This invention generally relates to methods and devices for making electrical connections to ultrasonic transducers. In particular, the invention relates to methods for making electrical connections to ultrasonic transducer elements through an acoustic backing layer.
A typical ultrasound probe consists of three basic parts: (1) a transducer package; (2) a multi-wire coaxial cable connecting the transducer to the rest of the ultrasound system; and (3) other miscellaneous mechanical hardware such as the probe housing, potting material and electrical shielding. The transducer package is typically produced by stacking layers in sequence.
In one type of known transducer stack, a flexible printed circuit board (hereinafter “flex circuit”), having a plurality of conductive traces connected in common to an exposed bus, is bonded to a metal-coated rear face of a large piezoelectric ceramic block. The bus of the flex circuit is bonded and electrically coupled to the metal-coated rear face of the piezoelectric ceramic block. In addition, a conductive foil is bonded to a metal-coated front face of the piezoelectric ceramic block to provide a ground path for the ground electrodes of the final transducer array. The conductive foil must be sufficiently thin to be acoustically transparent, that is, to allow ultrasound emitted from the front face of the piezoelectric ceramic block to pass through the foil without significant attenuation. The conductive foil extends beyond the area of the transducer array and is connected to electrical ground.
Next, a first acoustic impedance matching layer is bonded to the conductive foil. This acoustic impedance matching layer has an acoustic impedance less than that of the piezoelectric ceramic. Optionally, a second acoustic impedance matching layer having an acoustic impedance less than that of the first acoustic impedance matching layer is bonded to the front face of the first matching layer. The acoustic impedance matching layers transform the high acoustic impedance of the piezoelectric ceramic to the low acoustic impedance of the human body and water, thereby improving the coupling with the medium in which the emitted ultrasonic waves will propagate.
To fabricate a linear array of piezoelectric transducer elements, the top portion of this stack is then “diced” by sawing vertical cuts, i.e., kerfs, that divide the piezoelectric ceramic block into a multiplicity of separate side-by-side transducer elements. During dicing, the bus of the flex circuit is cut to form separate terminals and the metal-coated rear and front faces of the piezoelectric ceramic block are cut to form separate signal and ground electrodes respectively. Electrically and acoustically isolated, the individual elements can now function independently in the array. Although the conductive foil is also cut into parallel strips, these strips are connected in common to the conductive foil portion that extends beyond the transducer array, which conductive foil portion forms a bus that is connected to ground. Alternatively, the flex circuit can be formed with individual terminals instead of a bus and then bonded to the piezoelectric transducer array after dicing.
The transducer stack also comprises a mass of suitable acoustical damping material having high acoustic losses. This backing layer is coupled to the rear surface of the piezoelectric transducer elements to absorb ultrasonic waves that emerge from the back side of each element so that they will not be partially reflected and interfere with the ultrasonic waves propagating in the forward direction.
A known technique for electrically connecting the piezoelectric elements of a transducer stack to a multi-wire coaxial cable is by a flex circuit having a plurality of etched conductive traces extending from a first terminal area to a second terminal area in which the conductive traces fan out, i.e., the terminals in the first terminal area have a linear pitch greater than the linear pitch of the terminals in the second terminal area. The terminals in the first terminal areas are respectively connected to the individual wires of the coaxial cable. The terminals in the second terminal areas are respectively connected to the signal electrodes of the individual piezoelectric transducer elements.
As the system demands on element count in these devices increase, the requirements for making electrical connection to new complex transducer geometries become more demanding. In particular, the density requirements of the transducer array are challenged by the transducers needed for multi-dimensional imaging. These transducers require elements in two dimensions, instead of the one-dimensional designs required by conventional imaging apparatus. When the electrical interconnect becomes two-dimensional, however, the designer is faced with the challenge of providing an electrical interconnect for transducer elements which are no longer accessible from the sides of the array, which is a feature common to most conventional transducer designs. More specifically, in the case of an array of three or more rows of transducer elements, one or more rows are in the interior of the array with access blocked by the outermost rows of the array. In order to connect the internal elements, complicated methods have been proposed and developed. One solution, embodied in diverse transducer designs, is to make electrical connections through the acoustic backing layer of the transducer stack.
