The present disclosure relates to device integration into system substrates. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to selective transfer of micro devices from a donor substrate to a receiver substrate.
According to one aspect there is provided, a method of transferring selected micro devices in an array of micro devices each of which is bonded to a donor substrate with a donor force to contact pads in an array on a receiver substrate, the method comprising: aligning the donor substrate and the receiver substrate so that each of the selected micro devices is in line with a contact pad on the receiver substrate; moving the donor substrate and the receiver substrate together until each of the selected micro devices is in contact or proximity with a respective contact pad on the receiver substrate; generating a receiver force that acts to hold the selected micro devices to their contact pads while not affecting other micro devices in contact with or proximity contact with the receiver substrate; and moving the donor substrate and the receiver substrate apart leaving the selected micro devices on the receiver substrate.
Some embodiments further comprise weakening the donor force bonding the micro devices to the donor substrate to assist micro device transfer.
In some embodiments, the donor force for the selected micro devices is weakened to improve selectivity in micro device transfer. In some embodiments, the receiver force is generated selectively to improve selectivity in micro device transfer.
Some embodiments further comprise weakening the donor force using laser lift off.
Some embodiments further comprise modulating the force by magnetic field.
Some embodiments further comprise weakening the donor force by heating an area of the donor substrate.
Some embodiments further comprise modulating the receiver force by heating the receiver substrate.
In some embodiments the heating is performed by passing a current through the contact pads. In some embodiments the receiver force is generated by mechanical grip.
Some embodiments further comprise performing an operation on the receiver substrate so that the contact pads permanently bond with the selected micro devices.
In some embodiments the receiver force is generated by electrostatic attraction between the selected micro devices and the receiver substrate. In some embodiments the receiver force is generated by an adhesive layer positioned between the selected micro devices and the receiver substrate.
Some embodiments further comprise removing the donor force; and applying a push force to selected micro devices to move the devices toward the receiver substrate.
In some embodiments the push force is created by a sacrificial layer deposited between the selected micro device and the donor substrate.
According to another aspect there is provided a receiver substrate structure comprising: an array of landing areas for holding micro devices from a donor substrate selectively, each landing area comprising: at least one contact pad for coupling or connecting a micro device to at least one circuit or a potential in the receiver substrate; and at least one force modulation element for creating a receiver force for holding micro devices on the receiver substrate. For clarity, the area where the micro device sits on the receiver substrate is called the landing area.
In some embodiments the force modulation element is an electrostatic structure. In some embodiments the force modulation element is a mechanical grip. In some embodiments, for each landing area, a same element acts as the force modulation element and the contact pad.
The foregoing and additional aspects and embodiments of the present disclosure will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art in view of the detailed description of various embodiments and/or aspects, which is made with reference to the drawings, a brief description of which is provided next.
The foregoing and other advantages of the disclosure will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings.
While the present disclosure is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments or implementations have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the disclosure is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the disclosure is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of an invention as defined by the appended claims.
Many micro devices, including light emitting diodes (LEDs), Organic LEDs, sensors, solid state devices, integrated circuits, MEMS (micro-electro-mechanical systems) and other electronic components, are typically fabricated in batches, often on planar substrates. To form an operational system, micro devices from at least one donor substrate need to be selectively transferred to a receiver substrate.
Substrate and Transfer Structure:
The goal in selective transfer is to transfer some, selected micro devices 102, from donor substrate 100 to receiver substrate 200. For example, the transfer of micro devices 102a and 102b onto contact pads 206a and 206b without transferring micro device 102c will be described.
Following steps describe a method of transferring selected micro devices in an array of micro devices each of which is bonded to a donor substrate with a donor force to contact pads in an array on a receiver substrate:
If the donor force is too strong for receiver force to overcome for transferring the micro device to the receiver substrate, the donor force for micro devices is weakened to assist micro device transfer. In addition, if the receiver force is applied globally or selective receiver force is not enough to transfer the micro devices selectively, the donor force for the selected micro devices is weakened selectively to improve selectivity in micro device transfer.
