Claims
- 1. A process for fabricating a flat panel evacuated display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a substrate having at least one attachment site; providing at least one silicate glass element having a contacting surface having a volume of oxidizable material thereon; positioning said at least one silicate glass element such that said contacting surface is in physical contact with said at least one attachment site; and anodically bonding said contacting surface to said at least one attachment site.
- 2. The process of claim 1, wherein said substrate is a silicate glass face plate that is generally transparent in the visible spectrum.
- 3. The process of claim 2, wherein each said at least one silicate glass element is a spacer.
- 4. The process of claim 3, which further comprises the step of subjecting said silicate glass face plate to a thermal cycle, prior to positioning the spacers thereon, in order to dimensionally stabilize it.
- 5. A process for fabricating a flat panel evacuated display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a substrate having at least one attachment site; providing at least one silicate glass element having a contacting surface having a volume of oxidizable material thereon; positioning said at least one silicate glass element such that said contacting surface is in physical contact with said at least one attachment site; heating said substrate and said at least one silicate glass element; applying a potential between said at least one attachment site and a noncontacting surface of said at least one silicate glass element, said at least one attachment site being positively biased with respect to said noncontacting surface, said potential being sufficient to cause oxygen ions to migrate from the at least one silicate glass element having the volume of oxidizable material thereon at said at least one attachment site causing at least a portion of the oxidizable material to oxidize and form an oxide interface which bonds said substrate to said at least one silicate glass element.
- 6. The process of claim 5, wherein the substrate and the at least one silicate glass element are heated to about the transition temperature of said at least one silicate glass element.
- 7. The process of claim 5, wherein the applied potential falls within a range of about 500 to 1,000 volts.
- 8. A process for fabricating a flat panel display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a laminar silicate glass substrate; covering the substrate with an anti-reflective layer; covering the anti-reflective layer with a light-absorbing layer; patterning the light-absorbing layer to form a generally opaque matrix which will serve as a contrast mask during operation of the display, said matrix exposing portions of the anti-reflective layer where luminescent phosphor material will later be deposited; covering the matrix and the exposed portions of the anti-reflective layer with a transparent conductive layer depositing an oxidizable material layer over the transparent conductive layer; patterning the oxidizable material layer to form oxidizable material patches for spacer attachment sites exposing portions of the underlying transparent conductive layer; providing a plurality of spacers, each spacer of said plurality of spacers having a bondable surface having a volume of oxidizable material thereon; positioning the bondable surface of said each spacer of the plurality of spacers in contact with one of said spacer attachment sites; and anodically bonding the bondable surface of said each spacer of the plurality of spacers to the one of said spacer attachment sites with which it is in contact.
- 9. The process of claim 8, which further comprises the steps of:depositing a protective sacrificial layer over the oxidizable material patches and over the exposed portions of the transparent conductive layer; and patterning the protective sacrificial layer to expose each of said oxidizable material patches.
- 10. The process of claim 9, wherein said protective sacrificial layer is selected from a group consisting of cobalt oxide and aluminum, chromium, cobalt, and molybdenum metals.
- 11. The process of claim 9, wherein said patterning of the protective sacrificial layer also leaves a channel surrounding the oxidizable material layer at said one of said spacer attachment sites, said channel exposing the underlying transparent conductive layer.
- 12. The process of claim 8, wherein said spacer attachment sites are electrically interconnected during the step of said anodically bonding by the underlying transparent conductive layer.
- 13. The process of claim 8, wherein said anti-reflective layer has an optical thickness of about one-quarter wavelength of light in a middle of a visible spectrum.
- 14. The process of claim 13, wherein said anti-reflective layer is about 650 Å thick and comprises silicon nitride.
- 15. The process of claim 8, wherein said light-absorbing layer comprises a colored transition metal oxide.
- 16. The process of claim 15, wherein said colored transition metal oxide is cobalt oxide having a color ranging from dark blue to black.
- 17. The process of claim 8, wherein said patterning of said light-absorbing layer also creates alignment marks in said light-absorbing layer to which deposition of the phosphor material will be optically aligned.
- 18. The process of claim 8, wherein said transparent conductive layer comprises a material selected from a group consisting of indium tin oxide and tin oxide.
- 19. The process of claim 8, wherein said oxidizable material layer comprises a material selected from a group consisting of silicon and oxidizable metals.
- 20. The process of claim 8, wherein said depositing of said oxidizable material layer is via chemical vapor deposition.
- 21. The process of claim 8, wherein said depositing of said oxidizable material layer is via physical vapor deposition.
- 22. The process of claim 8, wherein said spacer attachment sites are situated in regions of said opaque matrix.
- 23. The process of claim 8, wherein said providing said plurality of spacers is accomplished via the steps of:preparing a glass fiber bundle section having a set of permanent glass fibers, each of which is completely surrounded by filler glass that is selectively etchable with respect to the set of permanent glass fibers; sintering the glass fiber bundle section; drawing the glass fiber bundle section; forming a block by stacking said drawn glass fiber bundle section and sintering the stacked glass fiber bundle section; slicing the block to form a uniformly thick laminar slice having a pair of opposing major surfaces; and polishing both of said opposing major surfaces of the laminar slice to a final thickness which corresponds to a desired spacer length.
- 24. The process of claim 23, wherein for cylindrical solid spacers, each of said set of permanent glass fibers is clad with said filler glass, and each said filler glass clad permanent glass fiber is surrounded by six other identically clad fibers, seven of which together form a repeating, hexagonally packed unit through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section.
- 25. The process of claim 23, wherein for spacer support columns having a square cross-section, the set of permanent glass fibers are cubically packed as a repeating array through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section, with each of said set of permanent glass fibers surrounded by eight of said filler glass fibers having identical cross-sections.
- 26. A process for fabricating a face plate assembly for a flat panel evacuated display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a laminar substrate; coating said laminar substrate with an anti-reflective layer; depositing a substantially opaque layer over the anti-reflective layer; patterning said substantially opaque layer to form a substantially opaque matrix surrounding transparent regions where the anti-reflective layer is exposed; depositing a transparent conductive material layer over said substantially opaque matrix and over exposed regions of said anti-reflective layer; depositing an oxidizable material layer over said transparent conductive material layer; patterning said oxidizable material layer to leave an oxidizable material patch at each of a plurality of spacer attachment sites; depositing a protective sacrificial layer over the oxidizable material patches and over portions of the transparent conductive material layer not covered by the oxidizable material patches; patterning the protective sacrificial layer to expose the oxidizable material patch at said each of said plurality of spacer attachment sites; providing an array of unattached glass spacers imbedded within a filler glass matrix, said unattached glass spacers being of uniform length and being positioned generally perpendicular to said substrate, said unattached glass spacers having a volume of oxidizable material thereon; positioning said array such that said each of said plurality of spacer attachment sites is generally in contact with a contacting end of one of said unattached glass spacers having said volume of oxidizable material thereon; and anodically bonding said unattached glass spacers to said plurality of spacer attachment sites with which they are in contact.
- 27. The process of claim 26, which further comprises the step of polishing an upper surface of the array following the anodic bonding step.
- 28. The process of claim 27, wherein said step of polishing is performed utilizing both abrasive action and chemical etchant action simultaneously.
- 29. The process of claim 26, wherein said laminar substrate is silicate glass.
- 30. The process of claim 29, wherein the process further comprises the step of subjecting said laminar substrate to a thermal cycle in order to dimensionally stabilize it.
- 31. The process of claim 26, wherein said protective sacrificial layer is selected from a group consisting of cobalt oxide and aluminum, chromium, cobalt, and molybdenum metals.
- 32. The process of claim 26, wherein said patterning of the protective sacrificial layer also leaves a channel surrounding each said oxidizable material patch, said channel exposing the underlying transparent conductive material layer.