The acoustic backing layer or plate is typically made of acoustically attenuating material that dampens the acoustic energy generated by the piezoelectric transducer in the direction away from the patient being scanned. An acoustic backing layer is typically cast from epoxy mixed with acoustic absorbers and scatterers, such as small particles of tungsten or silica or air bubbles. The mixtures of these materials must be controlled to give the acoustic backing layer a desired acoustic impedance and attenuation. This acoustic attenuation, along with the acoustic impedance, affects transducer performance parameters such as bandwidth and sensitivity. Therefore, the acoustic properties of the backfill material must be tailored to optimize the acoustic stack design. Meanwhile, the backfill material must also provide both mechanical support for the diced transducer array and, in the case of a two-dimensional array, allow for electrical connectivity to each of the individual transducer elements. The addition of the latter requirement for two-dimensional arrays presents some a typical constraints on the design and manufacturability of the acoustic backing layer. Electrical connectivity must be achieved through the acoustically attenuating material in such a manner as to prevent element-to-element electrical crosstalk. Meanwhile the electrical connector must also displace a minimal volume percentage of the acoustically attenuating material in order for the overall acoustic design of the system to be maintained.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,267,221 describes an acoustically attenuating material that contains conductive elements aligned in one direction through the acoustic material to provide electrical connectivity between a diced transducer array and an electrical circuit. The block of acoustically attenuating material spanned by the electrical conductors may be either homogeneous or heterogeneous in composition. The electrical conductors embedded within the acoustic material may be wires, insulated wires, rods, flat foil, foil formed into tubes or woven fabric. This patent also discloses forming a thin metal coating on cores made of acoustic backing material. Electrical contact to the transducer array interface may be at one or multiple locations on the array face.
A second approach for obtaining a composite acoustically attenuating material is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,043,590, which teaches an acoustic backing block comprised of a metallized flex circuit possessing conductive traces embedded within an acoustically attenuating material.
A different approach is taken in U.S. Pat. No. 6,266,857, which discloses the formation of a set of vias and indented pad seats in an acoustically attenuating backing layer, e.g., by means of laser machining. The machined substrate is then plated with an electrically conductive material. Excess electrically conductive material is removed from the substrate to leave electrically conductive material plated on the indented pad seats and the vias, thereby forming conductive pads and plated vias, the latter constituting conductive traces that penetrate the substrate in the thickness direction. In addition, vias are formed in the piezoceramic layer and plated, these plated vias being aligned with and electrically connected to those plated vias in the backing layer that are connected to ground. This arrangement allows the electrical connection of ground electrodes on the front surface and signal electrodes on the rear surface of the transducer element array to a flex circuit on the back surface of the backing layer.
There is a continuing need for two-dimensional ultrasonic transducer arrays of improved design with electrical connection through the acoustic backing layer.
The invention is directed in part to an ultrasonic transducer having an acoustic backing comprised of an acoustically attenuative material possessing an electrically conducting plane on at least one face and an electrically conducting path through the body of the acoustic backing material. The conductor thicknesses on the surface and through the body are sufficiently small that they present a minimal impact on the overall acoustic properties. The conductive face joins against the transducer elements, allowing for easy contact to each transducer pixel, and is separated into discrete elements during array dicing following assembly.
One aspect on the invention is a method of manufacture comprising the following steps: forming a preform of acoustic backing material having an array of holes that pass through the preform from one side to the other; depositing an electrically conducting film onto at least one face of the acoustic backing preform and onto the surfaces of the holes that span the acoustic backing material; filling the remaining volume inside the holes with acoustic backing material; mounting the resulting layer of acoustic backing material onto a transducer array; and electrically separating each transducer element to allow for individual electrical connection.
Another aspect of the invention is a method of manufacturing an ultrasonic transducer comprising the following steps: (a) forming an array of holes in a relatively thick layer of acoustically attenuative material having front and rear faces, each hole spanning the thickness of the body from the front face to the rear face thereof; (b) depositing a first relatively thin layer of electrically conductive material on at least the front face of the relatively thick layer and on the surfaces of the holes; (c) filling the remaining volume of the holes with acoustically attenuative material; (d) depositing a second relatively thin layer of electrically conductive material on a rear face of a layer of piezoelectric material; (e) laminating the relatively thick layer of acoustically attenuative material to the layer of piezoelectric material with the first and second relatively thin layers of electrically conductive material electrically connected; and dicing the layer of piezoelectric material and a portion of the relatively thick layer of acoustically attenuative material along a plurality of mutually parallel planes to a sufficient depth to form a plurality of kerfs that electrically isolate a plurality of regions of the first and second relatively thin layers from each other.