At 1002A donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are aligned so that selected micro devices 102a, 102b are in line with corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b, as shown in
At 1004A, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until the selected micro devices 102a, 102b are positioned within a defined distance of contact pads 202a, 202b, as shown in
At 1006A, forces between selected micro devices 102, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 (and contact pads 202) are modulated so as to create a net force towards receiver substrate 200 for selected micro devices and a net force towards donor substrate 100 (or zero net force) for other micro devices 102c.
Consider the forces acting one of the selected micro devices 102. There is a pre-existing force holding it to donor substrate 100, FD. There is also a force generated between micro device 102 and receiver substrate 200, FR, acting to pull or hold micro device 102 towards receiver substrate 200 and cause a transfer. For any given micro device 102, when the substrates are moved apart, if FR exceeds FD the micro device 102 will go with receiver substrate 200, while if FD exceeds FR the micro device 102 will stay with donor substrate 100. There are several ways to generate FR that will be described in later sections. However, once FR has been generated, there are at least four (4) possible ways to modulate FR and FD to achieve transfer of selected micro devices.
Different combinations and arrangements of the above are also possible. Using combinations may, in some cases, be desirable. For example, if the required change in FD or FR is very high, one can use a combination of modulation of FD and FR to achieve the desired net forces for the selected and the non-selected micro devices. Preferably, FR can be generated selectively and therefore act only on selected micro devices 102a, 102b, as shown in
In one embodiment, donor force FD is selectively weakened for selected micro devices 102a, 102b, so that FD′ is less than FR, as shown in
It should also be noted that activities performed during steps 1002A-1006A can sometimes be interspersed with one another. For example, selective or global weakening of FD could take place before the substrates are brought together.
At 1008A, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b, as shown in
At 1002B, the force between micro devices 102a, 102b and donor substrate 100 are modulated globally (for all devices in an area of donor substrate) or selectively (for selected micro devices 102a, 102b only) so as to weaken donor force, FD.
At 1004B donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are aligned so that selected micro devices 102a, 102b are in line with corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b.
At 1006B, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until the selected micro devices 102a, 102b touch contact pads 202a, 202b. It may not be strictly necessary that selected micro devices 102a, 102b actually touch corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b, but must be near enough so that the forces described below can be manipulated.
At 1008B, if needed the forces between selected micro devices 102 and receiver substrate 200 (and contact pads 202) are modulated so as to create a net force towards receiver substrate 200 for selected micro devices and a net force towards donor substrate 100 (or zero net force) for other micro devices 102c.
At 1010B, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b.
At 1012B, optional post processing is applied to selected micro devices 102a, 102b. Once donor substrate 100 is separated from receiver substrate 200, further processing steps can be taken. Additional layers can be deposited on top of or in between micro devices 102, for example, during the manufacture of a LED display, transparent electrode layers, fillers, planarization layers and other optical layers can be deposited. Step 1012B is optional and may be applied at the conclusion of method 1000A or 1000C as well.
At 1002C, contact pads 202a, 202b corresponding to selected micro devices 102a, 102b are treated to create extra force upon contact. For example, an adhesive layer may be applied, as described in greater detail below.
At 1004C donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are aligned so that selected micro devices 102a, 102b are in line with corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b.
At 1006C, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until the selected micro devices 102a, 102b touch contact pads 202a, 202b.
At 1008C, if needed the forces between selected micro devices 102 and donor substrate 100 are modulated so as to create a net force towards receiver substrate 200 for selected micro devices and a net force towards donor substrate 100 (or zero net force) for other micro devices 102c.
At 1010B, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding contact pads 202a, 202b.
Any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, 1000C can be applied multiple times to the same receiver substrate 200, using different or the same donor substrates 100 or the same donor substrate 100 using different receiver substrates 200. For example, consider the case of assembling a display from LEDs. Each pixel may comprise red, green and blue LEDs in a cluster. However, manufacturing LEDs is more easily done in batches of a single colour and on substrates that are not always suitable for incorporation into a display. Accordingly, the LEDs must be removed from the donor 100 substrate, possibly where they are grown, and placed on a receiver substrate, which may be the backplane of a display, in RGB clusters. In case, the color This is simplest when the pitch of the array of pixels can be set to match the pitch of the array of LEDs on the donor substrate.
When this is not possible, the pitches of each array can be set proportionally.
