Not applicable.
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Not applicable.
This invention relates to integrated circuit and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) devices. More particularly, this invention relates to the formation of vias in wafers on which the integrated circuits and MEMS devices may be fabricated.
Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) are very small moveable structures made on a substrate using lithographic processing techniques, such as those used to manufacture semiconductor devices. MEMS devices may be moveable actuators, sensors, valves, pistons, or switches, for example, with characteristic dimensions of a few microns to hundreds of microns. One example of a MEMS device is a microfabricated cantilevered beam, which may be used to switch electrical signals. Because of its small size and fragile structure, the movable cantilever may be enclosed in a cavity to protect it and to allow its operation in an evacuated environment. Therefore, upon fabrication of the moveable structure on a wafer, (device wafer) the device wafer may be mated with a lid wafer, in which depressions have been formed to allow clearance for the structure and its movement. To maintain the vacuum over the lifetime of the device, a getter material may also be enclosed in the device cavity upon sealing the lid wafer against the device wafer.
In order to control such a microfabricated switch, electrical access must be provided that allows power and signals to be transmitted to and from the switch. Vias are typically formed in at least one of the wafers to provide this access. If the switch is for high frequency signals, it may also be important to design the vias such that their electrical effects on the signals are minimized or at least known and understood.
Accordingly, electrical vias allow electrical access to electronic devices or microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) within a package or in a circuit. In order to continually reduce the cost of such packages and circuits, the packing density of devices within the packages and circuits has been continually increased. In order to support the increase in packing density, the pitch between electrical vias for the devices has also continued to shrink. As a consequence, there is a desire to form vias of increasingly large aspect ratio, that is, the vias are tending to become increasingly long and narrow. Furthermore increased packing density requires that the placement tolerance of the vias be tightly controlled, since increased placement uncertainty requires the center to center separation be increased to avoid inadvertent shorting of adjacent vias.
Long, narrow vias are often created by plating a conductive material into a hole formed in a substrate. A hole may be created in a substrate by a directional material removal process such as reactive ion etching (RIE). A seed layer is then deposited conformally over the etched surface, to provide a conductive layer to attract the plating material from the plating bath.
However, when using this approach, the plating material in the bath has a tendency to be increasingly depleted down the depth of the hole. This will cause the plating rate to be higher at the top and near zero at the bottom, resulting in pinch-off at the top. Since the aperture to the via has become closed, the plating bath no longer circulates and the confined bath within the hole is exhausted of its plating species. Plating into the hole will then cease, and a void is formed beneath the point of closure of the via aperture. Since these problems worsen as the via becomes longer and narrower, this approach becomes increasingly difficult for long, narrow vias. Specialized bath chemistries have been developed that reduce the negative effects cited above, but they can be expensive and are difficult to control.
Another known method for making vias is to use an anisotropic etch to form the holes with sloping sidewalls, and to deposit the conductive material on the sloped walls of the holes. However, this method often results in conductive material having non-uniform thickness, and the heat conduction in the thin deposited layer is relatively poor. The aspect ratio must also remain near 1:2 (width=2×depth), further limiting the density of the vias.
Each of these approaches involves the removal of substrate material in the hole to form the via, and the filling of this hole with a conductive material. The hole may be made by, for example, the methods described above and then filled by electroplating gold or copper. Because of the aforementioned problems with these approaches, such methods generally limit the aspect ratio of the via formed, and are also applicable only to conductive substrates.
Therefore, a need exists for a methodology which can form vias with high aspect ratio, and in a non-conductive substrate such as glass or fused silica.
A method is described which can be used to make conductive vias in a non-conductive substrate with large aspect ratios and without etching or removing material.
A feature of this process is that vertical columns are formed on a flat template substrate, and a through substrate via (TSV) wafer of glass is placed over the columns The glass temperature is then raised to a point where the glass begins to flow. It flows around the columns, and then solidifies and cools. The molten glass takes up the shape of the template substrate upon which it was resting. Upon cooling, the glass may be removed from the template substrate, or the template substrate removed from the glass, whereupon high aspect ratio holes remain in the glass. More generally, one may form a via through the thickness of substrate (a “through substrate via” or TSV) by forming a pattern of lands and spaces on a silicon template substrate, disposing a slab of glass material over the template substrate to form a wafer assembly, and melting the slab of glass material until it flows into the spaces and between the lands.