A further aspect of the invention is a method of manufacturing an ultrasonic transducer comprising the following steps: (a) forming a mold having a plurality of columns; (b) depositing a first relatively thin layer of electrically conductive material on the inner surfaces of the mold, including the peripheral surfaces of the columns; (c) casting acoustically attenuative material in the mold to form a relatively thick layer of the acoustically attenuative material joined to the first relatively thin layer of electrically conductive material, with an array of holes formed by the plurality of columns; (d) removing the mold while leaving the first relatively thin layer of electrically conductive material joined to the relatively thick layer of the acoustically attenuative material; (e) filling the remaining volume of the holes with acoustically attenuative material; (f) depositing a second relatively thin layer of electrically conductive material on a rear face of a layer of piezoelectric material; (g) mounting the relatively thick layer of acoustically attenuative material to the layer of piezoelectric material with the first and second relatively thin layers of electrically conductive material in contact with each other; and (h) dicing the layer of piezoelectric material and a portion of the relatively thick layer of acoustically attenuative material along a plurality of mutually parallel planes to a sufficient depth that a plurality of regions of the second relatively thin layer on the rear face of the layer of piezoelectric material are electrically isolated from each other and a corresponding plurality of regions of the first relatively thin layer on the front face of the relatively thick layer of acoustically attenuative material are electrically isolated from each other by a plurality of kerfs.
Yet another aspect of the invention is an ultrasonic transducer comprising an array of piezoelectric transducer elements and an acoustic backing layer acoustically coupled to the rear face of each of the piezoelectric transducer elements, the acoustic backing layer comprising a layer of acoustically attenuative material with a plurality of via-shaped internal structures, each of the via-shaped internal structures having a deposit of electrically conductive material thereon and bounding a volume filled with acoustically attenuative material.
A further aspect of the invention is an ultrasonic transducer comprising: an acoustic backing layer made of acoustically attenuative material; a array of ultrasonic transducer elements that generate ultrasound waves in response to electrical excitation, each ultrasonic transducer element having a rear face acoustically coupled to a respective region of a front face of the acoustic backing layer; a array of acoustic matching layer elements, each ultrasonic transducer element having a front face acoustically coupled to a respective acoustic matching layer element; a common ground connection made of electrically conductive material and disposed between the array of ultrasonic transducer elements and the array of acoustic matching layer elements; and a plurality of electrical conductors that pass through the acoustic backing layer. The front and rear faces of the ultrasonic transducer elements have deposits of electrically conductive material thereon. Each of the electrical conductors comprises a respective conductive pad formed on the front face of the acoustic backing layer and in electrical contact with an opposing rear face of a respective ultrasonic transducer element, and further comprises a respective conductive trace deposited on a respective via-shaped structure in the acoustic backing layer, connected to a respective one of the conductive pads and exposed at a rear face of the acoustic backing layer. No part of the common ground connection passes through the acoustic backing material.
Other aspects of the invention are disclosed and claimed below.
The present invention is directed to an acoustic backing layer for a multi-row two-dimensional transducer array and a method for manufacturing such an acoustic backing layer. The backing material possesses acoustic attenuation properties sufficient to allow for optimal acoustic stack design plus electrical connectivity through the backing layer to each individual element of the transducer array.
Each transducer element 12 in the array 10 is acoustically coupled to the acoustic backing layer 14. The rows of transducer elements are electrically connected to respective flex circuits 16 via electrical conductors (not shown in
After the foregoing dicing operation, a ground connection 18 is placed onto the metallized tops of the piezoelectric transducer elements 12. One embodiment of this is to plate a thin (e.g., 2–4 microns) metal layer onto an inner acoustic impedance matching layer 20 and then laminate the latter to the front face of the piezoelectric layer. A second acoustic impedance matching layer 22 is laminated to the first acoustic impedance matching layer 20. Layers 20 and 22 are then diced in the same planes that the piezoelectric layer was diced, thereby forming kerfs 36 that are generally coplanar with kerfs 32. The dicing of layer 20 stops short of the ground metallization 18. In this way the elements in a column are acoustically separated from one another, but electrically connected via the ground metallization.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, the electrical conductors connecting the transducer array to the flex circuits via the acoustic backing layer comprise: (1) respective conductive pads deposited on the front face of the acoustic backing layer and in electrical contact with respective signal electrodes on respective transducer elements; and (2) respective conductive traces connected to respective conductive pads and deposited inside respective vias or throughholes formed in the acoustic backing layer. Each via is subsequently filled with acoustically attenuative material. Optionally, the electrical conductors of the acoustic backing layer may further comprise respective conductive pads deposited on the rear face of the acoustic backing layer and in electrical contact with respective conductive pads or traces printed on flex circuits (one flex circuit for each row of transducer elements).