In general, however, matching the pitch of an array of pixels to the donor substrate is likely to be infeasible. For example, one generally tries to manufacture LEDs with the smallest possible pitch on the donor substrate to maximize yield, but the pitch of the pixels and the array of contact pads on the receiver substrate is designed based on desired product specifications such as size and resolution of a display. In this case, one may not be able to transfer all the LEDs in one step and repetition of any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, 1000C will be necessary. Accordingly, it may be possible to design the donor substrate and the receiver substrate contact pad array so that a portion of each pixel can be populated during each repetition of any of methods 1000A, 1000B, 1000C as shown in
Those of skill in the art will now understand that that additional variations and combinations of methods 1000A, 1000B and 1000C are also possible. Specific techniques and considerations are described below that will apply to any of methods 1000, alone or in combination.
Selective and global heating can be used in multiple ways to assist in method 1000A. For example, heat can be used in step 1008A to weaken FD or after step 1008A to create a permanent bond between micro devices 102 and contact pads 202. In one embodiment, heat can be generated using resistive elements incorporated into donor substrate 100 and/or receiver substrate 200.
FD can be weakened by applying heat to the interface between a micro device 102 and donor substrate 100. Preferably, selective heating elements 300 are sufficient to heat the interface past a threshold temperature where micro devices 102 will detach. However, when this is not feasible, global heater 302 can be used to raise the temperature to a point below the threshold while selective heaters 300 raise the temperature further, only for selected micro devices 102a, 102b above the threshold. An environmental heat source, e.g. a hot room, can substitute for the global heater.
Heat can also be used to create a permanent bond between micro devices 102 and contact pads 202. In this case, contact pads 202 should be constructed of a material that will cure when heated, creating a permanent bond. Preferably, selective heating elements 304 are sufficient to heat contact pads 202 past a threshold temperature to cause curing. However, when this is not feasible, global heater 306 can be used to raise the temperature to a point below the threshold for curing while selective heaters 304 raise the temperature for selected contact pads 202a, 202b above the threshold. An environmental heat source, e.g. a hot room, can substitute for the global heater. Pressure may also be applied to aid in permanent bonding.
Other variations are possible. In some cases, it may be feasible for micro devices 102 or contact pads 202 to themselves act as the resistive elements in selective heaters 300, 304. Heat can also be applied in a selective manner using lasers. In the case of lasers, it is likely that at least one of the donor substrate 100 and the receiver substrate 200 will have to be constructed of material that is at least semi-transparent to the laser being used. As shown in
In another embodiment of selective transfer, FR is generated by adhesive. Here, the FR is modulated either by selective application of adhesive to the landing area on the receiver substrate (or selected micro devices) or by selective curing of an adhesive layer. This method can be used in combination with weakening the donor force selectively or globally and is compatible with any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, and 1000C or any combination of them. Although, the following description is based on 1000A similar approaches can be used for 1000B, 1000C and the combination of the methods. In addition, the order of donor force weakening step 1110 can be changed in reference to other steps without affecting the results.
Receiver substrate 200 has an array of contact pads 212 attached. Although
As shown in
Method 1100 will be explained with reference to
At 1104 donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are aligned so that selected micro devices 102a, 102b are in line with corresponding selected contact pads 212a, 212b, as shown in
At 1106, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until selected micro devices 102a, 102b are in contact with corresponding selected contact pads 212a, 212b and adhesive 500, as shown in
At 1108, receiver force, FR, is generated, as shown in
At 1110, donor force FD is selectively (or globally) weakened for selected micro devices 102a, 102b, so that FD′ is less than FR, as shown in
At 1112, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding selected contact pads 212a, 212b, as shown in
One possible additional step, at 1114, is curing adhesive 500. Curing may create a permanent bond between micro devices 102 and contact pads 212. In another embodiment, curing takes place as part of step 1108 and is part of generating FR. If several sets of selected micro devices 102 are to be transferred to a common receiver substrate 200 curing may be done after all the transfers are complete or after each set is transferred.
