The invention relates to a micromechanical sensor- or actuator component with an optical function according to the preamble of the main claim and to a method for the production of micromechanical sensor- or actuator components according to the preamble of claim 18.
There should be understood by micromechanical sensor- or actuator components with an optical function, for example scanner mirrors, scanning gratings, bolometers, photodiodes and photodiode arrays, CCD arrays, CMOS image sensors or light modulators. The components must be protected for example against contamination by particles, moisture, high energy radiation (UV, DUV) or even be operated in a vacuum. It is therefore desired that they are sealed impermeably. On the other hand, the components require at least one optical interface in order that the sensor- or actuator element which is assigned to the micromechanical sensor- or actuator component can process the incident radiation. This optical interface is produced in the known manner by a window which is transparent for the desired wavelength range of the radiation.
As a known example of a micromechanical sensor- or actuator component with an optical function, a micromechanical scanner mirror is represented schematically in
An electrical connection to electrical elements is produced on/in the housing via bond pads 7a and 7b, bonding wires and contacts not being shown in the drawing for the sake of simplification.
Such a micromechanical component represented in
by housing separate chips,
by wafer bonding to the covering of the chips, and
by pick & place.
Even if there are deviations in detail, the three variants can be described essentially as follows.
Firstly, individual chips which include for example the substrate structure 1, the deflectable element 2 and electrodes, not illustrated, with corresponding electrical contactings, such as the bond pads 7a, 7b, are produced by sawing, laser cutting or deliberate breaking of the wafer from which the individual chips or substrate structures are produced. Then the individual chips are inserted into a standard or special housing, e.g. by bonding, gluing or the like. Subsequently, the electrical contacting is implemented by wire bonding. Alternatively, the electrical contacting is produced with a ball-grid array on the rear side of the chip. Finally, the housing is sealed by applying a transparent cover, corresponding to a glass cover 6. With this method, a test of each chip at wafer level, i.e. before separation, can be implemented before the actual housing and covering so that only the functional chips are further processed. However, the chips must be detached from the wafer without protecting the surface by sawing, breaking or the like, which complicates the process and causes additional waste after the functional test at wafer level. A further and a substantial disadvantage is the use of relatively expensive individual housings. With wafer bonding, the wafer which contains the sensor-/actuator chips is connected to a second wafer termed cover wafer in such a manner that a whole-surface cover over the individual substrate structures or chips is produced. The cover wafer is thereby for example a glass wafer for the visible wavelength range or silicon for the IR wavelength range. If necessary, a so-called spacer is used, which ensures that a specific spacing is produced between the actual wafer and the cover wafer. This is required for example if mechanical elements of the chips present on the wafer must not be restricted in their moveability. Furthermore, a base wafer can be bonded on the rear side of the actual wafer. This is necessary for example if a vacuum is required for operation and the actual wafer is perforated. This method has the advantage that the chips are covered before separation and hence are significantly less sensitive to the separation and further processing process but also non-functional chips are covered during this method which are discarded subsequently.
With the help of pick & place machines, i.e. with positioning machines, individual covers can be placed on a wafer with high locational accuracy and precision. These placed covers can be connected to the wafer using bonding layers, such as adhesive or solder layers. This method has the advantage that the chips can be characterised and tested at wafer level before covering and then covers can be placed only on the functional chips. The functional chips intended for further processing are then significantly less sensitive, as in the method according to b), to the separation and further processing process.
Corresponding to the described state of the art, the transparent covers are always applied parallel to the chip surface in all three cases. The parallelism of cover- and chip surface presents no problem in general for pure sensors. If light or radiation is however not only coupled in but also out again, as in the case of light modulators or scanner mirrors, then, because of the parallelism of the two surfaces, i.e. of the cover 6 and of the mirror element 2 in
This is illustrated schematically in
If, as described above for the image projection, the scanner mirror is deflected symmetrically about its zero position, then the residual reflection on the cover corresponding to the light beam 10 causes a point in the image centre. In order to clarify the order of magnitude of this effect, it is assumed in the following that the laser is not modulated, i.e. a maximum light image field is generated. The laser intensity I is distributed for example to 640×480=307200 image points. Assuming a hundred percent transmission of the cover glass, an average intensity of I/307200 is hence allotted to each image point. With the assumption that the cover has an antireflection layer and hence has a residual reflection of 1−99.99%=0.01%, in fact an additional intensity of approx. 1/10000 is allotted in the centre to the image point. This is hence approx. 30 times as high as the intensity of the remaining image points and hence as explained, disconcerting for the observer.
