Inkjet printers and other printing devices have become ubiquitous in society. These printing devices can utilize a slotted substrate to deliver ink in the printing process. Such printing devices can provide many desirable characteristics at an affordable price. However, the desire for more features at ever-lower prices continues to press manufacturers to improve efficiencies.
Currently, the slotted substrates can have a propensity to suffer malfunctions due to, among other things, ink occlusion within individual slots. Such malfunctions can decrease product reliability and customer satisfaction.
Accordingly, the present invention arose out of a desire to provide slotted substrates having desirable characteristics.
The same components are used throughout the drawings to reference like features and components.
a shows a top view of a portion of an exemplary substrate in accordance with one embodiment.
Overview
The embodiments described below pertain to methods and systems for forming slots in a substrate. Several embodiments of this process will be described in the context of forming fluid-handling slots in a substrate that can be incorporated into a print head die or other fluid-ejecting device.
As commonly used in print head dies, the substrate can comprise a semiconductor substrate that can have microelectronics incorporated within, deposited over, and/or supported by the substrate on a thin-film surface that can be opposite a back surface or backside. The fluid-handling slot(s) can allow fluid, commonly ink, to be supplied from an ink supply or reservoir to fluid-ejecting elements proximate to ejection chambers within the print head.
In some embodiments, this can be accomplished by connecting the fluid-handling slot to one or more ink feed passageways, each of which can supply an individual ejection chamber. The fluid-ejecting elements commonly comprise heating elements, such as firing resistors, that heat fluid causing increased pressure in the ejection chamber. A portion of that fluid can be ejected through a firing nozzle with the ejected fluid being replaced by fluid from the fluid-handling slot. Bubbles can be formed in the ink or fluid as a byproduct of the ejection process. If the bubbles accumulate in the fluid-handling slot they can occlude ink flow to some or all of the ejection chambers and cause the print head to malfunction.
In one embodiment, the fluid-handling slots can have a configuration that can reduce bubble accumulation and/or promote bubbles to migrate out of the slots. The slots can be formed utilizing a hybrid or combination process. A hybrid process can use more than one substrate machining method, e.g. dry etch, wet etch, laser, saw, sand drill to achieve a slot geometry.
Exemplary Printing Device
Exemplary Embodiments and Methods
The various fluid-handling slots (304a–c) pass through regions of a substrate 306. In this exemplary embodiment, silicon can be a suitable substrate. In some embodiments, substrate 306 comprises a crystalline substrate such as doped or non-doped monocrystalline silicon or doped or non-doped polycrystalline silicon. Examples of other suitable substrates include, among others, gallium arsenide, gallium phosphide, indium phosphide, glass, silica, ceramics, or a semi-conducting material. The substrate can comprise various configurations as will be recognized by one of skill in the art.
The exemplary embodiments can utilize substrate thicknesses ranging from less than 100 microns to more than 2000 microns. One exemplary embodiment can utilize a substrate that is approximately 675 microns thick.
In some exemplary embodiments, the substrate comprises a base layer, such as a silicon substrate, upon which the other layers can be formed. The substrate has a first surface 310 and a second surface 312. Various layers formed above the second surface 312 are commonly referred to as “thin film layers”. In some of these embodiments, one of the thin film layers is the barrier layer 314. In one such embodiment, the barrier layer can surround independently controllable fluid ejection elements or fluid drop generators. In this embodiment, the fluid ejection elements comprise firing resistors 316. This is but one possible exemplary configuration of thin film layers, other suitable examples will be discussed below.
The barrier layer 314 can comprise, among other things, a photo-resist polymer substrate. In some embodiments, above the barrier layer is an orifice plate 318. In one embodiment, the orifice plate comprises a nickel substrate. In another embodiment, the orifice plate is the same material as the barrier layer. The orifice plate can have a plurality of nozzles 319 through which fluid heated by the various resistors can be ejected for printing on a print media (not shown). The various layers can be formed, deposited, or attached upon the preceding layers. The configuration given here is but one possible configuration. For example, in an alternative embodiment, the orifice plate and barrier layer are integral.
The exemplary print cartridge 202 shown in
An ejection chamber 322 can be comprised of a firing resistor 316, a nozzle 319, and a given volume of space therein. Other configurations are also possible. When an electrical current is passed through the firing resistor in a given ejection chamber, the fluid can be heated to its boiling point so that it expands to eject a portion of the fluid from the nozzle 319. The ejected fluid can then be replaced by additional fluid from the fluid-handling passageway 320. Various embodiments can also utilize other ejection mechanisms.