Adhesive 500 can be applied in many ways. For example, adhesive 500 can be applied to any or all of micro devices 102, contact pads 212 or receiver substrate 200. It will often be desirable that an electrical coupling exist between a micro device 102 and its corresponding contact pad 202. In this case, the adhesive may be selected for its conductivity. However, suitable conductive adhesives are not always available. In any case, but especially when a conductive adhesive is not available, adhesives can be applied near contact pads or may cover only a portion of the contact pad.
In another embodiment, one or more cut-outs can be provided for the adhesive 500.
The adhesive 500 can be stamped, printed or patterned onto the contact pads 212, micro devices 102 or receiver substrate 200 by any normal lithography techniques. For example,
Adhesive 500 may be selected so that it will cure when heat is applied. Any of the techniques described with regard to heating can be suitably applied by one of skill in the art, according to the needs of a specific application.
In another embodiment of selective transfer, FR is generated by mechanical force. Here, the FR is modulated by application of mechanical forces between the landing area on the receiver substrate and the micro device. This method can be used in combination with weakening the donor force selectively or globally and is compatible with any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, and 1000C or any combination of them. Although, the following description is based on 1000A similar approaches can be used for 1000B, 1000C and the combination of the methods. In addition, the order of donor force weakening step 1210 can be changed in reference to other steps without affecting the results.
In one example, differential thermal expansion or pressure force can be used to achieve a friction fit that will hold micro devices 102 to contact pads 202.
Receiver substrate 200 has an array of contact pads 232 attached. In the embodiment shown, the array of contact pads 232 is of the same pitch as the array of micro devices 102; i.e., there is one micro device 102 for each contact pad 232. As discussed above, this need not be true, although it is preferable that the pitch of the array of contact pads 232 and the pitch of the array of micro devices 102 be proportional as this facilitates the transfer of multiple devices simultaneously.
Method 1200 will be described with reference to
At 1204, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate are aligned so that selected micro devices 102a, 102b are in line with corresponding contact pads 222a, 222b, as shown in
At 1206, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until the selected micro devices 102a, 102b fit into the space defined by the peripheral walls of corresponding mechanical grip as shown in
At 1208, a receiver force, FR, is generated. FR is generated by selectively cooling contact pads 222 corresponding to selected micro devices 102, causing peripheral walls 226 to contract around selected micro devices 102, closing gap 228 and exerting a compressive force on micro device 102, holding it in place, as shown in
At 1210, donor force FD is selectively (or globally) weakened for selected micro devices 102a, 102b, so that FD′ is less than FR, as shown in
At 1212, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding contact pads 222a, 222b, as shown in
In another embodiment of selective transfer, FR is generated by an electrostatic force or magnetic force. In case of magnetic force a current passes through a conductive layer instead of charging a conductive layer for electrostatic force. Although the structures here are used to describe the electrostatic force similar structures can be used for magnetic force. Here, the FR is modulated by application of selective electrostatic forces between the landing area on the receiver substrate and the micro device. This method can be used in combination with weakening the donor force selectively or globally and is compatible with any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, and 1000C or any combination of them. Although, the following description is based on 1000A similar approaches can be used for 1000B, 1000C and the combination of the methods. In addition, the order of donor force weakening step 1410 can be changed in reference to other steps without affecting the results.
In another embodiment of selective transfer, FR is generated by an electrostatic force. Here, the FR is modulated by application of selective electrostatic forces between the landing area on the receiver substrate and the micro device. This method can be used in combination with weakening the donor force selectively or globally and is compatible with any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, and 1000C or any combination of them. Although, the following description is based on 1000A similar approaches can be used for 1000B, 1000C and the combination of the methods. In addition, the order of donor force weakening step 1410 can be changed in reference to other steps without affecting the results.
The landing area on the receiver substrate 200 has at least a contact pad 232 attached and a force modulation element 234.
