This invention relates to electronic device packages in which components are actively cooled. More specifically it relates to managing the thermal ambient for the sensing device used to control the cooling assembly.
Some types of devices used in electronic circuit packages require controlled temperature to avoid degradation, failure, or to meet functional requirements. Common among these are semiconductor laser packages where optical-wavelength stability and the lifetime of the laser diode are significantly enhanced if the diode is maintained at a moderate uniform temperature, typically below 40° C. Accordingly, these devices are often provided with active cooling elements, usually thermoelectric cooling (TEC) devices.
Normally, TEC devices are also hermetically sealed to provide additional environmental control. Common hermetic packages comprise a sealed ceramic and/or metal container in a box-like configuration. The I/O leads from the TEC device pass through holes in the container walls, and are sealed with welding, epoxy, solder, or other suitable seal. In the description below these device packages are referred to as TEC packages. The primary device category of interest for TEC packages are optoelectronic device TEC packages. Although the description below focuses on TEC devices for the cooling device, other refrigerator devices may be substituted.
A typical TEC package may contain a variety of components. The most temperature sensitive devices are cooled using the TEC device. These are referred to herein as cooled components. Other components in the package may not require cooling. Thus the TEC package may have one or more sections where the TEC cooling is focused.
It is conventional to mount the cooled components on a subassembly platform. In an optical device this is referred to as the optical subassembly (OSA) platform. A temperature-sensing device, typically a thermistor, is mounted on the OSA platform. The assumption is that the temperature of the OSA platform is the same as the temperature of the cooled components. As seen below, this assumption is not always valid.
The environments in which these packages are used vary widely, and adverse or hostile environments are not uncommon. Most customer specifications require the devices to operate effectively in relatively hot temperature environments, e.g. as high as 75 or 80° C. The need for active cooling of heat sensitive components in a package exposed to these temperatures is well established.
For example, in a laser package, temperature control of the laser is needed to control laser wavelength and improve laser reliability. Heat flowing between the walls and other elements of the package and the TEC device can cause the actual temperature of the laser arid the temperature indicated by the temperature-sensing device to diverge in a manner that is dependent on both the laser and package wall temperature. The package wall temperature typically may vary from −5° C. to +85° C. This difference (divergence) in temperature can cause unwanted shifts in laser wavelength. This shifting is known as wavelength tracking error. To control this effect, temperature control of the laser is desirably controlled to within+/−1° C., and preferably within 0.2° C.
Miniaturization of electronic components and packages impacts the performance of cooling devices. As the package size shrinks, the free volume within the package is reduced. This creates new heat flow patterns among elements in the package, between the packaged elements and the package walls, and between the packaged elements, the package walls, and the temperature sensing device.
An aggravating condition is introduced with respect to the temperature-sensing device(s). In a relatively open (large) package design the sensing. device can reliably record the temperature of the OSA, and that reading reliably indicates the temperature of the component being cooled. However, as the void space in the package shrinks, the sensing device now “sees” other elements and records false temperatures, i.e. temperatures that do not reflect the temperature of the cooled component. This result may be acceptable in a package with elements in temperature equilibrium, but in a cooled package that is not the case.
Consequently, managing the thermal environment for the temperature-sensing device(s) in a cooled package presents a new challenge.
The invention may be better understood when considered in conjunction with the drawings in which:
Various thermo-mechanical solutions are described herein for improved control over the thermal ambient of the temperature-sensing device in a cooled component package. These employ expedients in the design of the package that are intended to modify the heat flow in the vicinity of the temperature-sensing device and laser. Heat flow modifier is the term applied to an element in the TEC package that is primarily designed to modify heat flow in the vicinity of the temperature-sensing device and laser, and is incorporated in the TEC package for that purpose.
One example of a heat flow modifier is the following. A heat shield that at least partially surrounds the temperature-sensing device and intercepts heat before reaching the temperature-sensing device. Another example is electrical leads that extend from the temperature-sensing element to the outside of the package, which are “grounded” on the OSA platform to reduce heat flow to the temperature-sensing element through the electrical connections. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the term “grounded” is used here in a thermal, not an electrical, context, and ground is a reference temperature in contrast to a reference voltage. Yet another example is the bonding layer between the OSA and the TEC device that may be modified to similarly reduce the laser-to-temperature sensing device temperature divergence, and thus reduce the wavelength tracking error. The usual bonding layer is a uniform layer of solder. If the geometry of that layer is modified, for example is made in a stripe configuration, wavelength tracking error is reduced.
In the OSA described herein, the cooled component is laser 14.
Monitoring the temperature of laser 14 is temperature-sensing device 15, typically a thermistor. The TEC, the OSA and other components are enclosed in a hermetically sealed container (not shown). The container is typically, but not limited to, a metal or ceramic box, and electrical connections to the OSA are routed through the container walls and connected to the OSA elements within, typically using, but not limited to, wire bond interconnections.
The thermally conductive heat shield, placed in the manner shown, functions in at least two ways to stabilize the temperature of the temperature-sensing device relative to the laser. First, it protects the temperature-sensing device from variable heat flow from other elements in the hermetic package, including but not limited to heat flow from the ambient and package walls.
Second, because it is attached to the OSA platform, it is maintained at or close to the temperature of the OSA platform, so that the temperature-sensing device is exposed on all sides to bodies maintained at the OSA temperature. The heat shield is shown and described herein as at least partially surrounding the temperature-sensing device. It may also comprise a housing or can that covers the temperature-sensing device. It may also comprise a housing that simultaneously covers the temperature sensing device and laser.
In the prior art device shown in
In the arrangement shown in
The term TEC is used repeatedly in this description but it will be understood that any kind of cooling device may be used in place of, or in addition to, a thermoelectric element. The terms “refrigerator” and “refrigerator element” may be used as a more generic descriptor. As mentioned before, the term cooled component is intended as meaning any electrical component that has an active cooling element(s) associated therewith. A cooled component package is a cooled component in a container housing. The package may comprise one or more TEC elements. The cooled component is typically a laser but may be any electrical device the performance of which is affected by temperature. The temperature-sensing device is typically a thermistor but may be any suitable device where an electrical signal output from the sensor varies with temperature.
In the embodiments shown, the temperature-sensing element is attached to the OSA platform. Other arrangements may be found suitable. In the embodiments shown, the temperature-sensing element can be located adjacent to the cooled component. “Adjacent” is meant to define a nearby or touching relationship. Likewise the cooled component, while normally affixed to the refrigerator, may be located adjacent to the refrigerator.
Various additional modifications of this invention will occur to those skilled in the art. All deviations from the specific teachings of this specification that basically rely on the principles and their equivalents through which the art has been advanced are properly considered within the scope of the invention as described and claimed.