DECAL ELECTRONICS FOR PRINTED HIGH PERFORMANCE CMOS ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
20190148170 ยท 2019-05-16
Inventors
- Muhammad Mustafa HUSSAIN (Austin, TX, US)
- Galo Torres Sevilla (Tungurahua, EC)
- Marlon Diaz Cordero (Thuwal, SA)
- Arwa T. Kutbee (Thuwal, SA)
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L23/5389
ELECTRICITY
Y10T29/49146
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
H01L21/48
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/538
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
High performance complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) electronics are critical for any full-fledged electronic system. However, state-of-the-art CMOS electronics are rigid and bulky making them unusable for flexible electronic applications. While there exist bulk material reduction methods to flex them, such thinned CMOS electronics are fragile and vulnerable to handling for high throughput manufacturing. Here, we show a fusion of a CMOS technology compatible fabrication process for flexible CMOS electronics, with inkjet and conductive cellulose based interconnects, followed by additive manufacturing (i.e. 3D printing based packaging) and finally roll-to-roll printing of packaged decal electronics (thin film transistors based circuit components and sensors) focusing on printed high performance flexible electronic systems. This work provides the most pragmatic route for packaged flexible electronic systems for wide ranging applications.
Claims
1. A method for fabricating a flexible electronic decal, comprising: fabricating a flexible electronic device; fabricating a first part of a flexible package to house the flexible electronic device; embedding the flexible electronic device in the first part of the flexible package; fabricating a second part of the flexible package to house the flexible electronic device; and sealing the flexible electronic device in the flexible package using the second part of the flexible package.
2. The method of claim 1, in which the step of fabricating the second part of the flexible package comprises printing the second part onto the first part of the flexible electronic device using a 3D printer, in which the printing step also seals the flexible electronic device in the flexible package.
3. The method of claim 1, in which the step of sealing the flexible electronic device comprises attaching the second part of the flexible package to the first part of the flexible package to encase the flexible electronic device.
4. The method of claim 1, in which the flexible electronic device comprises at least one of a NAND gate, NOR gate, inverter, and buffer.
5. The method of claim 1, in which the flexible electronic device comprises a flexible sensor.
6. The method of claim 1, in which the flexible electronic device comprises a ring oscillator.
7. The method of claim 1, in which the step of fabricating a first part of the flexible package comprises printing a first layer of a decal using a 3D printer.
8. The method of claim 1, in which the step of embedding the flexible electronic device in the first part of the flexible package comprises placing the flexible electronic device in a cavity in the first part of the flexible package and bonding a plurality of flexible conductive strips to a plurality of contacts of the flexible electronic device.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the plurality of flexible conductive strips are formed using one or more of inkjet printing, conductive cellulose, and sputtering.
10. The method of claim 1, in which the electronic device comprises circuitry and contacts, and in which the step of fabricating the flexible electronic device comprises the fabricating circuitry with semiconductor processing and fabricating contacts 708 with conductor processing.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the semiconductor processing comprises performing a ZnO process and the fabricating of contacts comprises performing an Al process.
12. The method of claim 1, in which at least one step of the fabricating of the flexible electronic decal is performed with roll-to-roll printing.
13. The method of claim 10, wherein the step of fabricating a flexible electronic device comprises: oxidizing a semiconductor wafer to form an oxide layer on a substrate layer; depositing and patterning a metal gate on the oxide layer; depositing a gate dielectric layer on the metal gate; depositing a source and drain on the dielectric layer; depositing and patterning a channel; removing the dielectric layer to reveal the oxide layer; depositing a passivation layer; and removing at least a portion of the substrate layer.
14. The method of claim 10, wherein the contacts are formed by: Oxidizing a substrate to form an oxide layer; forming a dielectric layer on the oxide layer; forming contacts on the dielectric layer; forming a sensing film; and removing a portion of the substrate.
15. A flexible electronic decal, comprising: a flexible electronic device; a flexible package including a first part to house the flexible electronic device, the flexible electronic device being embedded in the first part of the flexible package; the flexible package including a second part to house the flexible electronic device, wherein the flexible electronic device is sealed in the flexible package using the second part of the flexible package.
16. The flexible electronic decal of claim 15, wherein the second part of the flexible package is printed onto the first part of the flexible package using a 3D printer, said printing sealing the flexible electronic device in the flexible package.
17. The flexible electronic decal of claim 15, wherein the flexible electronic device is sealed in the flexible package by attaching the second part of the flexible package to the first part of the flexible package to encase the flexible electronic device.
18. The flexible electronic decal of claim 15, wherein the flexible electronic device comprises at least one of a NAND gate, NOR gate, inverter, and buffer.