Contact pads 232 are surrounded by a ring of conductor/dielectric bi-layer composite, hereinafter called an electrostatic layer 234. The shape and location of force modulation element 234 can be changed in the landing area and in relation to the contact pad. Electrostatic layer 234 has a dielectric portion 236 and a conductive portion 238. Dielectric portion 236 comprises a material selected, in part, for its dielectric properties, including dielectric constant, dielectric leakage and breakdown voltage. The dielectric portion can also be part of the micro device or a combination of the receiver substrate and the micro device. Suitable materials may include SiN, SiON, SiO, HfO and various polymers. Conductive portion 238 is selected, in part, for its conductive properties. There are many suitable single metals, bi-layers and tri-layers that can be suitable including Ag, Au and Ti/Au. Each conductive portion 238 is coupled to a voltage source 240, via a switch 242. Note that although conductive portions 238 are shown as connected in parallel to a single voltage source 240 via simple switches 242, this is to be understood as an illustrative example. Conductive portions 238 might be connected to one voltage source 240 in parallel. Different subsets of conductive portions 238 may be connected to different voltage sources. Simple switches 242 can be replaced with more complex arrangements. The desired functionality is the ability to selectively connect a voltage source 240, having a potential different than that of the micro devices 102, to selected conductive portions 238 when needed to cause an electrostatic attraction between the selected conductive portions 238 and corresponding selected micro devices 102.
Method 1300 will be explained in conjunction with
At 1304, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until the micro devices 102 come into contact with contact pads 232, as shown is
At 1306, a receiver force, FR, is generated, as shown in
At 1308, donor force FD is selectively weakened for selected micro devices 102a, 102b, so that FD′ is less than FR, as shown in
At 1310, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding contact pads 232a, 232b, as shown in
In other embodiments, electrostatic layer 234 can take on other configurations.
In other embodiments, the geometry of contact pads 232, electrostatic layer 234 and micro devices 102 can be changed to varying effect.
In another embodiment of selective transfer, the force on the donor substrate is modulated to push the device toward the receiver substrate. In one example, after removing the donor force other forces such as electrostatic forces can be used to push the device toward the receiver substrate. In another case, a sacrificial layer can be used to create a push force in presence of heat or light sources. To selectively create the push force, a shadow mask can be used for applying a light source (e.g. laser) to the selected micro devices. In addition, the FR can be generated by one of aforementioned methods (e.g., mechanical, heating, adhesive, electrostatic). For example, the FR can be modulated by application of selective electrostatic forces between landing area on the receiver substrate and the micro device. This method is compatible with any of the methods 1000A, 1000B, and 1000C or any combination of them. Although, the following description is based on 1000A, similar approaches can be used for 1000B, 1000C and the combination of the methods. In addition, the order of donor force modulation step 1410 can be changed in reference to other steps without affecting the results. However, the most reliable results can be achieved by applying the FR first and then applying the push force to the micro device.
At 1404, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved together until the micro devices 102 are close enough for electrostatic FR to act on micro devices 102. Donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 may be held so that no micro devices 102 make contact with contact pads 232 or, as shown in
At 1406, a receiver force, FR, is generated, as shown in
At 1408, donor force FD is selectively weakened for selected micro devices 102a, 102b, so that FD′ is less than FR. This may be done, for example, using laser lift off techniques, lapping or wet/dry etching. At this point, micro devices 102a, 102b will detach from donor substrate 100. Micro device 102b will jump the gap to their corresponding contact pads 232a, 232b on receiver substrate 200.
At 1410, donor substrate 100 and receiver substrate 200 are moved apart, leaving selected micro devices 102a, 102b attached to corresponding contact pads 232a, 232b, as shown in
One application of this method is development of displays based on micro-LED devices. An LED display consists of RGB (or other pixel patterning) pixels made of individual color LEDs (such as red, green or blue or any other color). The LEDs are manufactured separately and then transferred to a backplane. The backplane circuit actively or passively drives these LEDs. In the Active form each sub-pixel is driven by a transistor circuit by either controlling the current, the ON time, or both. In the Passive form, each sub-pixel can be addressed by selecting the respective row and column and is driven by an external driving force.
