The disclosure relates to optical packages with an integrated lens and optical assemblies incorporating such a package.
An optical package may include one or more optical, optoelectronic and electronic components. Proper packaging of the components is important to ensure the integrity of the signals and often determines the overall cost of the optical assembly. Precise accuracy typically is required to align an optical signal, for example, from a semiconductor laser housed by the package, with an optical fiber. However, precise alignment alone may be insufficient to couple the light into the optical fiber, for example, if the light from the laser diverges significantly.
Various packages that include an integrated lens that may help collimate light emitted by or to be received by an optoelectronic device encapsulated within the package are disclosed. The packages may be incorporated into larger optical assemblies.
For example, according to one aspect, a package includes a cap with a recess. An opto-electronic device for emitting or receiving light is mounted within the recess, and a base is attached to the cap to define an encapsulated region in an area of the recess. The base is transparent to a wavelength of light which the opto-electronic device is designed to emit or receive. A lens is integrated with the package for at least partially collimating light traveling to or from the opto-electronic device.
In some implementations, the lens may be a surface-machined micro-lens formed integrally with the base. The lens may consist, for example, of a spherical protrusion from the base.
According to another aspect, a package includes a cap with a recess. An opto-electronic device for emitting or receiving light is mounted within the recess. The package also includes a base that is transparent to a wavelength of light which the opto-electronic device is designed to emit or receive. In addition, a plate that holds a lens for at least partially collimating a light beam is disposed between the cap and the base. The recess includes a sidewall with a reflective surface to form part of a path for a light beam traveling between the opto-electronic device and the lens.
The plate may include, for example, a pyramid-shaped groove to hold the lens A ball lens may suitable as the lens in some implementations.
The opto-electronic device encapsulated within the package may include a light receiving device or a light emitting device, such as a surface emitting semiconductor laser or an edge emitting light semiconductor laser. Thus, a light beam emitted by the light emitting device passes through the lens before exiting the package.
In some implementations, the recess in the cap may include a sidewall with a reflective coating on its surface to redirect light from the opto-electronic device toward the lens.
The opto-electronic device may be hermetically sealed within the package.
The packages may be incorporated into an optical assembly so that light to or from the opto-electronic device within the package may be coupled to an optical fiber. Details of example of such assemblies are described below.
In various implementations, one or more of the following advantages may be present. The integrated lens encapsulated within the package may partially or substantially collimate the light beam from the light emitting device in the package so that the light beam is emitted from the package at a low divergence angle, with the base serving as a transparent window for the emitted light.
Other advantages may include the ability to make an optical package having relatively small dimensions and well-adapted to surface mounting technologies. In some cases, the relative alignment tolerances of the optical package and the optical fiber holder assembly may be relaxed because of the magnified mode fields. As a result, the assembly sequence of circuit boards that include one or more opto-electronic devices may be adapted more easily to modem surface mounting technologies.
Use of such packages may permit electrical lines to be shortened and feed-through lines to be made small so that the transmission of high-frequency signals from the outside into the package and vice-versa can be improved. A hermetically sealed package can enhance the reliability and lifetime of the opto-electronic components housed within the package.
Other features and advantages will be readily apparent from the following detailed description, the accompanying drawings and the claims.
Various examples of hermetically sealed packages with an integrated lens to help collimate light emitted by or to be received by an optoelectronic device encapsulated by the package are described below. The packages may be incorporated into larger optical assemblies.
As shown in
One or more optoelectronic components may be mounted in the recess, for example, by soldering them onto metallic pads previously deposited at the bottom of the recess. As shown in
The edge-emitting device 30 may be mounted either with its active side up or down. Mounting the device with its active side down, however, may provide better control of the lateral position of the light emitting region. Furthermore, in high frequency applications, contacts to the device 30 may be made from the front side of the device so as to avoid the use of bond wires. Also, in high power applications, heat flow from the active region can be improved by mounting the device, with its active side down, on a diamond sub-mount or another heat spreader. To prevent partial blocking of the laser's diverging output beam when the laser is mounted with its active side down, a mechanical support to raise the position of the laser within the recess may be added. A thick solder layer or solder bumps may be used, for example, to provide such support.
In some cases, bond wires or other electrical connections may be provided to couple the laser and monitor diode to metallization contacts. Hermetically sealed feed-through connections 46 may be used to couple the metallization within the recess 28 to electrical contacts on the outside of the package.
Various techniques may be used to form the hermetically sealed through-hole connections 46. One such technique uses a multilayer structure that includes a substantially etch-resistant layer sandwiched between first and second semiconductor layers. The first and second semiconductor layers may include, for example, silicon, and the etch-resistant layer may include, for example, silicon nitride, silicon oxy-nitride or silicon dioxide. The through-holes may be formed using a double-sided etching process in which the first and second layers are etched until the etch-resistant layer is exposed to define the locations of the through-holes. The semiconductor layer that is intended to be on the underside of the cap 22 may be etched over an area that corresponds to the positions of all or a large number of the through-holes. The through-holes then may be formed by removing part of the etch-resistant layer.
The through-holes may be hermetically sealed, for example, using an electro-plated feed-through metallization process as the base for the through-hole connections. The feed-through metallization also may include a diffusion barrier, and the sealing material may include, for example, a non-noble metal.