- 33. The process of claim 26, wherein said plurality of spacer attachment sites are electrically interconnected during the anodic bonding step by the underlying transparent conductive material layer.
- 34. The process of claim 26, wherein said anti-reflective layer has an optical thickness of about one-quarter wavelength of light in a middle of a visible spectrum.
- 35. The process of claim 26, wherein said anti-reflective layer is about 650 Å thick and comprises silicon nitride.
- 36. The process of claim 26, wherein said substantially opaque layer comprises a colored transition metal oxide.
- 37. The process of claim 36, wherein said colored transition metal oxide is cobalt oxide having a color ranging from dark blue to black.
- 38. The process of claim 26, wherein said patterning of said substantially opaque layer also creates alignment marks in said substantially opaque layer to which deposition of a phosphor material will be optically aligned.
- 39. The process of claim 26, wherein said transparent conductive material layer comprises a material selected from a group consisting of indium tin oxide and tin oxide.
- 40. The process of claim 26, wherein said oxidizable material layer comprises a material selected from a group consisting of silicon and oxidizable metals.
- 41. The process of claim 26, wherein said each of said plurality of spacer attachment sites is in an opaque matrix region.
- 42. The process of claim 26, wherein said providing said array of said unattached glass spacers is accomplished via the steps of:preparing a glass fiber bundle section having a set of permanent glass fibers, each of which is completely surrounded by filler glass that is selectively etchable with respect to the set of permanent glass fibers; sintering the glass fiber bundle section; drawing the glass fiber bundle section; forming a block by stacking said drawn glass fiber bundle section and sintering the stacked glass fiber bundle section; slicing the block to form a uniformly thick laminar slice having a pair of opposing major surfaces; polishing both of said opposing major surfaces of the laminar slice to a final thickness which corresponds to a desired spacer length; and providing a volume of oxidizable material on a major surface of the laminar slice.
- 43. The process of claim 42, wherein for cylindrical solid spacers, each of said set of permanent glass fibers is clad with said filler glass, and each said filler glass clad permanent glass fiber is surrounded by six other identically clad fibers, seven of which together form a repeating, hexagonally packed unit through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section.
- 44. The process of claim 42, wherein for spacer support columns having a square cross-section, the set of permanent glass fibers are cubically packed as a repeating array through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section, with each of said set of permanent glass fibers surrounded by eight of said filler glass fibers having identical cross-sections.
- 45. The process of claim 26, wherein said anodic bonding step is accomplished via the steps of:heating the laminar substrate and said contacting array of said array of unattached glass spacers; applying a potential between said transparent conductive material layer and a noncontacting end of each of said array of unattached glass spacers, said transparent conductive material layer being positively biased with respect to the noncontacting end of said each of said array of unattached glass spacers, said potential being sufficient to cause oxygen ions from the contacting end of each of said array of unattached glass spacers having said volume of oxidizable material thereon to migrate to the oxidizable material patch causing at least a portion of the oxidizable material on the array of unattached glass spacers and the oxidizable material on the oxidizable material patch to oxidize and form an oxide interface which bonds said array of unattached glass spacers to said plurality of spacer attachment sites with which they are in contact.
- 46. The process of claim 45, wherein electrical contact is made to the noncontacting end of said each of said array of unattached glass spacers via a metal foil electrode which covers the entire said array of unattached glass spacers.
- 47. The process of claim 45, wherein, during the anodic bonding step, the laminar substrate and the contacting said array of unattached glass spacers are heated to about a transition temperature of glass from which said array of unattached glass spacers are formed.
- 48. The process of claim 45, wherein said potential is within a range of about 500 to 1,000 volts and applied between said transparent conductive material layer and the noncontacting end of said each of said array of unattached glass spacers during the anodic bonding step.
- 49. The process of claim 45, wherein, during the anodic bonding step, extra spacers and filler glass anodically bond to the protective sacrificial layer.
- 50. The process of claim 49, which, after the anodic bonding step, further comprises the steps of:etching away the filler glass; etching away the protective sacrificial layer and said extra spacers; and depositing luminescent phosphor on portions of the laminar substrate not covered by the substantially opaque matrix.
