The current application is directed to a testing and sorting apparatus and method for individual LEDs on a manufacturing wafer prior to a dicing step.
The light-emitting diode (“LED”) manufacturing process consists of crystal growth by an epitaxial process, doping and patterning of conducting lines between separate LEDs on substrate wafers, dicing the wafers into individual LEDs, and packaging the LEDs. It is advantageous to test the individual LEDs, referred to as “dies” prior to dicing, while still at the wafer level in order to detect defective dies and to sort the operating dies according to wavelength, intensity and electrical characteristics. The accuracy of measurement of the above-mentioned parameters of the individual dies varies according to the needs of the manufacturer. Usually there is a trade-off between the level of accuracy and the speed of testing. Existing testing apparatuses include probers that apply an electrical current to individual dies and measure their electrical parameters and light-collecting optics, such as an integrating sphere or other large collecting optic, and a sensing device, such as a spectrometer to measure the total luminous flux and the wavelength distribution of each individual die. Usually, the use of an integrating sphere and a spectrometer, alone or concurrently, involves inspecting a single die at a given time, since each die-testing step uses the same integrating sphere or the same spectrometer to test the above-mentioned optical properties. The testing of dies therefore constitutes a serial process, which is slow in nature.
The current application is directed to an apparatus and a method for parallel testing and sorting of LED dies on a substrate wafer. The apparatus includes a moving stage and a chuck for the wafer, a wafer prober, collecting and imaging optics, sorting and separating optics, and a linear or rectangular array of light detectors. The method of testing includes moving an LED wafer or a test device on an XY stage, connecting the prober to a line of multiple LED dies or several lines of multiple LED dies, referred to as an “array of devices under test” (“ADUT”), measuring the electrical characteristics of the individual devices under test (“DUT”) in parallel, and collecting light from, and identifying the intensity and wavelength distribution of, the individual DUT in parallel.
a-b illustrates an imaging method.
a-b illustrate a scanning and testing method.
a-e show the system in a side view, a top view of the detector array, and detection details.
a-b show an alternative design of the separating optics that uses beam splitters.
a-b illustrates an imaging method. In its simplest form, the imaging optics can be a lens assembly 80, as shown in
a-b illustrate a scanning and testing method. A wafer 302 is positioned using the stage with the optical image orientation of the die rows aligned against the detector-array position and orientation. The wafer 302 or the optical head is moved to position X1. The prober comes in contact with the contact points and the LEDs in ADUT 304a are turned on by the prober. Each LED in the ADUT 304a is imaged, using one of the methods described above, by light falling onto one of the detector sets 306 in the detector array 108. The parameters such as intensity and wavelength distribution of all the LEDs in the ADUT are collected and analyzed in parallel, thus considerably accelerating the testing throughput of the currently described instrument compared to other instruments and methods. After the data has been recorded, the wafer 108 or the optical head is moved along the X axis to position X2 and the LEDs in ADUT 304b are tested. The process is repeated until the wafer moves through a full slice and arrives at ADUT 304n. Than the wafer is moved in the Y direction to a 2nd slice, and ADUT 306a through 306n are tested while the wafer moves in the opposite X direction. One of the concerns in LED testing relates to intensity cross talk between different adjacent LEDs. This is the leakage of light from one LED through the optical system to the adjacent LED's detector set. To avoid such cross talk, the ADUT 308b to 308n can be composed of separated LEDs which have one, two, or three device separation lengths between them. The scanning in this case is interlaced. After scanning the entire wafer along the X axis, the wafer (or the measuring instrument) is moved one LED separation distance in the Y direction and the next ADUT (310b to 310n shown in
a-e show the system in a side view, a top view of the detector array, and detection details.
a-b show an alternative design of the separating optics that uses beam splitters. The beam splitters are used to separate the beam for a 3 binning test. More beam splitters can be added if more than 3 binning is required. Due to the LED's large divergent angle, collimation optics 510 (such as a micro-lens array or zone plate array) needs be placed next to the image plane. There are 2 options for the coating. Beam splitter 1 (511) can be 33/66 and splitter 2 (512) can be 50/50 splitting. Detectors are coated with narrow band passing coating for the 3 wavelength band of interest or filters (not shown) are used. Another option is to coat beam splitter 1511 and beam splitter 2512 with a coating to only split the wavelength of interest. Only the 3rd detector is coated with the narrow band pass coating for the 3rd wavelength of interested, in one implementation.
The light collected by the multiple detectors in the detector array from each individual LED in the array, vary by multiple system parameters, such as detector sensitivity, angular coverage of the optical system at different field points, coupling efficiency of the light into fibers (in the case of using fibers in the collecting optics), optical distortion of the imaging lens (in the case of lens imaging method), variations across the separating optics components, and other factors. The detector array needs to be calibrated one time or periodically, both as a stand-alone component to account for variation inside the detector array and when integrated in the system, to account for system-induced variations. The calibration is done against a known calibrated light source and compensation methods for the variations can include optical alignments of components in the system or electrical signal amplification adjustment or adjustment of the collected signal values by a software algorithm.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 61/500,076, filed Jun. 22, 2011.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61500076 | Jun 2011 | US |