Claims
- 1. A laser system for cutting a target material comprising:a seed laser system for producing a first pulse laser beam; a laser amplifier for amplifying the first pulse laser beam to produce an amplified pulse laser beam; a harmonic generation system for converting the amplified pulse laser beam into a second pulse laser beam having a shorter wavelength; a focussing system for focussing the second pulse laser beam to an approximately ellipse shaped third pulse laser beam; and a motion control system for moving a target material contacted by the third pulse laser beam.
- 2. The laser system of claim 1 wherein the focussing system comprises:a first lens and a second lens, the first lens controlling the length of the major axis of the approximately ellipse shaped third pulse laser beam and the second lens controlling the length of the minor axis of the approximately ellipse shaped third pulse laser beam.
- 3. The laser system of claim 2 wherein:the first lens and the second lens are cylindrical and are aligned at substantially 90 degrees.
- 4. The laser system of claim 2 wherein the motion control system comprises:two orthogonal stages capable of moving the target material in any direction parallel to a surface plane of the target material.
- 5. The laser system of claim 1 wherein the motion control system comprises:two orthogonal stages capable of moving the target material in any direction parallel to a surface plane of the target material.
- 6. The laser system of claim 5 wherein the motion control system further comprises:a controller for controlling the speed and direction of movement of each of the orthogonal stages.
- 7. The laser system of claim 5 wherein the motion control system further comprises:a vision system for aligning the major axis of the third pulse laser beam to at least one fiduciary point on the target material.
- 8. The laser system of claim 5 wherein:the orthogonal stages move the target material in a direction parallel to the major axis of the third pulse laser beam.
- 9. The laser system of claim 2 wherein the seed laser system comprises:a laser crystal; an optical pump arranged to pump the laser crystal; at least two mirror surfaces defining a resonator, the resonator defining a beam path which transits the laser crystal; an acousto-optic Q-switch installed within the beam path for blocking passage of light in the beam path except for short periods of time, the first optical shutter defining an ON period and an OFF period; an acousto-optic mode locker installed within the resonator for blocking the passage of light in the resonator except for periodic sub nanosecond intervals, the intervals being spaced such that during each ON period a light pulse traveling at the speed of light in the resonator is able to make a plurality of transits through the resonator, increasing in intensity on each transit to defined an intensified pulse; and a cavity dump for periodically releasing intensified pulses from the resonator, the periodically released intensified pulses defining the first pulse laser beam.
- 10. The laser system of claim 9 wherein:the optical pump comprises a laser diode.
- 11. The laser system of claim 10 wherein:the laser crystal is a Nd:YAG crystal.
- 12. The laser system of claim 2 wherein:the laser amplifier comprises a laser diode pumped Nd:YAG rod.
- 13. The laser system of claim 12 wherein:the laser amplifier is configured to provide for multiple passes of the first pulse laser beam through the Nd:YAG rod.
- 14. The laser system of claim 2 wherein the harmonic generation system comprises:at least one non-linear crystal for converting the amplified pulse laser beam into a second pulse laser beam having a wavelength equal to 1/n times the wavelength of the amplified pulse laser beam, where n is an integer greater than 1.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a divisional application of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/385,676, which was filed on Aug. 27, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,472,295.
US Referenced Citations (14)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (5)
Entry |
Enhancements in materials-ease assembly and increase yield, 3M Innovation (1996). |
Leading the Way in Chip-scale Technology, advertising supplement, Flexible Circuits Engineering 20-25 (Jan.-Feb. 1997). |
Chipscale International, Join the Chipscale Revolution (1997). |
Solberg, Singulating Chip-Scale Packages, Chip Scale Review 86-87 (Jul. 1998). |
Texas Instruments Licenses Tessera's uBGA Technology, Intel Selects uBGA Package for Flash Memory Devices, JEDEC Committee Approves Ne Chip-scale Package Online (unknown date). |