As shown in
The lens holder plate 24, which may comprise, for example, silicon, includes a through-hole such as a pyramid or other suitably shaped groove 40 (see
The lens 34, the lens holder plate 24 and the base 26 may be assembled as follows. First, the lens holder plate may be positioned such that the end of the groove 40 having the smaller diameter faces downward. The ball lens 34 then would be inserted in the groove. Next, the base is placed over the lens holder plate. A glass solder ring 42 (
Alternatively, the lens holder plate 24 can be fixed on the cap 22 first. Then the ball lens 34 may be inserted, and, if necessary, actively aligned and attached in the groove using a thin layer of adhesive previously deposited on the side wall of the groove. Next, the base may be placed on top and sealed, for example, with a low melting point metal solder ring 42.
In the implementation of
One advantage of the foregoing implementation may include the relative ease with which the slanted sidewalls of the recess may be formed using standard semiconductor etching techniques. Although the laser light is not reflected by the metal surface 36 at a ninety-degree angle, the use of the ball lens 34 can accommodate such an angle.
The cap 122 includes a recess 128 on its underside. However, in contrast to the implementation of
Although formation of the recess 128 with sidewalls close to a 45° angle may be somewhat more complex than formation of the recess in
As shown in
To complete the package 120, the base may be fused to the cap 122 using a metal or glass solder ring 158 (see
As described above, the package 160 may include hermetically sealed feed-through connections 146 to electrically couple contacts on the outer surface of the cap to the components encapsulated within the package.
If opto-electronic devices designed to operate at a wavelength below the transparency limit of silicon are encapsulated in the package, the base may be made, for example, of a suitable glass, and the lens may be formed of a suitable polymer to allow the optical signals to pass through the lens and base.
As in the previous embodiments, the base 176 should comprise a material, such as silicon or glass, that is transparent to the wavelength of light emitted by the laser 130. When the base is positioned over and fused to the cap 126, for example, using a metal or glass solder ring, a hermetic seal is formed. The lens 172 may be mounted within a pyramid-shaped recess 178 (
In another implementation, the top surface surrounding the recess 178 can be used to mount a second bulk optical element, such as a second lens, in a control distance from the first lens 172. This might be advantageous if the laser 130 has a strongly elliptical beam profile. The first lens 130 may be have a cylindrical shape to collimate the fast axis of the laser beam partially, and the additional second lens may be a spherical lens to perform the remaining collimation.
In some implementations, for example, where a surface-emitting laser is encapsulated within the package 170, the recess 178 in the base 176 may not be needed. In that case, the lens 172 may be mounted on the planar surface of the base exterior.
The foregoing examples use a light source as the opto-electronic component that is housed within the optical package and whose optical output can be collimated by the lens. However, in other implementations, an optical receiving device such as a PIN diode may be disposed within the package to receive a light beam that passes through the integrated lens. Therefore, each of the packages discussed above may be used with either a light emitting or light receiving device. If a light receiving device is housed within the package, then the base should be transparent to the wavelength of light that the light receiving device is designed to detect.
The terms “cap” and “base,” as used in this disclosure, are not intended to imply a particular orientation of those sections with respect to the top or bottom of the package. In some implementations, the cap may be located above the base, whereas in other implementations, the cap may be located below the base.
In some implementations, multiple packages may be processed on a semiconductor wafer prior to dicing the wafer into separate chips.
The various packages described above may be incorporated into an optical assembly and allow for the surface-mounting of opto-electronic components onto circuit boards using standard circuit assembly equipment. One advantage of providing a lens that is integrated as part of the optical package is that the light beam emitted from the package may be substantially collimated. The collimated light beam allows other optical components, such as beam splitters and optical isolators, to be placed in the light path before the light beam enters the optical fiber. Similar advantages may be obtained for implementations in which light from the optical fiber is coupled to an optical receiving device encapsulated within the package.
For example, as shown in
Efficient optical coupling between the fiber 204 and the light emitting device in the sealed package 22 may be simplified as a result of the integrated lens 34 in the package and the cylindrical lens 212 in the assembly, both of which serve to collimate the light beam. Active alignment may be achieved by adjusting the position of the mirror 216. The mirror may be fixed in place, for example, with an adhesive. The assembly illustrated in
In another implementation, an optical fiber may be optically coupled to the package 120 using a pigtail design, as shown, for example, in
Active alignment may be performed by moving the entire fiber holder. Following the alignment process, an ultra-violet (UV) curable adhesive may be used to attach the assembly to the circuit board 232. An additional strain relief may be provided by gluing the fiber pigtail onto the circuit board 232 with a drop of adhesive 244.
Light emitted by the laser 130 and reflected by the mirrored side wall of the cap passes through the base of the package 120 and may be substantially collimated by the lens 152. The collimated light beam passes through an opening 264 in the metal housing and is reflected by the mirror 262. The reflected beam passes through the collimator and GRIN lens assembly 256 into the fiber 242.
In various implementations, additional or alternative optical components such as optical isolators may be inserted into the path of the light beam as well.
In some implementations, multiple packages as describe above may be incorporated into a single fiber connector-receptacle. For example, each package may include a laser of a different wavelength. Matching thin film filters may be provided to reflect the emitted light onto a common axis to combine the light beams into a single fiber holder assembly in a continuous wavelength division multiplexing (CWDM) application.
The assemblies also may incorporate packages in which a light receiving device serves as the opto-electronic device.
The assembly of
A light beam with a first wavelength may be emitted from the package 278. The light beam is reflected by the filter plate 270 and redirected through collimator assembly 256 into the fiber 242. On the other hand, a light beam having a second wavelength may be provided from the fiber. That light beam passes through the filter plate 270 and is reflected by the surface 262 of the mirror toward the package 276. The light receiving device in the package 276 would detect the received light beam.
Other implementations are within the scope of the claims.
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