The object therefore underlying the invention is to produce a micromechanical sensor- or actuator component with an optical function and a method for the production of such components with which to reduce or even avoid reflections which might impair the function of the micromechanical sensor- or actuator component.
This object is achieved according to the invention by the characterising features of the main claim and of the independent claim.
Advantageous developments and improvements are possible due to the measures indicated in the sub-claims.
As a result of the fact that the optical main axis of the cover is not perpendicular to the surface of the substrate and also does not coincide with the optical main axis of the deflectable element when inoperative, the beams which are reflected on the cover by incident light beams are not focused on one point so that no image point with a high intensity is produced. Advantageously, the cover which has normally a transparent cover element and a frame part is disposed diagonally to the surface of the substrate. Such an arrangement produces a simple construction.
It is particularly advantageous if the angle between the surface of the substrate or the surface of the deflectable element when inoperative and the cover element is greater than the maximum deflection angle of the deflectable element. Consequently, the light beam which is reflected by the cover or the cover element, at a sufficient spacing from the sensor- or actuator component, is no longer situated in a region in which the plate deflects the corresponding incident light beam. Consequently, the light beam which is reflected by the cover element can be masked for example by means of an aperture diaphragm.
The deflectable element can be configured as a plate-shaped mirror element or also as a grating. However, it can also be a hollow mirror, an optical lens or a filter element.
In a simple embodiment, the cover element is configured as a flat, single- or multilayer plate. If it is desired or required for specific applications, the cover element can be formed from one or more optical elements, such as lenses or lens arrays, prisms or the like, the optical main axis of the respective optical element or elements being situated non-perpendicular to the substrate surface. There is thereby intended by prisms, the main axis of the optically active surface upon which light can impinge, possibly also emerge there.
Advantageously, the cover can be connected to the substrate by means of an adhesion layer, the adhesion layer being able to be an adhesive layer or a solder layer but also being able to be connected to the substrate via a eutectic or SLID (solid-liquid interdiffusion).
According to requirement, the cover can be configured in one piece or also multipart, comprising in total or partially plastic material and/or being an injection moulded part.
Advantageously, the cover, on the side orientated away from the substrate, has surface elements which are configured parallel to the substrate surface. Such surface elements can be used for applying pressure by means of a workpiece, as a result of which the necessary force for the connection methods, such a for example the thermocompression method, can be applied.
It is advantageous if the substrate is connected to a base wafer as base plate, the same methods as when applying the cover being able to be used.
The method for the production of micromechanical sensor- or actuator components combines the following advantages which are known in part from the state of the art: the individual substrate structures with deflectable element and electrodes and also electrical contactings can be tested at wafer level and be encapsulated likewise at wafer level. As a result, the sensitive structures are protected during separation. The cover can have any arbitrary configuration within the prescribed conditions and the micromechanical component can be produced in total with an economical housing.
Embodiments of the invention are represented in the drawing and are explained in more detail in the subsequent description. There are shown:
In
In
The main axis of the cover 22, 21, as evident, is not perpendicular to the surface of the substrate and hence is orientated at a diagonally inclined angle.
As can be detected from
The underside of the substrate 1, in the embodiment according to
The frame parts 15, 16 with the corresponding side parts, not shown, and hence the entire cover are connected to the surface of the substrate 1 by means of an adhesion layer 17a or 17b. The adhesion layer can comprise for example an adhesive, represent a glass solder or be produced by anodic bonding. Interdiffusion effects can also be used in order to produce a connection. Possibilities are the use of eutectics, such as Au—Si or special SLID materials.
In
The N-shape illustrated in
In the embodiments according to
In
As already explained further back, the micromechanical components can be used for the most varied of applications. As scanner mirrors, they can be used in image projectors. They can thereby be configured as one- or two-dimensional scanners which can also be suitable for taking a picture. Use is also possible for confocal microscopy, e.g. as transaction mirror or OCT. Such scanner mirrors can also be used for speckle reduction.
The components according to the invention can be used with gratings also in spectrometers. Wavelength tuning of lasers or spectral imaging is likewise possible.
A configuration with Fabry-Perot filters can also be achieved with the invention, such as micromirror arrays for lithography or for projections.
Also diffractive one- or two-dimensional arrays can be configured (PCB, masks, displays).
Components with gratings, mirrors or plates can be static or deflected resonantly.
Also other diffractive optical elements can be present.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1020070500027 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |