This application claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/422,216 filed Mar. 16, 2012, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Techniques for shielding permittivity-sensitive devices, for example in combination with a pressure-transferring and biocompatible material, are disclosed.
The performance of solid state devices can be affected by changes in the electrical permittivity of the device's surroundings. Output from such a device can be misleading if the device was calibrated in one environment, e.g., air having a relative permittivity of roughly 1, and then operated in a different environment, e.g., liquid water which can have a relative permittivity around 80. (The relative permittivity of water is highly variable as a function of temperature, frequency, salinity, etc.) The effect of a changing permittivity environment could be important in a wide variety of applications of permittivity-sensitive devices, and in particular it has been observed in the in vivo use of capacitive pressure sensors.
Capacitive pressure sensors are sometimes used in situations where recalibration is difficult, e.g., in vivo uses for measuring blood pressure, and inside automobile tires for measuring tire air pressure. In such contexts, it would be useful to avoid having to recalibrate a sensor to account for changes in the permittivity environment. Permittivity shielding can minimize the effect of a changing permittivity environment on a solid state device, reducing or eliminating the need for recalibration.
Any device that is sensitive to changes in the permittivity of its environment could potentially benefit from permittivity shielding. Semiconductor devices, for example complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) devices, are known under certain circumstances to be sensitive to changes in environmental permittivity. Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) may also be sensitive to changes in environmental permittivity. Such MEMS may be designed to act as sensors, including capacitive pressure sensors, and may be formed on a CMOS semiconductor device.
MEMS capacitive pressure sensors can be used in a variety of contexts to measure the pressure of a fluid, for example measuring blood pressure or measuring air pressure inside a tire. In order to measure blood pressure, the capacitive pressure sensor will typically be rendered biocompatible, for example, by encapsulating the device in a biocompatible material such as silicone. Silicone fulfills the technical and biological requirements that are needed for a long-term implant for measuring pressure. Silicone is a nearly ideal material because of its biocompatibility, long-term stability, and ability to transfer pressure from its inner surface to its outer surface.
But silicone is biocompatible in part because it is porous. When silicone is exposed to a fluid, such as blood, fluid and/or vapor will infiltrate the silicone. This infiltration will displace air, or whatever fluid was present prior to submersion, changing the permittivity of the surroundings, and thereby acutely changing the capacitive pressure sensor readings. Recalibration is therefore required immediately after immersion. Moreover, the process of infiltration may take a widely varying amount of time such that capacitive pressure sensor readings may continue to change over hours, days or even weeks. And because the composition of the infiltrating substance can change over time (for example as blood chemistry, concentration of medications, and other health conditions vary) the effect of infiltration on permittivity may vary unpredictably. This unpredictability requires that the calibration of the sensor be vigilantly monitored over long periods of time. Different protective coatings, typically plastics or other non-metals, may be preferred for other applications, but alternative coatings that are similarly porous will have many of the same advantages and disadvantages as silicone.
Typically, as shown in
The sensor can be a microelectromechanical device formed on the surface of the semiconductor. The semiconductor can be a CMOS device. The sensor could be, for example, a capacitive pressure sensor.
The first and second layers of metallic adhesive may be the same material. The material may include, or consist substantially of or entirely of, an alloy of tungsten and titanium. The layer of permittivity shielding may include a conductive metal or metal alloy. The permittivity shielding may include, consist substantially of, or consist entirely of gold. The protective layer may include, consist substantially of, or consist entirely of silicone.
Either the metallic adhesive, or the permittivity shielding, or both, may be deposited by galvanic metallization, or sputtering, or any other process in which a thin layer of metal or metal alloy is deposited in a defined, predetermined geometry.
The permittivity shielding serves at least two purposes. First, a conductive (preferably highly conductive) permittivity shielding will help minimize the effect on the sensor of changes in permittivity in the neighborhood of the sensor. The conductive permittivity shielding can act as a partial Faraday cage, reducing the effect that changes in the permittivity environment have on electromagnetic fields in or around the sensor. The shielding effect also protects the whole electronic circuit implemented within the device.
Second, the permittivity shielding can act as a fluid barrier, preventing permittivity altering substances (e.g., blood) from permeating at least part of the protective layer. A thickness of roughly 0.2 to 5 microns is thought to be sufficient to render a layer of metallic permittivity shielding substantially water impermeable, but greater or lesser thicknesses may be required to make the barrier impermeable to other fluids. By isolating a protective layer from fluids, the fluid-impermeable permittivity barrier creates a zone around the sensor in which the permittivity environment is maintained and not altered. Furthermore, it may be advantageous that not only the area directly around the sensor but the whole electronic circuit should be protected against changing permittivity, because changing permittivity could also cause changes in the electronic circuit and therefore could result in changing the calibration data of the device. The fluid-free zone of the protective layer could be 0.3 to 2 millimeters thick, depending on the permittivity characteristics of the fluid in question.
In embodiments in which the permittivity shielding overlies the sensor, the sensor will work best if the permittivity shielding reliably and accurately transfers pressure. To achieve good pressure transfer the permittivity shielding, and associated adhesive layers, should be flexible. Thinner permittivity shielding is generally more flexible. But, as explained below, the permittivity shielding should also be fluid impermeable, which requires a certain minimum thickness that depends on the particular combination of fluid and shielding material. Gold has been found to work well, being relatively impermeable to blood and its constituents while still relatively thin and flexible. Gold also has the advantage that it is highly electrically conductive.
The permittivity shielding described herein can be applied to a wide variety of systems, especially the implantable pressure monitors described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,682,313, 7,686,768, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference. One example of such an implantable pressure monitor is shown in
In addition to the in vivo applications described above, sensors, particularly capacitive pressure sensors, can be employed in a wide variety of contexts. Permittivity shielding can be used and may be beneficial in any context where the permittivity environment may evolve over time and the performance of the sensor is susceptible to such changes. Of course, in non-biological contexts the protective layer need not be biocompatible, but may still be porous or otherwise susceptible to changes in permittivity, and therefore may benefit from the addition of permittivity shielding.
In capacitive pressure sensing, it is possible to correct for the effect of a changing permittivity environment even where no permittivity shielding is used. A capacitive pressure sensor is typically formed with active capacitive membranes that are sensitive to changes in pressure. The output signal from the active capacitive membranes is typically used to directly calculate the sensed pressure. But that output signal may partly be due to the impinging pressure and partly due to the permittivity environment. To deal with this problem, one can form the capacitive pressure sensor so that it also has passive capacitive membranes that are insensitive to changes in pressure. The signal from the passive capacitive membranes can then be interpreted as responding only to changes in permittivity. The signal due to permittivity can then be subtracted from the signal from the active capacitive membranes, leaving only signal due to changes in pressure. In this way, paired active and passive pressure membranes can be used to correct for changing permittivity.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/031505 | 3/14/2013 | WO | 00 |
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WO2013/138624 | 9/19/2013 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13422216 | Mar 2012 | US |
Child | 14385691 | US |