 3300. The cut-out area 3340 may be formed simultaneously with the formation of the deformable plate 3300. These processes are similar or identical to those described above with respect to the formation of deformable plate 1300 of dual substrate MEMS plate switch 100. The condition of the plate substrate after formation of the deformable plate is shown in cross section in
To complete fabrication of the single contact electrostatic MEMS plate switch 300, the via substrate 4000 may be brought adjacent to the plate substrate 3000 and aligned as described above with respect to the features of the plate substrate 3000. The two wafers may be held in place using, for example, a clamp and the pair may then be inserted into a wafer bonding chamber. The wafer bonding chamber may be filled with a preferred gas environment, in order to seal this environment in the device. The via substrate 4000 may then be pressed against the plate substrate 3000 in the wafer bonding chamber, and heated to melt the indium metal. As the AuIn alloy forms, it immediately solidifies to form the hermetic seal. The completed device is shown in
The single contact MEMS plate switch 300 may also be formed on a substrate prepared with voids 3700 under the device layer 3010, prior to processing of the device layer 3010. In this embodiment, the voids 3700 may be formed by performing an etching process on the handle layer 3030 and dielectric layer 3020 of an SOI substrate by, for example, deep reactive ion etching. The device layer 3010 may then be deposited or bonded to the remaining substrate. Such an embodiment is illustrated in
The isthmus of material 3350 functions to close the switch when the electrostatic plate 4300 beneath the deformable plate 3300 is activated with a voltage that pulls the deformable plate 3300 toward the opposite electrode. When the electrostatic plate 4300 is activated, deformable plate 3300 is drawn toward the electrostatic plate 4300, along with the isthmus of material 3350. Since the isthmus of material 3350 is attached to the moving contact 3110, the moving contact 3110 is pushed against the second contact 4112 formed in the via substrate 4000, to close the switch. The shape of the isthmus of material 3350 may determine the trajectory with which the moving contact 3110 is lowered onto the adjacent contact 4112 in the via substrate, 4000.
The arrangement of the spring beams 3330 in these embodiments may be either in the symmetrical arrangement, as shown in
What follows is a description of one particular embodiment of a design for a single contact MEMS plate switch 300. It should be understood that the dimensions set forth below are exemplary only, and may be adjusted for the requirements of a particular application. The deformable plate 3300 may be, for example, about 200 μm on a side, and the same thickness as the device layer from which it is made, about 5 μm thick. The contacts 4110 and 4120 may be copper plated vias in the via substrate 4000, about 15 μm in diameter and 45 μm to 90 μm deep, through the thickness of the via substrate 4000. The Cu vias may be topped with layers 4112 and 4122, which may be multilayers of metals and metal alloys, such as Ni, W, Au, and AuPd, with a thickness of about 1 μm and a diameter of about 20 μm. These layers may be deposited as described above, using for example, sputtering or electroplating.
The spring beams 3330 may be formed by deep reactive ion etching through the device layer of an SOI substrate, and may be about 4 to 10 μm wide, 134 μm long and about 5 μm thick. The four spring beams together may generate a restoring force of about 100 μN. The shunt bar 3100 may be, for example, about 70 μm long, 20 μm wide, and 0.5 μm thick, and made of plated or ion beam deposited gold, for example. With these dimensions, the shunt bar may have a stiffness of about 6.4 N/m, so may offer a force of about 10 μN against the pull down force of about 400 μN. In this exemplary design, the single contact MEMS plate switch 300 is intended to operate at a switching voltage in the range of about 35-50 V.
The cut-out area 3340 in the deformable plate 3300 may be, for example, 100 μm long and about 40 μm wide. The cut-out area 3340 may be formed by deep reactive ion etching, and may be formed during formation of the deformable plate 3300 itself. Within the cut-out area 3340, the isthmus of material 3350 may be about 4 μm wide, 40 μm long and about 5 μm thick, and also formed by deep reactive ion etching.
While various details have been described in conjunction with the exemplary implementations outlined above, various alternatives, modifications, variations, improvements, and/or substantial equivalents, whether known or that are or may be presently unforeseen, may become apparent upon reviewing the foregoing disclosure. For example, while the disclosure describes a number of fabrication steps and exemplary thicknesses for the layers included in the MEMS switch, it should be understood that these details are exemplary only, and that the systems and methods disclosed here may be applied to any number of alternative MEMS or non-MEMS devices. Furthermore, although the embodiment described herein pertains primarily to an electrical switch, it should be understood that various other devices may be used with the systems and methods described herein, including actuators and valves, for example. Accordingly, the exemplary implementations set forth above, are intended to be illustrative, not limiting.
This U.S. patent application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/797,924 (Attorney Docket No. IMT-V1), which is incorporated by reference herein in tis entirety.
Portions of the present invention were made with U.S. Government support under NSF SBIR Grant No. 0637474. The government may have certain rights in this invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11797924 | May 2007 | US |
Child | 12068586 | US |