The LEDs conventionally are manufactured in the form of single color LEDs on a wafer and patterned to individual micro-devices by different process such as etching. As the pitch of the LEDs on their substrate is different from their pitch on a display, a method is required to selectively transfer them from their substrate to the backplane. The LEDs' pitch on their substrate is the minimum possible to increase the LED manufacturing yield on a wafer, while the LED pitch on the backplane is dictated by the display size and resolution. According to methods implemented here, one can modulate the force between the LED substrate and the micro-LEDs and uses any of the technique presented here to increase the force between selected LED and backplane substrate. In one case, the force for LED wafer is modulated first. In this case, the force between LED devices and substrate is reduced either by laser, backplane etching, or other methods. The process can selectively weaken the connection force between selected LEDs for transfer and the LED substrate or it can be applied to all the devices to reduce the connection force of all the LED devices to the LED substrate. In one embodiment, this is accomplished by transferring all LEDs from their native substrate to a temporary substrate. Here, the temporary substrate is attached to the LEDs from the top side, and then the first substrate is removed either by polishing and/or etching or laser lift off. The force between the temporary substrate and the LED devices is weaker than the force that the system substrate can selectively apply to the LEDs. To achieve that a buffer layer may be deposited on the temporary substrate first. This buffer layer can be a polyamide layer. If the buffer layer is not conductive, to enable testing the devices after transfer to the temporary and system substrate, an electrode before or after the buffer layer will be deposited and patterned. If the electrode is deposited before the buffer layer, the buffer layer may be patterned to create an opening for contact.
In another method, the LED connection-force modulation happens after the LED substrate and the backplane substrate are in contact and the system substrate forces to LED are selectively modulated by the aforementioned methods presented here. The LED substrate force modulation can be done prior to the backplane substrate force modulation as well.
As the force holding the LEDs to the backplane substrate after transfer is temporary in most of the aforementioned methods, a post processing step may be needed to increase the connection reliability to the backplane substrate. In one embodiment, high temperature (and/or pressure can be used). Here, a flat surface is used to apply pressure to the LEDs while the temperature is increased. The pressure increases gradually to avoid cracking or dislocation of the LED devices. In addition, the selective force of the backplane substrate can stay active during this process to assist the bonding.
In one case, the two connections required for the LED are on the transfer side and the LED is in full contact with the backplane after the transfer process. In another case, a top electrode will be deposited and patterned if needed. In one case, a polarization layer can be used before depositing the electrode. For example a layer of polyamide can be coated on the backplane substrate. After the deposition, the layer can be patterned to create an opening for connecting the top electrode layer to system substrate contacts. The contacts can be separated for each LED or shared. In addition, optical enhancement layers can be deposited as well before or after top electrode deposition.
Identifying defective micro devices and also characterizing the micro devices after being transferred is an essential part of developing a high yield system since it can enable the use of repair and compensation techniques.
In one embodiment shown in
In one case, the defective devices are replaced or fixed before applying any post processing to permanently bond the device into receiver substrate. Here, the defective devices can be removed before replacing it with a working device. In another embodiment, the landing area on the receiver substrate corresponding to the micro devices comprises at least a contact pad and at least a force modulation element.
It should be understood that various embodiments in accordance with and as variations of the above are contemplated.
