The present invention relates to electronic assemblies, and more particularly to electronic assemblies with embedded sensors and processing circuitry.
Electronic assemblies may be composed of a number of components. It is known in the art to mount sensor and signal processing components to a surface of a substrate. Some applications, known as “flip chip,” mount integrated circuits directly to a surface of a substrate. Other applications house a sensor or integrated circuit in a package. The package may include a lead frame, with one or more die are mounted on the leadframe. The leadframe and die are then encapsulated, and the package is mounted to a substrate, such as a printed circuit board, for example. It is known to increase the density of components on a substrate by stacking several integrated circuits within a single package, such as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,784,023, entitled “Method Of Fabrication Of Stacked Semiconductor Devices,” or U.S. Pat. No. 6,593,662 entitled “Stacked-Die Package Structure,” and then mounting the package to a substrate such as a printed circuit board. Some packages mount a single integrated circuit within a recess in a substrate within a package, such as U.S. Pat. No. 7,002,254, entitled “Integrated Circuit Package Employing Flip-Chip Technology And Method Of Assembly.” In any of these approaches, each component or package occupies real estate on the surface of the printed circuit board.
Flip-chip mounting as known in the art is schematically illustrated in
A prior art arrangement 300 of packaged sensors or integrated circuits 301 mounted to a substrate 302 is schematically illustrated in
Design rules for mounting packages, and the physical dimensions of the packages themselves, will require certain spacing between the devices. The real estate occupied will be even larger if room must be made for surface interconnections or a discrete component, such a resistor 303. Another consequence of this approach is that one sensor may be some distance from another sensor, possibly hampering their ability to sense or measure the same local environment. Spreading out the components 301 also requires longer interconnection conductors than a more compact layout, possibly leading to increased parasitic capacitances, or increased susceptibility to noise coupling to the signals.
In a first embodiment of the invention there is provided a substrate having a frontside surface comprising circuitry, and a backside surface comprising a plurality of recesses. A plurality of the recesses have at least one sensor, and a port configured to expose the sensor to the environment external to the recess. A sensor may detect a characteristic of the external environment, or energy from the environment that impinges on the sensor. Some embodiments employ inertial sensors without exposing the inertial sensors directly to the external environment. The frontside of the substrate may include circuitry configured to receive a signal from at least one of the sensors. In some embodiments, the circuitry may also control the sensor, or a plurality of sensors. The port may comprise an aperture, a transparent portion, a filter, or a lens, in some embodiments. In some embodiments, the assembly may include a cap, and the cap may comprise an aperture, a transparent portion, a filter, or a lens, or circuitry. In some embodiments, some ports may be sealed from the outside environment while allowing some environmental external recess. In some embodiments, the substrate may be a semiconductor, while in other embodiments the substrate may be a laminated body, or other material.
The foregoing features of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description, taken with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A system with recessed sensing or processing elements has a base with a backside surface and a frontside surface. The backside surface has a number of recesses that host circuit elements, such as die, sensors, discrete elements, or integrated circuits. Some embodiments expose the recesses to the environment, while others seal the recesses, while still others expose the recess to the environment through a lens or filter. Some embodiments include a cover or backside cap member, to cover the recesses or support the covers. In some embodiments, the backside cap member may completely seal one or more recesses, may leave some recesses open to the environment, or may include filters or lenses.
In contrast to a prior art substrate with elements mounted on its surface, these illustrated embodiments do not cause the sensors or integrated circuits to occupy portions of the frontside surface. Portions of the frontside surface that would otherwise be covered by mounted sensors, or mounted integrated circuits, are therefore free to include conductors or other circuits that may, for example, receive, conduct or process signals, including for example signals to or from the sensors. The close proximity of the devices also provides an opportunity to reduce the length of interconnection conductors, possibly reducing parasitic capacitances, signal delays, or noise.
The base may be formed from a semiconductor wafer or silicon-on-insulator (“SOI”) wafer, in which case the circuits on the active surface may be integrated circuits. In some embodiments, the base may be formed from another material or materials, or may be a laminated member.
One advantage of the multisensor system of
Illustrations of various embodiments discussed herein may include multiple features. Some features, however, may be combined, or mixed and matched, in ways not illustrated in the figures. A complete catalog of all variations and combinations is not practicable. Persons of ordinary skill in the art will be able to conceive many variations and combinations.
In the following examples, the term “environmental media,” when used in connection with a sensing or measurement, has a meaning that includes, but is not limited to, the physical make-up of the environment being measured or sensed, or some quality, property, or characteristic of that environment (e.g., temperature, pressure, humidity), or something being transmitted via or through the environment (e.g., acoustic energy; electromagnetic energy; light), or other properties of the environment or apparatus, such as acceleration or rotation.
