The present disclosure is generally directed to an improved micro-fluid ejection device. More particularly, the disclosure is directed toward the use of certain insulating materials to improve the energy efficiency of a fluid ejection actuator by reducing heat losses from the ejection actuator to an underlying semiconductor substrate.
A micro-fluid ejector device, such as a thermal ink jet printer, forms an image on a printing surface by ejecting small droplets of ink from an array of nozzles on an ink jet printhead as the printhead traverses the print medium. The fluid droplets are expelled from a micro-fluid ejection head when a pulse of electrical current flows through the fluid ejector actuator on the ejection head. When the fluid ejection actuator is a resistive fluid ejector actuator, vaporization of a small portion of the fluid creates a rapid pressure increase that expels a drop of fluid from a nozzle positioned over the resistive fluid ejector actuator. Typically, there is one resistive fluid ejector actuator corresponding to each nozzle of a nozzle array on the ejection head. The resistive fluid ejector actuators are activated under the control of a microprocessor in the controller of micro-fluid ejection device.
In the case of resistive fluid ejector actuators, electrical energy pulses applied to the fluid ejector actuators must be sufficient to vaporize the fluid, such as ink. Any energy produced by the resistive fluid ejector actuator that is not absorbed by the fluid or used to vaporize the fluid ends up being absorbed into the semiconductor substrate of the micro-fluid ejection head. Hence, the total energy applied to the fluid ejector actuator includes the energy absorbed by the substrate, the energy absorbed by the fluid, and the energy used to vaporize the fluid. Excess energy may result in an undesirable and potentially damaging overheating of the micro-fluid ejection head.
Furthermore, because it is desirable to expel fluid as quickly as possible, there is a continual push to increase the number of droplets expelled per unit of time. Unfortunately, as the number of ejection pulses in any given amount of time increases, the heat generated in the micro-fluid ejection head also increases. If the ejection head becomes too hot, the delicate semiconductor structures in the substrate may be damaged. Accordingly, it has become convention in the manufacture of micro-fluid ejection heads to incorporate a thermal barrier layer between the fluid ejector actuators and the substrate.
For example, with reference to
Therefore, a need exists for a way to reduce heat losses to adjacent layers of a micro-fluid ejection head to provide semiconductor devices, such as micro-fluid ejection heads, having improved thermal and electrical efficiency.
The foregoing and other needs may be provided by an improved micro-fluid ejection head for a micro-fluid ejection device as described herein. The micro-fluid ejection head includes a semiconductor substrate, a plurality of fluid ejection actuators supported by the semiconductor substrate, a nozzle member containing nozzle holes attached to the substrate for expelling droplets of fluid from one or more nozzle holes in the nozzle member upon activation of the ejection actuators. The substrate further includes a thermal insulating barrier layer disposed between the semiconductor substrate and the fluid ejection actuators. The thermal insulating barrier layer includes a porous, substantially impermeable material having a thermal conductivity of less than about 1 W/m-K.
In another embodiment, there is provided a micro-fluid ejection structure for expelling droplets of fluid. The fluid ejection structure includes a thermal fluid ejector actuator wherein the thermal fluid ejector actuator increases in temperature and vaporizes a volume of fluid in contact therewith when a voltage is applied to the thermal fluid ejection actuator. A semiconductor substrate for supporting the thermal fluid ejection actuator is provided. An insulating layer having a thermal conductivity of less than about 1 W/m-K is disposed between the thermal fluid ejection actuator and the semiconductor substrate.
Yet another embodiment of the disclosure provides a method for reducing energy consumption for a micro-fluid ejection head. The method includes depositing a thermal insulating layer having a thermal conductivity of less than about 1 W/m-K on a semiconductor support substrate. A resistive layer is deposited on the semiconductor support substrate to provide a fluid ejector actuator. The thermal insulating layer is disposed between the resistive layer and the support substrate.
According to exemplary embodiments provided herein, the porous, substantially impermeable material providing the insulating layer serves to reduce the flow of heat from the ejector actuators toward the silicon layer, thus minimizing heat losses during activation of the ejector actuators during fluid ejection operations.
The above described embodiment improves upon the prior art in a number of respects. The structure of the present disclosure may significantly lower the energy consumption of the fluid ejector actuator by reducing heat dissipation to the area surrounding the ejector actuator and thereby minimize problems associated with over heating of the substrate. The disclosure lends itself to a variety of applications in the field of micro-fluid ejection devices, and particularly in regards to energy efficient inkjet printheads.
Further advantages of exemplary embodiments disclosed herein may become apparent by reference to the detailed description of preferred embodiments when considered in conjunction with the drawings, which are not to scale, wherein like reference characters designate like or similar elements throughout the several drawings as follows:
Referring now to
Referring now to
The ejection heads 20A-20C described herein may also include a nozzle member, such as plate 34, including nozzle holes therein such as nozzle hole 36, a fluid chamber 38, and a fluid supply channel 40, collectively referred to as flow features. The flow features are in fluid flow communication with a source of fluid to be ejected, such as may be accomplished by having the flow features in flow communication with a feed slot 42 or the like formed in the substrate 22 for supplying fluid from a fluid supply reservoir associated with the ejection heads 20A-20C and ejector actuators 17. In use, the actuators 17 are electrically activated to eject fluid from the ejection heads 20A-20C via the nozzle holes 36. The configuration of the disclosure advantageously provides the low thermal diffusitivity film 32 between the actuators 17 and the substrate 22, such as to reduce the travel of heat from activation of the actuators 17 into the substrate 22, thus minimizing heat losses during activation of the actuators 17 during a fluid ejection operation.
