The present invention relates generally to spatial light modulators, and more particularly to a spatial light modulators having a substrate with reflectivity enhancing layers and methods of manufacturing and using the same.
Spatial light modulators (SLMs) are devices or arrays of multiple devices that can control or modulate an incident beam of light in a spatial pattern that corresponds to an electrical input to the devices. The incident light beam can be modulated in intensity, phase, polarization or direction. Some modulation can be accomplished through the use of Micro-Electromechanical System devices or MEMS that use electrical signals to move micromechanical structures to modulate light incident thereon.
One type of SLM is a ribbon light modulator, such as a Grating Light Valve™ (GLV®) commercially available from Silicon Light Machines Corporation of Sunnyvale, Calif. Referring to
It is highly desirable to improve light modulators. In particular, there is a need to improve a light modulator having a substrate with a mirrored or highly reflective surface and to improve a method of manufacturing the same. It is desirable that light modulators be produced having uniform reflectivity between wafer lots. It is further desirable that any treatment or modification of surface layers on the substrate not interfere with or adversely effect any underlying circuits formed in an electronically active substrate.
The present invention provides a solution to these and other problems, and offers further advantages over conventional spatial light modulators.
In one aspect, the present invention is directed to a light modulator for modulating light incident thereon. Generally, the light modulator includes a substrate having a number of reflectivity enhancing layers formed thereon. The reflectivity enhancing layers include at least a top surface for receiving light incident on the light modulator, a first layer overlying the substrate, and a second layer between the top surface and the first layer, the second layer overlying and abutting the first layer. The second layer has a predetermined thickness. In accordance with the present invention, the thickness of the second layer is selected in relation to its refractive index and a wavelength of the incident light such that the light passing through the second layer and reflecting off an interface between the first and second layers constructively interferes with light reflected from the top surface. Preferably, the first layer also has a predetermined thickness, and the thickness of the first layer is selected in relation to its refractive index and the wavelength of incident light such that the light passing through the first layer and reflecting off an interface between the first layer and the substrate constructively interferes with light reflected from the top surface.
In one embodiment, the substrate is electrically active having an electrode and/or drive electronics below the first layer, and the first layer is a dielectric layer and the second layer is a conductive interconnect layer. In one version of this embodiment, the thickness of the second layer is also selected to provide a desired resistance of the conductive interconnect layer, and the thickness of the first layer is further selected to reduce capacitive coupling between underlying electrically active substrate and the overlying conductive interconnect layer. Preferably, the first and second layers each have thicknesses substantially equal to an odd multiple of a quarter wavelength of the light within that layer. In one specific embodiment, the first and second layers have thicknesses substantially equal to seven quarters of the wavelength of the light within that layer.
Although embodiments described heretofore include only two reflectivity enhancing layers, it will be appreciated that the light modulator according the present invention can include any number of reflectivity enhancing layers each having a thickness equal to an odd multiple of a quarter wavelength of the light within that layer.
It will also be appreciated that the light modulator having a substrate with reflectivity enhancing layers according to the present invention is particularly useful in a ribbon light modulator having a number of reflective ribbons disposed above the substrate with gaps between the ribbons.
In another aspect a method is provided for manufacturing a light modulator including a substrate with reflectivity enhancing layers formed thereon. Generally, the method involves: (i) forming a first layer on the substrate; and (ii) forming a second layer overlying and abutting the first layer. In accordance with the present invention, the second layer has a predetermined thickness selected in relation to a wavelength of light incident on a top surface of the reflectivity enhancing layers such that light passing through the second layer and reflecting off an interface between the first and second layers constructively interferes with light reflected from the top surface. Preferably, the step of forming a first layer involves forming a first layer overlying and abutting the substrate, having a predetermined thickness selected such that the light passing through the first layer and reflecting off an interface between the first layer and the substrate constructively interferes with light reflected from the top surface.
These and various other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent upon reading of the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the appended claims provided below, where:
The present invention relates generally to spatial light modulators, and more particularly to diffractive spatial light modulators (SLMs) having a mirrored, or highly reflective substrate and methods of manufacturing and using the same.
Although, in theory, the efficiency of these modulators may be as high as 70% to 80%, in the past manufacturers have typically struggled to consistently deliver device efficiencies above 60%. Historically, there is significant lot-to-lot variations in device efficiency. Although efficiency is influenced by many factors (sacrificial layer or SAC thickness, ribbon bow, Aluminum reflectivity, and other factors), a known source of variation is the reflectivity of the surface of the modulator substrate 104.