- 51. A process for fabricating a flat panel evacuated display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a substrate having at least one attachment site; providing at least one silicate glass element having a contacting surface coated with a volume of oxidizable material; positioning said at least one silicate glass element such that said contacting surface is in physical contact with said at least one attachment site; and anodically bonding said contacting surface to said at least one attachment site.
- 52. The process of claim 51, wherein said substrate is a silicate glass face plate that is generally transparent in a visible spectrum.
- 53. The process of claim 52, wherein each of said at least one silicate glass element is a spacer.
- 54. The process of claim 53, which further comprises the step of subjecting said face plate to a thermal cycle, prior to positioning the spacers thereon, in order to dimensionally stabilize it.
- 55. A process for fabricating a flat panel evacuated display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a substrate having at least one attachment site; providing at least one silicate glass element having a contacting surface coated with a volume of oxidizable material; positioning said at least one silicate glass element such that said contacting surface is in physical contact with said at least one attachment site; heating said substrate and said at least one silicate glass element; applying a potential between said at least one attachment site and a noncontacting surface of said at least one silicate glass element, said at least one attachment site being positively biased with respect to said noncontacting surface, said potential being sufficient to cause oxygen ions to migrate from the at least one silicate glass element to the oxidizable material at said at least one attachment site causing at least a portion of the oxidizable material to oxidize and form an oxide interface which bonds said substrate to said at least one silicate glass element.
- 56. The process of claim 55, wherein the substrate and the at least one silicate glass element are heated to about transition temperature of said at least one silicate glass element.
- 57. The process of claim 55, wherein the applied potential falls within a range of about 500 to 1,000 volts.
- 58. A process for fabricating a flat panel display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a laminar silicate glass substrate; covering the substrate with an anti-reflective layer; covering the anti-reflective layer with a light-absorbing layer; patterning the light-absorbing layer to form a generally opaque matrix which will serve as a contrast mask during operation of the display, said matrix exposing portions of the anti-reflective layer where luminescent phosphor material will later be deposited; covering the matrix and the exposed portions of the anti-reflective layer with a transparent conductive layer; providing a plurality of spacers, each spacer of said plurality of spacers having a bondable surface covered with a layer of an oxidizable material; positioning the bondable surface of each said spacer of said plurality of spacers in contact with said transparent conductive layer where said conductive layer overlays said opaque matrix; and anodically bonding the bondable surface of each said spacer of said plurality of spacers to the transparent conductive layer.
- 59. The process of claim 58, which further comprises the steps of:depositing a protective sacrificial layer over the transparent conductive layer; and patterning the protective sacrificial layer to expose the transparent conductive layer at spacer attachment sites.
- 60. The process of claim 58, wherein said protective sacrificial layer is selected from a group consisting of cobalt oxide and aluminum, chromium, cobalt, and molybdenum metals.
- 61. The process of claim 58, wherein said spacer attachment sites are electrically interconnected during the anodic bonding step by the underlying transparent conductive layer.
- 62. The process of claim 58, wherein said anti-reflective layer has an optical thickness of about one-quarter wavelength of light in a middle of a visible spectrum.
- 63. The process of claim 62, wherein said anti-reflective layer is about 650 Å thick and comprises silicon nitride.
- 64. The process of claim 58, wherein said light-absorbing layer comprises a colored transition metal oxide.
- 65. The process of claim 64, wherein said colored transition metal oxide is cobalt oxide having a color ranging from dark blue to black.
- 66. The process of claim 58, wherein said patterning of said light-absorbing layer also creates alignment marks in said light-absorbing layer to which deposition of the phosphor material will be optically aligned.
- 67. The process of claim 58, wherein said transparent conductive layer is selected from a group consisting of indium tin oxide and tin oxide.
- 68. The process of claim 58, wherein said oxidizable material layer comprises a material selected from a group consisting of silicon and oxidizable metals.