19. The flexible electronic decal of claim 15, wherein the flexible electronic device comprises a sensor;
20. The flexible electronic decal of claim 15, wherein the flexible electronic device comprises a ring oscillator.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] For a more complete understanding of the disclosed system and methods, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0034] One example of a flexible IC in a flexible package is shown in
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[0036] A method for manufacturing flexible packages with flexible devices is shown in
[0037] Then, at block 404, a first part 308 of a flexible package 300 is fabricated, wherein the flexible package 300 includes space to house the flexible electronic device 304 manufactured at block 402. Next, the flexible electronic device 304 of block 402 may be embedded in the flexible package 300 of block 406. Then, at block 408, a second part 310 of a flexible package 300 may be fabricated to match the first part 308 of the flexible package of block 404. At block 410, the second part 310 of the flexible package 300 may be sealed against the first part 308 to house the electronic device. In some embodiments, the first part 308 and the second part 310 of the flexible package of blocks 404 and 408 may be fabricated separately and joined together at block 410. In some embodiments, the second part 310 may be fabricated at block 408 directly on the first part of the flexible package 300 from block 404 and the sealing of the flexible electronic device of block 410 occurs when sufficient amounts of the second part of the flexible package have been fabricated on the first part.
[0038] A size of the flexible package and electronic device fabricated using the method of
[0039] One embodiment for manufacturing electronic circuitry for formation of flexible electronic devices is a ZnO process described with reference to
[0040] One embodiment for manufacturing electronic connections for formation of flexible electronic devices is an Al process described with reference to
[0041] Performance of electronic devices manufactured as flexible electronics and packaged in flexible packaging may nearly match performance of conventional rigid silicon-based ICs. Some examples of various electronic devices and measured characteristics of those devices are presented in
[0042] In physiological (e.g., epidermal), environmental, and organic measurements, noise immunity of the circuits is desired to improve measurement accuracy and signal conditioning of the sensing mechanisms.
[0043] Additionally, circuits may use zinc oxide (ZnO)-based transistors with low ON voltages (V.sub.ON) for low power consumption applications, such as those in wearable and implantable electronics where battery life is a challenging concern due to difficulty in power delivery as well as real time sensing.
[0044] Characteristics for other embodiments of electronic devices are shown in
[0045] In some embodiments, inkjet printing may be fused for interconnecting. The inkjet droplet formation was carefully studied to minimize parasitic drops, which is an important consideration for water-based silver nanoparticle inks. Inkjet droplet formation may be performed with a special pulse-form may include 2 bursts (e.g., 65 s each) with short trailing retention pulses and a final retention pulse. The obtained drop size for the described pulse-form was found to be approximately 10 L, but other drop sizes are possible. The nozzle voltage may be set at 50 V in order to allow correct droplet formation and full range control over the piezoelectric actuator. The printing speed was selected as 0.1 mm/sec in order to allow initial surface wetting and adhesion. The printing speed may be selected, in part, based on expected ink drift on the substrate. Once the drop reaches the substrate, it is necessary to allow enough time for the surface energy of the substrate to decrease to stable levels before new drops are printed. The printing distance from the nozzle to the substrate was set as 9 mm in order to allow precise positioning of the drop on the printed surface.
[0046] In current CMOS technology, sequential placing and bonding of ICs is used to produce high-level electronics systems in PCBs. In some embodiments, roll-to-roll printing of silicon and amorphous oxide semiconductor ICs may be used to increase the throughput of manufacturing of electronic systems. By using a low adhesive tape as a temporary host substrate and a manual roll printer as shown in
[0047] Another embodiment of an electronic device may include a sensor, such as a bi-axial strain sensor.
[0048] Humidity sensors, as shown in
[0049] Depending on the application, the operation frequency of the sensor can be selected with some tradeoffs in terms of sensitivity and linearity. In the case of low operation frequencies, the sensors exhibit larger sensitivities, in the range of 2 to 22 fF/% RH, than the sensors operated at high frequencies, which exhibit sensitivities in the range of 1 to 1.7 fF/% RH. However, sensors at high frequencies exhibit a better linearity in the response with respect to the RH value, in this sense, calibration of the sensor is easier for high operation frequencies.
[0050] In free-form electronics, contact and test pad formation is one of the highest concerns in the field due to challenges such as increased contact resistance and contact break between flexible chips and input and output pins.
[0051] Another embodiment of a flexible electronic device may include an inverter.
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[0056] Additional data regarding the flexible electronic devices is shown in
[0057] In embodiments of this disclosure, a combination of CMOS technology-compatible flexing of CMOS electronics, inkjet printing, and conductive cellulose for interconnecting, 3D printing for packaging, and roll-to-roll printing of decal electronic systems are combined to devise a high-throughput manufacturable system embodying batch processing for wide deployment of new age sleek consumer electronics for integration with asymmetric surfaces commonly available in natural species. The decal flexible electronic systems show uncompromising electrical performance, large-scale-integration density, and functionality under extreme mechanical conditions. The fabrication process is simple, affordable, and reliable. Some embodiments of the flexible electronic devices described above include use in future Internet of Everything (IoE) electronics to produce highly complex physically flexible stretchable-reconfigurable consumer electronics systems at reduced costs and production times while preserving the advantages provided by CMOS technology for data processing and storage.