In one embodiment, the template substrate is silicon, and the columns are formed in this silicon substrate. In another embodiment, the template substrate is glass, and metal vias are deposited in the holes made in the glass wafer. In third embodiment the template substrate is glass and Si posts made from heavily doped Si wafer and are left in the glass to form the vias.
Numerous devices can make use of the systems and methods disclosed herein. In particular, RF switches benefit from the reduced capacitive coupling that an insulative substrate can provide. High density vias formed in the insulative substrate increase the density of devices which can be formed on a substrate, thereby reducing cost to manufacture. The performance of such devices may also be improved, in terms of insertion loss, distortion and isolation figures of merit.
One such device is a capacitive switch, which carries high frequency RF signals to a junction. Another example is a low frequency DC switch which must carry large currents in an insulating substrate. A third example is a photovoltaic cell used for power generation.
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 following figures, wherein:
a is a cross sectional view of a sixth embodiment of the through substrate via, a silicon via is surrounded by a glass annulus;
b is a plan view of the sixth embodiment; and
The systems and methods described herein may be particularly applicable to microelectromechanical devices, wherein the vias may be required to be very low loss or when the device is small. MEMS devices are often fabricated on a composite silicon-on-insulator wafer, consisting of a relatively thick (about 675 μm) “handle” layer of silicon overcoated with a thin (about 1 μm) layer of silicon dioxide, and covered with a silicon “device” layer. The MEMS device is made by forming moveable features in the device layer by, for example, deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) with the silicon dioxide layer forming a convenient etch stop. The movable feature is then freed by, for example, wet etching the silicon dioxide layer from beneath the moveable feature. Alternately, MEMS devices can be fabricated on a thin Silicon wafer by depositing and etching thin solid layers of metals and non-metals. If one of these layers is a sacrificial layer, the MEMS device can be released by etching this sacrificial layer, thus freeing the device or feature to move. The moveable features may then be hermetically encapsulated in a cap or lid wafer, which is bonded or otherwise adhered to the top of the silicon device layer, to protect the moveable features from damage from handling and/or to seal a particular gas in the device as a preferred environment for operation of the MEMS device.
Through-hole vias are particularly convenient for MEMS devices, because they may allow electrical access to the encapsulated devices. Without such through holes, electrical access to the MEMS device may have to be gained by electrical leads routed under the capping wafer which is then hermetically sealed. It may be problematic, however, to achieve a hermetic seal over terrain that includes the electrical leads unless more complex and expensive processing steps are employed. This approach also makes radio-frequency applications of the device limited, as electromagnetic coupling will occur from the metallic bondline residing over the normally oriented leads. Alternatively, the electrical access may be achieved with through-wafer vias formed through the handle wafer, using the systems and methods described here.
The systems and methods described herein may be particularly applicable to vacuum encapsulated microelectromechanical (MEMS) devices, such as a MEMS actuator, a sensor, or an infrared microdevice. However, they may also be applicable to any integrated circuit formed on a device wafer and encapsulated with a lid wafer.
The general method is illustrated in
Upon forming the template wafer 100, a glass slab or wafer 130 may be placed overtop the columns 110. The glass slab may be, for example, borosilicate or fused silica glass. The slab may be, for example, about 700 um thick. The glass slab 130 may be anodically or fusion bonded to the silicon template substrate, by for example, applying heat and/or voltage between the wafers. Voltages on the order of 1 kV may be required for anodic bonding, and temperatures in the range of about 200-500 C for 5-20 minutes may be required. Anodic and fusion bonding of silicon and glass wafers are well known in the art. The silicon substrate 120 is shown bonded to the glass wafer 130 in
It should be noted that one of the features 111 shown in
Because of the finite viscosity of the soft glass, the coating of the template substrate 100 may be somewhat conformal, so that a raised feature 140 exists above each column 110. This excess material may be removed easily by, for example, chemical mechanical polishing CMP. The silicon template substrate 100 may also be removed by polishing or etching, leaving only the glass material 130 with conductive columns 110 formed therein. The condition of the polished substrate assembly is shown in
The columns 110 may now be vias 110, and are formed in the glass material 130. The columns or vias 110 may therefore consist of the silicon material from the silicon template substrate, and thus may be conducting, depending on the doping level of the silicon. The vias may therefore form a plurality of wires extending through the thickness of the slab of glass material and having a center to center tolerance of less than about 5 microns. As a result of this manufacturing process, the vias may have excellent dimensional and location tolerance, to within the less than the 5 micron tolerance just mentioned. If preferred, however, this silicon may be removed and replaced with, for example, copper or gold. These materials may have superior electrical properties to silicon, which may be required for some applications. Alternatively, the silicon may be removed to leave a glass slab with a plurality of substantially vertical channels formed therein.