- 69. The process of claim 58, wherein said oxidizable material layer is deposited via chemical vapor deposition.
- 70. The process of claim 58, wherein said oxidizable material layer is deposited via physical vapor deposition.
- 71. The process of claim 58, wherein of said plurality of spacers is formed comprising:preparing a glass fiber bundle section having a set of permanent glass fibers, each of which is completely surrounded by filler glass that is selectively etchable with respect to the set of permanent glass fibers; sintering the glass fiber bundle section; drawing the glass fiber bundle section; forming a block by stacking said drawn glass fiber bundle section and sintering the stacked bundle glass fiber section; slicing the block to form a uniformly thick laminar slice having a pair of opposing major surfaces; polishing both of said opposing major surfaces of the laminar slice to a final thickness which corresponds to a desired spacer length; and depositing said layer of oxidizable material on one of said opposing major surfaces of said slice.
- 72. The process of claim 71, wherein for said plurality of spacers having a cylindrical cross-section, each of said set of permanent glass fibers is clad with said filler glass, and each said filler glass clad permanent glass fiber is surrounded by six other identically clad fibers, seven of which together form a repeating, hexagonally packed unit through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section.
- 73. The process of claim 71, wherein for said plurality of spacers having a square cross-section, the set of permanent glass fibers are cubically packed as a repeating array through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section, each of said set of permanent glass fibers surrounded by eight of said filler glass fibers having substantially identical cross-sections.
- 74. The process of claim 71, wherein for said plurality of spacers having a rectangular cross-section, the set of permanent glass fibers are cubically packed as a repeating array through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section, each of said set of permanent glass fibers surrounded by eight of said filler glass fibers having substantially identical cross-sections.
- 75. A process for fabricating a face plate assembly for a flat panel evacuated display, said process comprising the steps of:providing a laminar substrate; coating said substrate with an anti-reflective layer; depositing a substantially opaque layer over the anti-reflective layer; patterning said substantially opaque layer to form a substantially opaque matrix surrounding transparent regions where the anti-reflective layer is exposed; depositing a transparent conductive material layer over said opaque matrix and over exposed regions of said anti-reflective layer; depositing a protective sacrificial layer over the transparent conductive material layer; patterning the protective sacrificial layer to expose the transparent conductive material layer at spacer attachment sites; providing an array of unattached glass spacers imbedded within a filler glass matrix, said unattached glass spacers being of uniform length, and being positioned generally perpendicular to said substrate, each of said unattached glass spacers having a contacting end coated with a volume of oxidizable material; positioning said array such that each of said spacer attachment sites is generally in contact with said contacting end of said unattached glass spacers; and anodically bonding said unattached glass spacers to said spacer attachment sites with which they are in contact.
- 76. The process of claim 75, wherein said laminar substrate is silicate glass.
- 77. The process of claim 76, wherein the process further comprises the step of subjecting said substrate to a thermal cycle in order to dimensionally stabilize it.
- 78. The process of claim 75, wherein said protective sacrificial layer is selected from a group consisting of cobalt oxide and aluminum, chromium, cobalt, and molybdenum metals.
- 79. The process of claim 75, wherein said spacer attachment sites are electrically interconnected during the anodic bonding step by the underlying transparent conductive material layer.
- 80. The process of claim 75, wherein said anti-reflective layer has an optical thickness of about one-quarter wavelength of light in a middle of a visible spectrum.
- 81. The process of claim 75, wherein said anti-reflective layer is about 650 Å thick and comprises silicon nitride.
- 82. The process of claim 75, wherein said light-absorbing layer comprises a colored transition metal oxide.
- 83. The process of claim 82, wherein said colored transition metal oxide is cobalt oxide having a color ranging from dark blue to black.
- 84. The process of claim 75, wherein said patterning of said opaque layer also creates alignment marks in said light-absorbing layer to which deposition of a phosphor material will be optically aligned.
- 85. The process of claim 75, wherein said transparent conductive material layer is selected from a group consisting of indium tin oxide and tin oxide.