The embodiment of
With reference to
The low thermal diffusivity film 32 can be made of an aerogel material, such as an aerogel material based on silica, titania, alumina, or other ceramic oxide materials. Aerogels are materials composed of ceramic materials fabricated from a sol-gel by evacuating the solvent to leave a network of the ceramic material that is primarily air by volume, so as to be of high porosity, but substantially impermeable so as to inhibit heat transfer therethrough.
In this regard, and without being bound by theory, it is believed that aerogel structures typically have a porosity greater than about 95%, but with a pore size of the aerogel material that is less than the mean free path of air molecules at atmospheric pressure, e.g., less than about 100 nanometers. Because of the small pore size, the mobility of air molecules within the material is restricted and the material can be considered to be substantially impermeable. Under atmospheric conditions, air has a thermal conductivity of about 0.25 W/m K (watts per meter Kelvin).
Accordingly, because the travel of air is so restricted, the resulting aerogel material may be made to have a thermal conductivity that approaches or is lower than the thermal conductivity of air. In this regard, the film 32 can have a thermal conductivity of less than about 1 W/m-K, such as less than about 0.3 W/m-K, and is preferably provided in a thickness of from about 3,000 Angstrom to about 10,000 Angstrom, most preferably from about 4,000 to about 6,000 Angstrom.
An exemplary aerogel material is available from Honeywell Electronic Materials of Sunnyvale, Calif. under the trade name NANOGLASS. Aerogel material provided under the NANOGLASS trade name has a thermal conductivity of about 0.207 W/m-K, and a pore radius ranging from about 2 to about 4 nanometers. The aerogel material may be applied to the substrate 22 to provide film 32 by a spin-on process, followed by a thermal curing process via hot plate, or furnace. One process for making a suitable film 32 is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,821,554 to Smith et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The foregoing ejection head structures 20A-20C of
For example, curve 50 of
As noted previously, the thermal diffusitivity layer 32 is preferably provided in a thickness of from about 3,000 Angstrom to about 10,000 Angstrom, most preferably from about 4,000 to about 6,000 Angstrom. In this regard, and with reference to
With respect to the other components of the ejection heads 20A-20C, the fluid ejector actuators 17 may be a conventional fluid ejector actuators and may be provided as by a layer of resistive material such as tantalum-aluminum (Ta—Al), or other materials such as TaAlN, TaN, HfB2, ZrB2, with an overlying layer 60 of a conductive metal. Typically, the layer 26 of resistive material has a thickness ranging from about 800 Angstroms to about 1600 Angstroms. A portion of the conductive metal layer 60 is etched off of resistive layer 26 to provide the fluid ejector actuator 17. In the region where the metal layer has been etched away, the current primarily flows through the relatively higher resistance layer 26, thereby heating up the resistive layer 26 and fluid in contact with the resistive layer 26 to provide the fluid ejector actuator 17.
Current is carried to the fluid ejector actuator 17 by the low resistance metal layer 60 attached to resistive layer 26. The metal layer 60 may be made of a variety of conductive materials including, but not limited to, gold, copper, aluminum, and alloys thereof, and is electrically connected to conductive power and ground busses to provide electrical pulses from an ejection controller in a micro-fluid ejection device such as an inkjet printer to the fluid ejector actuators 17. The metal layer 60 may preferably have a thickness ranging from about 4,000 Angstroms to 15,000 Angstroms.
The substrate 22 is preferably a semiconductor substrate made from silicon of a type commonly used in the manufacture of ink jet printer heater chips. The substrate 22 typically has a thickness ranging from about 200 to about 800 microns.
The insulating layer 28 may be deposited as by using a CVD or PVD process or by thermal oxidation of a surface of the silicon substrate 22. In that regard, the insulating layer 28 is preferably a thermal oxide layer and a layer of borophososilicate glass. Further examples of materials for providing the insulating layer 28 include silicon nitride (SiN), silicon dioxide (SiO2) or boron (BPSG) and/or phosphorous doped glass (PSG). Such materials serve to provide electrical and thermal insulation between the substrate 22 and the overlying structure providing the fluid ejector actuator 17. The insulating layer 28 preferably has a thickness ranging from about 8,000 to about 30,000 Angstroms. The thermal conductivity of the thermal insulation layer 28 is typically between 1 and 20 W/m-K.
The protective layer 30 may be any corrosion resistant material such as silicon nitride, silicon carbide, tantalum, diamond-like carbon, and the like. A combination of one or more of the foregoing materials may be used as the protective layer 30. Protective layer 30 thicknesses typically range from about 1000 to about 5000 Angstroms.
It is contemplated, and will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the preceding description and the accompanying drawings that modifications and/or changes may be made in the embodiments of the disclosure. Accordingly, it is expressly intended that the foregoing description and the accompanying drawings are illustrative of preferred embodiments only, not limiting thereto, and that the true spirit and scope of the present disclosure be determined by reference to the appended claims.
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