As shown in
Referring to
The hard mask can comprise any suitable material. Exemplary materials can have characteristics such that they are resistant to etching environments and do not produce polymeric residues during an etching process, and that are not removed by solvents used to remove photoresist materials during a slotting process. The hard mask can be grown thermal oxide or either grown or deposited dielectric material such as CVD (chemical vapor deposition) oxides, TEOS (tetraethoxysilane), silicon carbide, silicon nitride, or other suitable material. Other suitable masking materials can include, but are not limited to, aluminum, copper, aluminum-copper alloys, aluminum-titanium alloys, and gold.
The patterning of the hard mask, as shown here, can be accomplished in various suitable ways. For example, a photo-lithographic process can be utilized where the hard mask can be formed over generally all of the first surface and then hard mask material can be removed from the desired area such as the first area 510. Methods of removal can include either dry or wet processing.
Another suitable process includes patterning a first material on the desired area (such as first area 510) of the surface 310a. The hard mask can then be grown, deposited, or otherwise applied over the first surface. The first material can then be removed from the desired area leaving it free of hard mask material. The desired area can have a width w1 in the range of about 100 to about 1000 microns and a length (not shown) corresponding to a length of a desired slot. In one exemplary embodiment, the desired area can have a width of about 350 microns. Slot lengths can range from less that about 1,000 microns to more than about 80,000 microns.
Referring to
The slot portion 610 can be formed by any suitable technique including, but not limited to, laser machining, sand drilling, and mechanically contacting the substrate material. Mechanically contacting can include, but is not limited to, sawing with a diamond abrasive blade. As shown here, the slot portion can be formed through less than the entire thickness of the substrate. This allows the use of techniques that might otherwise be inappropriate for forming slots in a substrate that already has thin film layers formed thereon. For example, laser machining can be used to form the slot portion 610 since, in some embodiments, a portion of the thickness of the substrate 306a can be left to protect or buffer the thin film layers 410 from potentially damaging affects of the laser beam.
Referring to
In some embodiments, the slot portion 610a can be dry etched into the substrate 306a through the second patterned masking layer (photoresist) 710. In one such embodiment, the slot portion 610a is etched through the exposed portion 712 (shown in
The slot portion 610a can be etched to any suitable depth relative to the substrate thickness t. In various exemplary embodiments, this can range from less than about 50% to about 100% of the substrate's thickness t. In this example, the slot portion is etched through about 90% of the substrate's thickness. In another example, the slot portion passes through about 95% of the substrate's thickness.
Referring to
Referring to
In this embodiment, the etchant removed substrate material to form a slot 304d that has a through region 1002 that is positioned between two shallow regions 1004 and 1006. In some embodiments, the slot 304d can have a sidewall 1008 that at least partially defines the slot. In some of these embodiments, the sidewall 1008 can have a first portion 1010 that is generally parallel to the first surface 310a and a second portion 1012 that is generally orthogonal to the first surface. In this example, the first portion 1010 can comprise a portion of one of the shallow regions (1004 and 1006) while the second portion 1012 can comprise a portion of the through region 1002. This exemplary configuration can avoid trapping bubbles formed in the firing chambers 322a as will be described in more detail below.
As shown in
Existing technologies have formed slots by utilizing a combination of dry etching and wet etching. The process can form a re-entrant profile in the finished slot. Such a profile can cause bubble accumulation in the slot. An example of such a re-entrant profile can be seen in
The slot 1102 shown in
Shallow regions, such as those shown in
In some of the present embodiments, the wet etching process etches or removes substrate material within the slot portion and proximate the slot portion on the first area of the first surface. Substrate removal techniques for forming the slot portion can be selected with regard to speed and efficiency of removal, while wet etching can finish the slot by selectively etching to the thin film layers. This can be achieved at least in part by the thin film layers slowing down the lateral progression of the etching along the <111> planes as described above. Utilizing wet etching to finish the slot(s) can also increase the strength of the resultant slotted substrate by reducing sharp edges, corners and other stress concentrating regions.
The described embodiments can efficiently form a slotted substrate. The slotted substrate can be formed utilizing two or more techniques for removing substrate material. The described process can be utilized to form a desired slot configuration. The slot configuration can, among other attributes, reduce failure of the slotted substrate to properly deliver fluid when incorporated into a print head die and/or other fluid-ejecting devices.
Although the invention has been described in language specific to structural features and methodological steps, it is to be understood that the invention defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or steps described. Rather, the specific features and steps are disclosed as preferred forms of implementing the claimed invention.
This patent application is a divisional claiming priority from a patent application having Ser. No. 10/283,767 titled “Slotted Substrate and Method of Making” filed Ser. No. 10/30/2002, and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,648,454.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10283767 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 10601148 | US |