Examples of Multi-Chip/Multi-Sensor Systems
In one embodiment, the system of
Circuitry on the base or on circuits within the recesses could coordinate the operation of such sensors. For example, if all sensors need to sense or sample the environment at the same time, or in a defined sequence, the circuitry control the operation of the sensors in time. If a sensor has an adjustable parameter, such as sensitivity or sample size, circuitry may control those parameters. If a sensor stores data, the circuitry may read the data from the sensor, for example at an appropriate time. In embodiments that include a reference sensor and a sensor to sample the environment, the circuitry may control the timing of the sampling by both sensors, and then determine the net measurement by comparing the outputs of the two sensors. The proximity of the sensors to the controlling circuitry may facilitate cleaner timing and data signals.
While the sensors 407, 408, 409 in
In illustrative embodiments, multiple sensors detect or measure the same environmental media, but are calibrated for different sensitivities. As such, the system can provide a highly accurate reading of a specific environmental property. For example, the sensor system 400 of
The proximity of the various sensors and integrated circuits in the foregoing examples may facilitate or enable several desirable features. For example, placing sensors in close proximity to one another may enable them to more accurately sense the environment at nearly the same point in space. Such proximity may facilitate comparisons between like sensors, or measurement accuracy among unlike sensors. Also, placing sensors in close proximity to processing circuitry may facilitate fast communication with reduced noise, and lower parasitic capacitance. In addition, the recesses provide some protection against damage from physical contact between the sensor or integrated circuit and an object from the external environment. A sensor or integrated circuit within a recess may also avoid the need for individual packaging, thus saving manufacturing costs and time, as well as system weight.
Alternate embodiments could be represented by the system 500 of
Covers
Some applications of various embodiments may benefit from covering, partially or completely, one or more of the recesses. Some embodiments may include one or more covers or caps, filters or lenses in, or covering, one or more recesses. In some embodiments, a cover completely covers a recess, such as covers 608 and 609 covering recess 603 and 604 in
The amount of desirable exposure to the outside environment may depend on what environmental media the sensor is designed to sense. In some embodiments, a gas sensor, for example, may need to be fully exposed to its environment in order to sample the gases in that environment. In some embodiments, an opening from the recess to the environment may be smaller than the dimensions of the recess, and sized according to the application, such aperture 805 in
Other sensors may not require direct exposure to the external environment, and so their host recesses may be closed, or even sealed-off from the external environment. A light or infrared sensor, for example, may sense incident energy through a cover that is transparent to the radiation being sensed. For example, some plastic encapsulants used in the semiconductor industry are transparent to infrared radiation, but opaque to light in the visible spectrum.
Some applications may benefit from having a filter that selectively passes environmental media into or out of a recess. Some applications may benefit from having a lens that focuses environmental media as it passes into a recess. Illustrative embodiments may include a cover, filter or lens, or a cover that includes or embodies a filter or lens. A cap or cover that embodies a lens is described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,326,932, entitled “Sensor and Cap Arrangement.” A cover may also include a more traditional optical lens, for example. In some embodiments, a cover may also include a transparent portion that is polarized, to polarize any incident electromagnetic radiation as it passes into the recess.
Some sensors may not require any opening or exposure to the external environment. An inertial sensor such as an accelerometer or gyroscope, for example, can detect inertial forces and gravity without any opening to the outside environment. In some embodiments, a recess may be sealed to isolate the recess from the external environment, such as recess 604 in
In some embodiments, one or more sensors could be shielded from the ambient environment to act as reference sensors. For example, in some embodiments an infrared sensor is sealed within a recess such that no external infrared radiation impinges on the sensor, while another, nominally identical infrared sensor is exposed to the environment. Such an embodiment may be illustrated by
The recess may be filled with fill material, such as a thermoplastic. In embodiments with a sensor that has moving parts, such a MEMS device, however, the host recess may be covered but remain unfilled, so that no encapsulant or filler interferes with the motion of the moving parts. In some embodiments, recesses hosting MEMS devices, for example, may be left uncapped and unfilled. In other embodiments, the recess and a cap or cover may form a void.
Vias
Some applications may benefit from the ability to transmit signals to and from a recess to another point in the system. As such, some embodiments may include one or more vias through the base. For example, a via 411 as illustrated in
Some embodiments may include vias all the way through the base, such as the long, vertical via 808 in
Fabrication of Base
A sequence of illustrations in
In some embodiments, one or more recesses 704, 705 may have vertical sidewalls 707 from the bottom of the recess 704, 705 to the top, while others may have angled sidewalls (not shown). Alternately, the sidewalls may incorporate a lip or shoulder 706 to facilitate mounting of a lens or filter, for example. In
Backside Cap Wafer
Some applications may benefit from mounting a cap member to the backside surface. Such a cap member could protect an embedded sensor, or provide signal processing capacity, for example. Some embodiments 800 may include a backside cap wafer 801 that covers one or more of the recesses 802, 803, 804, as illustrated in
Some applications may benefit from including circuitry on a backside cap wafer 801. As such, a backside cap wafer may also include circuitry in some embodiments, such as integrated circuitry, or even other sensors. In some embodiments, a via 808 may extend from the frontside surface 809 to the backside 810 of the base 811 (e.g., an inter-surface via), to transmit power, ground, or signals to and from a backside cap wafer 801.