Thus, the electrical path is from the flex circuit 16 to the conductive trace in the backing layer 14, and then to the signal electrode on the rear face of the transducer element 12. The metallized front faces of the transducer elements are connected to the ground metallization 18, which is common to all elements. The forward acoustic path is from the ceramic elements 12 through the ground metal layer 18 to the acoustic matching layers 20 and 22, and then into the lens or facing (not shown) for the transducer. The reverse acoustic path is for the energy to get trapped by the acoustic backing layer 14.
The method of manufacturing the acoustic backing layer in accordance with one embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to
The preform, consisting of a layer 24 of acoustic backing material plus holes 26, may be made by any of several techniques. For example, the preform may be formed from a solid piece of acoustic backing material by mechanical or laser drilling of the holes. Conversely, the preform may be formed by casting the acoustic backing material over a mold that contains columns. Once removed from the mold, the mold columns form holes 26 in the cast acoustic backing material 24. The mold columns may be tapered to assist in removal of the cast material from the mold.
After the backing layer preform has been prepared, a layer 28 of electrically conductive material is deposited on the front face of the preform and on the interior surfaces of the holes 26, as seen in
A variation for preparing the conductive array of holes in the acoustic backing material is to prepare the form for casting the acoustic backing material as described above. A thin layer of electrically conductive material is deposited onto the form prior to casting of the acoustic backing material. After the backing material has hardened, the form is removed by heating or dissolving, thereby leaving behind the acoustic backing material and the attached conductive coating. The conductive film need not be limited to only one face of the acoustic backing material. However, it is preferred that at least the front face of the acoustic backing material be electrically conducting for optimal electrical coupling to the signal electrodes of the piezoelectric transducer elements.
Once the acoustic backing material possesses electrical connectivity through each of the array holes, additional acoustic backing material 30 is used to fill the remaining openings in the acoustic backing preform, as shown in
The final product is an acoustic backing material in which a substantial volume is acoustically attenuative material so as to allow for optimal transducer design. However, the acoustic backing material also possesses an array of conductive material deposited over one face, to provide for minimal contact resistance with the transducer array interface, and possesses electrical connectivity through the thickness to provide for electrical contact to electrical circuitry mounted to the other face.
The next operation is to mount the acoustic backing layer onto the back face of a piezoelectric layer and then dice the resulting laminate through the total thickness of the latter and through only a top portion of the thickness of the formed using a dicing saw. Preferably this is done in one dicing operation, although this is not necessary and the top portion of the acoustic backing layer could be diced before being laminated to the piezoelectric layer.
A top view of the acoustic backing layer after dicing in mutually orthogonal directions can be seen in
In the case of mutually orthogonal straight kerfs as shown in
Connection to the exposed ends of the conductive traces 40 on the back side of the acoustic backing material array holes thereby provides electrical connection to each transducer element in the multi-row array. Connection can be through any of several common methods, such as the use of a multilayer flex circuit or other direct metallization method.
The lamination and dicing of the various layers of the transducer pallet is shown in
Referring now to
After dicing, the front face of the second acoustic impedance matching layer 22 is conventionally bonded to the planar rear face of a convex cylindrical lens (e.g., made of silicone rubber) using an acoustically transparent thin layer of silicone adhesive.
The conductive pads on the front face of the acoustic backing layer may be laminated to the signal electrodes of the transducer array using high pressure and a thin layer of non-conductive epoxy. If the opposing surfaces of the acoustic backing material and the piezoelectric ceramic material are microscopically rough and the epoxy layer is sufficiently thin, then an electrical connection is achieved via a distribution of direct contacts between high points on the ceramic and high points on the acoustic backing layer.
An ultrasonic transducer array can be electrically connected to conductive traces on a flex circuit using the acoustic backing construction disclosed above. The latter can also be used to electrically connect an ultrasonic transducer array to other electrical conductor arrangements, such as inflexible printed circuit boards, wires, cables, and so forth.
While the invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 0240184 | Nov 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040100163 A1 | May 2004 | US |