This U.S. non-provisional patent application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2009-0121079, filed on Dec. 8, 2009, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention disclosed herein relates to a photonics technology, and more particularly, to a method of forming a waveguide facet and a photonics device using the method.
Today, communications between boards in computers, and communications between chips in boards or communications between electronic devices in semiconductor chips are typically performed using electric methods. However, such communications using electric methods may cause technical limitations such as low speed, high resistance, high temperature, and parasitic capacitance, as well known in the art. Since such technical limitations can be suppressed using optical communication technologies, research for applying the optical communication technologies to communications between boards, and communications between chips or electronic devices is being and will be actively carried out.
To embody optical communication technologies in typical silicon semiconductor integrated circuits, silicon photonic technologies of forming optical devices and optical waveguides with silicon are required. In this case, optical connection technologies of constituting silicon optical waveguides to allow input/output of external optical signals are specially required to commercialize silicon photonic technologies. Typically, such optical connection technologies may be embodied by connecting optical waveguide facets to optical fibers in butting manner. At this point, the optical waveguide facets are required to be clearly formed so as to inhibit optical loss due to scattering or reflection. However, when silicon wafers are used, the yield is significantly reduced, and fabricating costs are increased.
In more detail, when optical waveguide facets are obtained from a compound semiconductor substrate, the optical waveguide facets may be formed by performing a backside polishing step to reduce the thickness of the substrate, and then, by cleaving the substrate along crystal surfaces of the substrate. However, since silicon wafers have high hardness, it is difficult to perform a backside polishing step and a cleaving step on silicon wafers. For example, a backside polishing step may be performed with sand paper, but a number of minute holes or crystalline defects may be randomly formed in the backside of a substrate during the backside polishing step. As such, due to randomly formed minute holes, a silicon substrate may be cloven out of desired crystal surfaces. This may cause breakage of an optical device, not an optical waveguide, thus reducing the yield. According to an experiment performed by the inventors, such a technical limitation became more serious when a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer was used. In addition, essentially, the success rate of a cleaving process did not depend on whether a crystal plane of a wafer was (100) or (110).
The present invention provides a method of forming a clear waveguide facet.
The present invention also provides a method of forming a waveguide facet, which can improve the yield.
Embodiments of the present invention provide methods of forming a waveguide facet, the methods including: forming at least one optical device die on a substrate, the optical device die including waveguides; forming at least one trench in a lower surface of the substrate; and cleaving the substrate to form facets of the waveguides over the trench, wherein the trench is formed along a direction crossing the waveguides under the waveguides.
In some embodiments, the substrate may be formed of material having a single crystal structure. The trench may define a fragile region having mechanical fragileness in the substrate, and the cleaving of the substrate may use the mechanical fragileness of the fragile region to confine positions where the facets are formed within the upper side of the trench. The cleaving of the substrate may include using a mechanical method to apply mechanical force to the fragile region.
In other embodiments, the substrate may include a single crystal silicon wafer. The substrate may further include a lower layer having low refractivity than that of the waveguide, and formed under the waveguides. The waveguides may be formed of silicon.
In still other embodiments, the forming of the optical device die may include processing a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer including a single crystal silicon wafer, an oxide layer, and a silicon layer, the single crystal silicon wafer may be used as the substrate, and the silicon layer of the processed silicon-on-insulator wafer may be used as the waveguides.
In even other embodiments, the optical device die may include a plurality of optical device dies spatially separated from each other by a boundary region, and arrayed in two dimensions on the substrate, and the trench may be horizontally spaced apart from the boundary region between the optical device dies and disposed in the lower surface of the substrate. The optical device dies may be formed using a pattern transfer process including a plurality of exposure operations, and the boundary region may be formed in regions on which different ones of the exposure operations are performed.
In yet other embodiments, the forming of the trench may include forming a plurality of trenches in the lower surface of the substrate, and one or two of the trenches may be formed below each of the optical device dies. The optical device dies may include a reference die spaced a predetermined distance from a side wall of the substrate, and the forming of at least one trench may include forming a reference trench under the reference die; and repeatedly forming the trench at a position that is spaced a pitch of the optical device die from the reference trench or the trench as a reference line.
In further embodiments, the methods may further include, before the forming of the trench, forming a reference mark in a predetermined region of the substrate, wherein the trench is formed using the reference mark as a reference line. The reference mark may include a side wall of the substrate formed by cutting an edge of the substrate along a direction parallel to the trench.
In other embodiments of the present invention, photonics devices include an optical device including a connection waveguide to optically connect to an external optical device, wherein the connection waveguide has a facet disposed at an edge of the optical device, and the facet of the connection waveguide is formed using one of the aforementioned methods.
The accompanying figures are included to provide a further understanding of the present invention, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate exemplary embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain principles of the present invention. In the figures:
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described below in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. The present invention may, however, be embodied in different forms and should not be constructed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the present invention to those skilled in the art.
In the specification, it will be understood that when an element such as a layer, film, region, or substrate is referred to as being “on” another element, it can be directly on the other element or intervening elements may also be present. In the figures, the dimensions of layers and regions are exaggerated for clarity of illustration. Also, though terms like a first, a second, and a third are used to describe various regions and layers in various embodiments of the present invention, the regions and the layers are not limited to these terms. These terms are used only to discriminate one region or layer from another region or layer. Therefore, a layer referred to as a first layer in one embodiment can be referred to as a second layer in another embodiment. An embodiment described and exemplified herein includes a complementary embodiment thereof.
Hereinafter, it will be described about exemplary embodiments of the present invention in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
(1) Substantial Identity in Shape
A part or whole of the optical device dies D may be substantially identical. For example, one of the optical device dies D and at least one of the optical device dies D may have translational, rotational or mirror symmetry in shape.
Meanwhile, the number of types of the optical device dies D having identity in shape may be two or greater.
(2) Independence in Function
Each of the optical device dies D may be an independent region including optical elements configured to perform a predetermined function. That is, the optical device dies D may be configured to perform a substantially identical function, but operate independently from each other, and be not organically connected to each other.
In a fabricating method, a patterning process including a photolithography operation and an etch operation may be used to form the optical device dies D. In this case, the positions and shape of the optical device dies D are defined through the photolithography operation. In more detail, the area of the substrate W may be too large to form all the optical device dies D disposed on the upper portion of the substrate W through a single exposure operation. For this reason, the optical device dies D may be formed through a photolithography process including a plurality of exposure operations (or shots) (at this point, each of the exposure operations may be configured to partially transfer a prototype of patterns constituting the optical device dies D to a predetermined region of the substrate W).
Since the optical device dies D are formed using an identical prototype, they may have the aforementioned substantial identity in shape. In addition, since the optical device dies D are formed through the exposure operations different from each other, they may have the aforementioned independence in function. However, according to a modification of the current embodiment, a single shot or exposure operation may be performed to define a plurality of optical device dies. Since the modification of the current embodiment may be easily implemented is within the scope of the present invention by those of ordinary skill in the art, a description thereof will be omitted.
Since the description of the term “optical device die” is made to describe the scope of the present invention in more detail, the present invention is not limited thereto. Other secondary meanings of the term “optical device die” may be understood based on those of a typical “die” used in technical fields such as a semiconductor integrated circuit field.
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Moreover, a pitch P of the first partial sawing regions PSX1 may be substantially identical to a pitch P of the optical device dies D. The pitch P of the optical device dies D may be the sum of the width of one optical device die D and the width of a scribe lane SL formed between the neighboring optical device dies D. Accordingly, the relative position between the optical device die D and the first partial sawing region PSX1 under the optical device die D may be substantially identical in all the optical device dies D. The identity in relative position may be embodied by repeating newly forming of the first partial sawing region PSX1 on the standard basis of the first reference side wall RS1 or on the standard basis of the previously formed first partial sawing region PSX1, as illustrated in
Referring to
Moreover, a pitch P of the second partial sawing regions PSX2 may be substantially identical to the pitch P of the optical device dies D. Accordingly, the relative position between the optical device die D and the second partial sawing region PSX2 under the optical device die D may be substantially identical in all the optical device dies D. The identity in relative position may be embodied by repeating newly forming of the second partial sawing region PSX2 using the first reference side wall RS1 or the previously formed second partial sawing region PSX2 as a reference line, as illustrated in
Referring to
According to an embodiment, the full sawing lines FSL1 may be formed by repeating the fully sawing of the substrate W using the second reference side wall RS2 as a reference line, as illustrated in
Referring to
According to an embodiment, the cleaving process in operation S6 may be performed using a mechanical method of applying mechanical force to the first and second partial sawing regions PSX1 and PSX2, as illustrated in
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the substrate W and the optical device dies D may be formed in a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer. For example, referring to
According to embodiments of the present invention, referring to
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From the point of view that optical waveguides formed using one of the waveguide facet forming methods described with reference to
According to the embodiments of the present invention, the method of forming a waveguide facet includes the partially sawing the lower surface of a substrate. Due to the partially sawn region, the substrate can be cloven at a desired position (that is, at a portion of the substrate adjacent the partially sawn region). Since a waveguide having the waveguide facet is cloven together with the substrate under the waveguide, the waveguide facet is clear after the cleaving of the substrate. Moreover, since the cloven portion of the substrate is confined within a desired region, the yield reduction due to cleaving failure can be prevented.
The above-disclosed subject matter is to be considered illustrative, and not restrictive, and the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications, enhancements, and other embodiments, which fall within the true spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, to the maximum extent allowed by law, the scope of the present invention is to be determined by the broadest permissible interpretation of the following claims and their equivalents, and shall not be restricted or limited by the foregoing detailed description.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2009-0121079 | Dec 2009 | KR | national |