- 86. The process of claim 75, wherein said oxidizable material comprises a material selected from a group consisting of silicon and oxidizable metals.
- 87. The process of claim 75, wherein each of said spacer attachment sites is in a region of said opaque matrix.
- 88. The process of claim 75, wherein said array of said unattached glass spacers is formed comprising:preparing a glass fiber bundle section having a set of permanent glass fibers, each of which is completely surrounded by filler glass that is selectively etchable with respect to the set of permanent glass fibers; sintering the glass fiber bundle section; drawing the glass fiber bundle section; forming a block by stacking said drawn glass fiber bundle section and sintering the stacked glass fiber bundle section; slicing the block to form a uniformly thick laminar slice having a pair of opposing major surfaces; polishing both of said opposing major surfaces of the laminar slice to a final thickness which corresponds to a desired spacer length; and depositing a layer of said oxidizable material on one of said opposing major surfaces of said slice.
- 89. The process of claim 88, wherein for said laminar slice having a cylindrical cross-section, each of said set of permanent glass fibers is clad with said filler glass, and each of said filler glass clad set of permanent glass fibers is surrounded by six other identically clad fibers, seven of which together form a repeating, hexagonally packed unit through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section.
- 90. The process of claim 88, wherein for said laminar slice having a square cross-section, the set of permanent glass fibers are cubically packed as a repeating array through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section, each of said set of permanent glass fibers surrounded by eight of said filler glass fibers having identical cross-sections.
- 91. The process of claim 88, wherein for said laminar slice having a rectangular cross-section, the set of permanent glass fibers are cubically packed as a repeating array through a cross-section of the glass fiber bundle section, each of said set of permanent glass fibers surrounded by eight of said filler glass fibers having identical cross-sections.
- 92. The process of claim 75, wherein said anodic bonding step is accomplished via the steps of:heating the substrate and said contacting end of said array of unattached glass spacers; applying a potential between said transparent conductive material layer and a noncontacting end of each of said unattached glass spacers, said transparent conductive material layer being positively biased with respect to the noncontacting end of each spacer support column, said potential being sufficient to cause oxygen ions from the contacting end of said each of said unattached glass spacers to migrate to a layer of said oxidizable material, thereby causing at least a portion of the oxidizable material to oxidize and form an oxide interface which bonds said unattached glass spacers to said spacer attachment sites with which they are in contact.
- 93. The process of claim 92, wherein electrical contact is made to said noncontacting end of said each of said array of unattached glass spacers via a metal foil electrode which covers the entire array of said unattached glass spacers.
- 94. The process of claim 92, wherein, during the anodic bonding step, the substrate and the contacting array of said unattached glass spacers are heated to about transition temperature of glass from which said array of unattached glass spacers are formed.
- 95. The process of claim 92, wherein said potential is within a range of about 500 to 1,000 volts and applied between said transparent conductive material layer and the noncontacting end of said each of said array of unattached glass spacers during the anodic bonding step.
- 96. The process of claim 92, wherein, during the anodic bonding step, extra spacers and filler glass anodically bond to the protective sacrificial layer.
- 97. The process of claim 96, which, after the anodic bonding step, further comprises the steps of:etching away the filler glass; etching away the protective sacrificial layer and said extra spacers; and depositing luminescent phosphor on portions of the substrate not covered by the opaque matrix.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 09/302,082, filed Apr. 29, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,329,750 B1, issued Dec. 11, 2001, which is a division of application Ser. No. 08/856,382, filed May 14, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,980,349, issued Nov. 9, 1999.
GOVERNMENT RIGHTS
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. DABT 63-93-C-0025 awarded by Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). The Government has certain rights in this invention.
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Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
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Albaugh, Kevin G., Electrode Phenomena during Anodic Bonding of Silicon to Sodium Borosilicate Glass, J. Electrochemical Society, vol. 138, No. 10 (Oct. 1991). |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09/302082 |
Apr 1999 |
US |
Child |
09/631003 |
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US |