A backside cap wafer 801 in some embodiments may be fabricated from the same material as the base 811. In such an embodiment, the base 811 and the backside cap 801 wafer may exhibit similar coefficients of thermal expansion, which may make the assembly stronger, easier to manufacture, or better able to withstand temperature variations.
One method of fabricating such a capped wafer 900 is illustrated in
Some applications may benefit from including a filter or lens in a recess prior to mounting a cap wafer. In an alternate embodiment 920, as illustrated in
Some applications may benefit from a cavity to host a sensor, which cavity is larger than the recess itself. In some embodiments 1000, a backside cap member 1001 may also include one or more recesses 1002, and one or more of the cap recesses 1002 may correspond to one or more base recesses 1009, as illustrated in
The cap 1001 may also incorporate a locking feature to improve adhesion of the cap 1001 to the base 1003.
A benefit of a cap member with a cap recess is that the cap recess may also include an opaque coating 1005 over at least a portion of its surface. In alternate embodiments, one or more recesses 1006 in a cap wafer have a coating 1005 within a recess to block, or partially block, incident radiation.
Laminated Cap
A cap wafer 1100 may, in some embodiments, have a multi-layered cap member, such as a laminated member 1101, as illustrated in
A laminate/film 1103 that incorporates lens/filters etc. 1104, 1105 may act as an interface between the cap silicon 1102 (possibly with openings 1106, 1107) and the base 1108. The film 1103 can be manufactured separately and customised to fit specific wafer sizes/sensor arrays and arrangements.
A laminated cap 1121 may also incorporate features, such as a locking feature 1122, to improve adhesion of film/improve robustness of construction of an assembly 1120, as illustrated in
Some embodiments include a laminate base. Using a laminated base as described herein may make more efficient use of the volume of the laminate base by putting some elements, such as circuits or sensors, within the laminated base, while leaving a sensor exposed to the external environment. Such an arrangement leaves surface space free for other purposes, protects the internal elements, and provides an opportunity to include caps, filters or lenses between a sensor or circuit and the external environment.
One such embodiment 1200 is schematically illustrated in
A recess 1202 in a laminate base 1201 may be created by an aperture 1203 in a layer 1201(a) of the laminate base 1201, or a plurality of aligned apertures in two or more of the layers 1201(a), 1201(b) and 1201(c). A recess may be open to the environment, or may be closed-off from the environment. A cap 1204 above a recess 1205 may be formed by a layer 1201(b) above the recess. In some embodiments, a sensor or integrated circuit 1204 may occupy a layer above the recess 1205, and partially or completely close-off the recess 1205 from the external environment. A cap, lens, filter, or other integrated circuit or sensor may occupy an internal layer [such as sensor 1206 in layer, or a layer near the surface [such as lens 1207 in layer 1201(a)] of the laminated base 1201.
A cover, cap, filter, or lens in a laminate base may be at or near a surface of the laminate base, as highlighted in
In some situations, it may be desirable to transmit environmental media to, or into, a base.
An illustrative embodiment including coupled inductors is schematically illustrated in
An exemplary embodiment of a system 1700 may include a substrate, such as a multilayer laminate substrate 1701, mounted to an integrated circuit 1702, as schematically illustrated in
In this embodiment 1700, the laminate substrate 1701 (containing the sensing structures, lenses, filters, etc., 1707, 1708) is mounted on a silicon substrate or integrated circuit 1702, which may include circuitry to drive or control the sensing system 1700 or its individual sensors 1707, 1708, or process the output of one or more of the sensors 1707, 1708. An advantage of such an embodiment is that the laminate substrate 1701, or other such embedded structure, could be tailored to suit different sensing applications as required, simply by designing variations that all mount to the same processing integrated circuit. The processing integrated circuit 1702 could be, for example, a digital signal processor (“DSP”), an application-specific integrated circuit (“ASIC”) or other integrated circuit adapted to mount to and electrically communicate with the laminate substrate 1701.
A variety of laminate substrates 1701 may be adapted to mount to one design of integrated circuit 1702. For example, a first laminate substrate may contain pressure sensors (1707; 1708), while a second laminate substrate may contain gas sensors (1707; 1708), yet either of the first or second laminate substrates could be mounted to the same type of DSP integrated circuit 1702, to create a modular systems 1700. Through-silicon vias, such as 1705, may conduct signals through the integrated circuit 1702 to or from the laminate substrate 1701. Further, solder balls 1706 or other known means of connection may mount the assembly 1700 to a circuit board or other structure (not shown).
The embodiments of the invention described above are intended to be merely exemplary; numerous variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, some steps in processes may be combined or reordered, or even skipped. All such variations and modifications are intended to be within the scope of the present invention as defined in any appended claims.
The present application is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/554,219, filed on Sep. 4, 2009, titled “System With Recessed Sensing Or Processing Elements” and naming Alan J. O'Donnell, Michael J. Cusack, Rigan F. McGeehan, and Garrett A. Griffin as inventors, which application is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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