In another embodiment, the net transfer forces are modulated by weakening the donor force using laser lift off. In another embodiment, the net transfer forces are modulated by weakening the donor force using selectively heating the area of the donor substrate near each of the selected micro devices. In another embodiment, the net transfer forces are modulated by selectively applying adhesive layer to the micro devices. In another embodiment, a molding device is used to apply the adhesive layer selectively. In another embodiment, printing is used to apply the adhesive layer selectively. In another embodiment, a post process is performed on the receiver substrate so that the contact pads permanently bond with the selected micro devices. In another embodiment, the post process comprises heating the receiver substrate. In another embodiment, the heating is done by passing a current through the contact pads. In another embodiment, the method is repeated using at least one additional set of selected micro devices and corresponding contact pads. In another embodiment, the contact pads are located inside an indentation in the receiver substrate and each selected micro device fits into one such indentation. In another embodiment, the pitch of the array of micro devices is the same as the pitch of the array of contact pads. In another embodiment, the pitch of the array of micro devices is proportional to the pitch of the array of contact pads. In another embodiment, each of the selected micro devices comprises a protrusion and the contact pads comprise a depression sized to match the protrusion on each micro device. In another embodiment, the net transfer forces are modulated by generating electrostatic attraction between the selected micro devices and the receiver substrate. In another embodiment, the electrostatic forces are applied to the entire array of micro devices on the donor substrate by a force element on the receiver substrate or behind the receiver substrate. In another embodiment, the electrostatic forces are generated selectively by the force modulation element of the landing area. In another embodiment, the force modulation element of the landing area on the receiver substrate comprises a conductive element near each contact pad, each conductive element capable of being linked to a voltage source in order to sustain an electrostatic charge. In another embodiment, each conductive element comprises one or more sub-elements. In another embodiment, the sub-elements are distributed around the contact pad. In another embodiment, each conductive element surrounds a contact pad. In another embodiment, the force modulation element of the landing area on the receiver substrate comprises a conductive layer and a dielectric layer throughout a substantial portion of the landing area, the conductive layer capable of being linked to a voltage source in order to sustain an electrostatic charge. In another embodiment, the donor substrate and the receiver substrate are brought close together, but the selected micro devices and the contact pads do not touch until after the net transfer forces are modulated whereupon the selected micro devices move across the small gap to the contact pads. In another embodiment, the height of the selected micro devices differ. In another embodiment, the contact pads are concave. In another embodiment, the force modulation element of the receiver substrate generates a mechanical clamping force. In another embodiment, the mechanical force modulation element forms part of at least one contact pad. In another embodiment, the mechanical force modulation elements are separate from the contact pad. In another embodiment, the mechanical force modulation is created by thermal expansion or compression of at least one of the force modulation element or micro device. In another embodiment, each contact pad has a concave portion and each selected micro device is inserted into a concave portion of a contact pad.
In another embodiment, the receiver substrate is heated before the donor substrate and the receiver substrate are moved together so that the concave portion of the contact pads expands to be larger than a selected micro device and the receiver substrate is cooled before the donor substrate and the receiver substrate are moved apart so that the concave portion of the contact pads contracts around the selected micro devices and provides the receiver force via mechanical clamping of the selected micro devices.
In another embodiment, the force modulation element in the landing area of the receiver substrate is an adhesive layer positioned between the selected micro devices and the receiver substrate. In another embodiment, the adhesive layer is conductive. In another embodiment, a portion of each of the contact pads on the receiver substrate is coated with an adhesive layer. In another embodiment, a portion of each of the selected micro devices is coated with an adhesive layer. In another embodiment, a portion of the area near the contact pads is coated with an adhesive layer.
In another embodiment, the net transfer force is modulated both on the donor substrate with at least one of the aforementioned methods and on the receiver substrate with at least one of the described methods.
While particular implementations and applications of the present disclosure have been illustrated and described, it is to be understood that the present disclosure is not limited to the precise construction and compositions disclosed herein and that various modifications, changes, and variations can be apparent from the foregoing descriptions without departing from the spirit and scope of an invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
CA 2879465 | Jan 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2879627 | Jan 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2880718 | Jan 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2883914 | Mar 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2890398 | May 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2887186 | May 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2891007 | May 2015 | CA | national |