The reflected waves from the ribbons 102 and gaps 201 shown in
A SLM according to the present invention will now be described with reference to
As noted above, and shown in
In accordance with the present invention the substrate 104 of the light modulator includes a number of reflectivity enhancing layers. Each of the reflectivity enhancing layers have refractive indices and thicknesses selected in relation to a desired wavelength of light such that the light passing through at least one of the layers and reflecting off an interface between the layer and a underlying layer, or off an interface between the layer and the substrate, constructively interferes with light reflected from a top surface of the reflectivity enhancing layers. In one embodiment, this occurs when each of the reflectivity enhancing layers is an odd multiple of λ/4 thick, where λ is the wavelength of light within the respective layer.
A substrate film stack having reflectivity enhancing layers according to an embodiment of the invention is shown in
Each of the layers in the substrate 104 serves a specific, non-optical purpose. Hence, its thickness is not a completely free variable and has not heretofore been optimized for optical response. However, through slight modifications to each layer thickness, applicants believe that it is possible to create a net optical response that is (a) highly reflective and (b) relatively insensitive to film thickness variations.
An incident light wave 502 is shown in
The incident light is also partially reflected (second reflected light component 506) with no (0 degree) phase shift from the LM1-INOX interface 505. In addition, this second reflected light component 506 goes through a phase change as it twice travels through the LM1 layer 208. The amount of the phase change depends upon the wavelength λ of the light in the LM1 material and the thickness of the LM1 layer 208. The wavelength λ of the light depends upon the index of refraction in the LM1 material. In one implementation, the index of refraction nLM1=4.2. In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, the thickness 510 of LM1 is controlled such that the thickness 510 is equal to (or substantially equal to) mλ/4, where m is an odd number. With such an LM1 thickness 510, the second reflected light component 506 has a phase of mλ/2 which is equivalent to λ/2 (since m is odd) at the substrate surface. Hence, the second reflected light component 506 is in phase with (and so adds constructively to) the first reflected light component 504 coming off the substrate surface.
The incident light is also reflected (third reflected light component 508) with a λ/2 (180 degree) phase shift from the INOX-substrate interface 507. In addition, this third reflected light component 508 goes through a phase change as it twice travels through the LM1 layer 208 and also twice travels through the INOX layer 210. The amount of the phase change depends upon the wavelength λ of the light in the LM1 and INOX materials and the thicknesses of the LM1208 and INOX 210 layers. The wavelength λ of the light in the INOX layer 210 depends upon the index of refraction in the INOX material. In one implementation, the index of refraction nINOX=1.46 In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, the thickness 512 of INOX is controlled such that the thickness 512 is equal to (or substantially equal to) nλ/4, where n is an odd number. With such an INOX thickness 512, the third reflected light component 508 has a phase of λ/2+mλ/2+nλ/2 which is equivalent to λ/2 (since both m and n are odd) at the substrate surface. Hence, the third reflected light component 508 is in phase with (and so adds constructively to) the first 504 and second 506 reflected light components at the substrate surface.
Computational simulations of the substrate optical response were performed as a function of INOX and LM1 thicknesses. The results are shown in
The robust “mirror substrate” condition is achieved by enforcing constructive interference among each of the buried interfaces. Constructive interference occurs when each material slab (LM1 and INOX) thickness is and odd multiple of λ/4, where λ is the wavelength of the light inside the film layer. When light (λ0) enters the LM1 material, its wavelength is reduced to λ0/nLM1, where nLM1 is the refractive index of the material (λ=λ0/nLM1). When light (λ0) enters the INOX material, its wavelength is reduced to λ0/nINOX, where nINOX is the refractive index of the material (λ=λ0/nINOX).
A series of films were prepared to experimentally verify the mirror substrate design point. A matrix of five INOX thicknesses multiplied by nine LM1 thicknesses was prepared on blank wavers. The reflectivity of each substrate was measured spectroscopically. An excerpt of this study is shown in
Similarly,
Note that while the calculated simulation of
The foregoing description of specific embodiments and examples of the invention have been presented for the purpose of illustration and description, and although the invention has been described and illustrated by certain of the preceding examples, it is not to be construed as being limited thereby. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and many modifications, improvements and variations within the scope of the invention are possible in light of the above teaching. It is intended that the scope of the invention encompass the generic area as herein disclosed, and by the claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 60/555,912, entitled “Spatial Light Modulator Having a Mirrored Substrate and Method of Fabricating Same,” filed Mar. 24, 2004, by inventors Alexander P. Payne, James A. Hunter, and David T. Amm, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60555912 | Mar 2004 | US |