“Substantially vertical”and “substantially perpendicular” may be understood to mean parallel to within about 5 degrees, with respect to adjacent channels, and perpendicular within about 5 degrees to top surface, respectively. The glass slab 130 thereby has an array of precisely shaped pillars and may form a micro-lens array after the Si wafer is removed which are substantially parallel to one another. Such microlens arrays may be useful in, for example, photomultiplier tubes, wherein the vertical channels direct short wavelength photons onto a pixelated detector.
To form the through substrate vias with copper (Cu) via rather than silicon, the following process may be undertaken: After removal of the silicon by, for example, chemical etching,
(1) deposition of a seed layer to permit electrochemical deposition (ECD) into the hole,
(2) electrochemical deposition (ECD) of the Cu,
(3) planarization,
(4) seed layer removal,
(5) trace metal processing,
(6) backside grind and chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) to expose the buried Cu
(7) backside trace metal processing.
In the process outlined above, the seed layer may be, for example, a thin layer of gold or copper deposited conformally to a thickness of less than about 1 um.
To provide a location for solder or bump bonding to the columns or vias 110, metallic pads 150 may be deposited over the columns or vias 110. Such metallization steps are known and are described in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,528,691, U.S. Pat. No. 7,893,798 B2, and U.S. Pat. No. 7,569,926, each of which is incorporated by reference in its entirely, and is assigned to the assignee of the present application. Details of other processing steps may also be found in these incorporated applications. The condition of the completed structure, henceforth referred to as the “through substrate via” (TSV) is shown in
Exemplary dimensions of the device shown in
It should be understood that other designs of template substrates may also be used to practice this invention.
The electrical connections may be provided by a TSV wafer, shown as structure 200 in
The device shown in
In
In one application, a plurality of microfluidic channels 160 may be fabricated in the glass slab 130. These channels may conduct a fluid between the posts, or allow for the expansion or contraction of a gas contained in the channels. These fluidic channels formed in the glass between the Si islands may provide a “thermal short circuit,” that is, areas of high thermal conductivity between the posts. In this architecture, the device 600 may form a section of Joule Thompson Refrigerator that can reach temperatures as low as 77K without fracture of the structure.
In another application, the silicon posts may be appropriately doped either p-type or n-type or both. In this architecture, their surfaces may form the p-n junctions required for photovoltaic (PV) electricity generation. The glassy regions between the posts may serve to focus the radiant energy onto the posts, to increase the light collection efficiency or energy conversion efficiency to electricity from sunlight. The glass 130 may also provide structural strength and rigidity to the unit, important in protecting the thin, fragile silicon material. Importantly, the geometry of this architecture greatly increases the surface area of the p-n junctions. As is well known, having p-n junction with substantial surface area is key to forming highly efficient photovoltaic cells.
A more detailed view of this photovoltaic application is shown in
a shows another exemplary embodiment of a device similar to that illustrated in
It should be understood that this process is exemplary only, and that steps can be added or omitted, or performed in a different order than that shown without deviating from the scope of this invention. For example, if the template wafer is removed by grinding, leaving silicon columns in the via holes formed in the glass slab or wafer, the vias may already be sufficiently conductive, and step S70 may not be necessary. It should also be understood that as described above, the holes in the glass slab may be filled with any number of filler materials, including conductive materials such as copper.
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.