CA 2891027 | May 2015 | CA | national |
This application is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/365,634, filed Jul. 1, 2021, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/931,132, filed Jul. 16, 2020, which is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/002,662, filed Jan. 21, 2016, abandoned, and claims foreign priority to Canadian Application No. 2,879,465, filed Jan. 23, 2015, Canadian Application No. 2,879,627, filed Jan. 23, 2015, Canadian Application No. 2,880,718, filed Jan. 28, 2015, Canadian Application No. 2,883,914, filed Mar. 4, 2015, Canadian Application No. 2,887,186, filed May 12, 2015, Canadian Application No. 2,890,398, filed May 4, 2015, Canadian Application No. 2,891,007, filed May 12, 2015, and Canadian Application No. 2,891,027, filed May 12, 2015, each of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5184398 | Moslehi | Feb 1993 | A |
6159822 | Yang | Dec 2000 | A |
7088431 | Ottens | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7629184 | Kulp | Dec 2009 | B2 |
8139340 | Reynolds | Mar 2012 | B2 |
8436255 | Goh | May 2013 | B2 |
8518204 | Hu | Aug 2013 | B2 |
8647438 | Hoffman | Feb 2014 | B2 |
8765582 | Hsu | Jul 2014 | B2 |
9134368 | Kuo | Sep 2015 | B2 |
9196498 | Nangoy | Nov 2015 | B1 |
9257414 | Chen | Feb 2016 | B2 |
9308650 | Eisele | Apr 2016 | B2 |
9349630 | Raj | May 2016 | B2 |
9356137 | Zhang | May 2016 | B2 |
9431283 | Thompson | Aug 2016 | B2 |
9478583 | Hu | Oct 2016 | B2 |
9496155 | Menard | Nov 2016 | B2 |
9589826 | Ono | Mar 2017 | B2 |
9607907 | Wu | Mar 2017 | B2 |
9741591 | Schweikert | Aug 2017 | B2 |
9965106 | Guard | May 2018 | B2 |
9991147 | Wang | Jun 2018 | B2 |
10153190 | Qin | Dec 2018 | B2 |
10700120 | Chaji | Jun 2020 | B2 |
11476216 | Chaji | Oct 2022 | B2 |
20020048137 | Williams | Apr 2002 | A1 |
20030162463 | Hayashi | Aug 2003 | A1 |
20040026773 | Koon | Feb 2004 | A1 |
20040154733 | Morf | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20040251821 | Cok | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20040262614 | Hack | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20050082523 | Blanchet-Fincher | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20050104225 | Huang | May 2005 | A1 |
20050169570 | Kim | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20050215073 | Nakamura | Sep 2005 | A1 |
20050287687 | Liao | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20060102913 | Park | May 2006 | A1 |
20070045620 | Park | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20080315440 | Dekker | Dec 2008 | A1 |
20090302339 | Yamazaki | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20100006845 | Seo | Jan 2010 | A1 |
20110216272 | Yoshida | Sep 2011 | A1 |
20130126081 | Hu | May 2013 | A1 |
20130130440 | Hu | May 2013 | A1 |
20130153277 | Menard | Jun 2013 | A1 |
20130157438 | Maeda | Jun 2013 | A1 |
20130214302 | Yeh | Aug 2013 | A1 |
20130273695 | Menard | Oct 2013 | A1 |
20140027709 | Higginson | Jan 2014 | A1 |
20140048836 | Hsu | Feb 2014 | A1 |
20140151678 | Sakuma | Jun 2014 | A1 |
20140333683 | Qi | Nov 2014 | A1 |
20140361265 | Liu | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20140367633 | Bibl | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20140367705 | Bibl | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20140367711 | Bibl | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20150060820 | Takagi | Mar 2015 | A1 |
20150144974 | Chen | May 2015 | A1 |
20150228513 | Parkhe | Aug 2015 | A1 |
20150357315 | Oraw | Dec 2015 | A1 |
20160013170 | Sakariya | Jan 2016 | A1 |
20160064363 | Bower | Mar 2016 | A1 |
20160372893 | McLaurin | Dec 2016 | A1 |
20170162552 | Thompson | Jun 2017 | A1 |
20170179092 | Sasaki | Jun 2017 | A1 |
20170261782 | Lee | Sep 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2880718 | Jul 2016 | CA |
2887186 | Nov 2016 | CA |
2890398 | Nov 2016 | CA |
1491436 | Apr 2004 | CN |
1813362 | Aug 2006 | CN |
101154618 | Apr 2008 | CN |
102097357 | Jun 2011 | CN |
103904073 | Jul 2014 | CN |
105324858 | Feb 2016 | CN |
1750308 | Feb 2007 | EP |
20160107363 | Sep 2016 | KR |
201423242 | Jun 2014 | TW |
WO 1997023903 | Jul 1997 | WO |
WO 2002084631 | Oct 2002 | WO |
WO 03088359 | Oct 2003 | WO |
WO 2014165151 | Oct 2014 | WO |
WO 2015081289 | Jun 2015 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report and Written Opinion in International Application No. PCT/IB2016/050307, dated May 4, 2016 (7 pages). |
International Search Report and Written Opinion in International Application No. PCT/IB2017/051297, dated May 17, 2017 (7 pages). |
International Search Report and Written Opinion in International Application No. PCT/IB2018/055347, dated Nov. 9, 2018 (17 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20220139856 A1 | May 2022 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 17365634 | Jul 2021 | US |
Child | 17569893 | US | |
Parent | 15002662 | Jan 2016 | US |
Child | 16931132 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 16931132 | Jul 2020 | US |
Child | 17365634 | US |