[0058] Some embodiments of manufacturing methods and testing methods are described in further detail below. In one embodiment, circuit fabrication begins with standard silicon (Si) (100) wafers. First, 500 nm thermal silicon dioxide (SiO.sub.2) is grown in order to isolate the ZnO devices from the host wafers. Then, the gate metal is deposited using aluminum sputtering (e.g., at Power: 400 W; time: 600 seconds; pressure: 5 mTorr; pre-sputtering time: 100 seconds; gas: 25 sccm Ar) to achieve a thickness of 200 nm. Then, the gate metal is patterned using standard photolithography and wet etching. Next, the wafers are cleaned using acetone, isopropyl alcohol, and plasma ashing. Then, 40 nm Al.sub.2O.sub.3 are deposited on top of the wafer using atomic layer deposition (ALD) with a deposition rate of 1 per cycle at a temperature of 300 C. Next, the source and drain contacts are patterned using lift-off technique and a deposition of 10 nm/200 nm of chrome/gold (Cr/Au) on top of the wafers using sputtering (e.g., Chrome at: Power: 400 W; time: 80 seconds; pressure: 5 mTorr; pre-sputtering time: 10 seconds; gas: 25 sccm Ar; and Gold at: 400 W; time: 200 seconds; pressure: 5 mTorr; pre-sputtering time: 10 seconds; gas: 25 sccm Ar). Next, 40 nm ZnO are deposited on top of the wafers using ALD at a temperature of 100 C. in order to allow enough oxygen vacancies to be present in the semiconducting film and enhance the performance of the TFTs. Following this, photolithography is performed on the wafers to pattern the channel of the devices and the gate dielectric. Then, the ZnO and AlO.sub.2 films are patterned using diluted hydrofluoric acid (10:1 dilution for 5 seconds) and reactive ion etching (30 seconds in CHF.sub.3 and Ar plasma), respectively. A 40 nm low-temperature (100 C.) Al.sub.2O.sub.3 is deposited on top of the wafers as passivation layer for the fabricated devices. Finally, the passivation layer is removed from the test pads to allow ohmic contact between the aluminum-based interconnects and the pads.
[0059] In one embodiment, sensor fabrication may start with standard Si (100) wafers. First, 300 nm thermal SiO.sub.2 are grown on top of the wafers in order to allow peeling of future films from the host substrate. Then, 10 m polyimide is spin-coated on top of the wafers with a speed of 3000 rpm. Next, the polyimide film is cured at 350 C. for 30 minutes. Afterwards, the sensor metal is deposited on top of the cured films using Al sputtering (e.g., at Power: 400 W; time: 900 seconds; pressure: 5 mTorr; pre-sputtering time: 100 seconds; gas: 25 sccm Ar) to target a thickness of 300 nm. Finally, the polyimide film is removed from the host Si substrate by simply peeling the polymer from the wafers. At this point, the sensors are diced and the remaining Si wafer can be recycled for future fabrication processes.
[0060] In one embodiment, circuit flexing may include, first, dicing the wafers using a semi-automated diamond tip dicing saw to allow processing of single dies. Next, each die is coated with thick photoresist (7 m) to protect the front part of the devices during future back etching steps. Next, the dies are mounted upside down on top of a carrier wafer with thermal oil and are processed using BOSCH process (regenerative reactive ion etching process) at a temperature of 20 C. The flexing process is performed in 4 different etch steps. The first step reduces the thickness of the dies from 500 m to 200 m in a single etch step. Next, the dies are cleaned and coated with fresh PR to prevent permanent PR adhesion of to the dies due to the low processing temperatures. Then, the dies are processed in 3 more etch steps that reduce 55 m each until the required silicon thickness is obtained (<50 m). In between each etch step mechanical and optical profilometer measurements are performed in order to confirm the substrate thickness and prevent over etching of the devices. Finally, the dies are cleaned to remove the PR and are ready to be flexed below 1.5 cm.
[0061] In one embodiment, 3D printed packaging and embedding may include, first, the decals are designed using SolidWorks CAD software. The sensor decals are designed using a meshed structure with a separation between lines of 100 m in order to allow the sensors to have intimate contact with the sensing surfaces. The electronics decals are designed using a solid model in order to prevent environmental factors from damaging the performance of the fabricated devices. Next, the decals are printed on a 3D printer. The electronics and sensor decals are printed in two steps in order to allow embedding of the devices inside the structure of the 3D printed package. In the case of sensors, the first layer consists of 100 m of meshed flexible polymer (PLA) while for electronics the first layer consists of 300 m solid flexible polymer. Afterwards, the first layer is printed the 3D printer is paused and the devices are embedded into the structure by placing a 3M high temperature adhesive tape on the back of the devices. Then, the printed Al foil strips are bonded to the circuit testing pads with silver epoxy in order to allow good electrical contact and low contact resistance. Next, the printing process is resumed and the second layer prints the remaining of the package on top of the embedded devices. Extra protection may be provided during embedding of ZnO circuits to prevent the high temperature polymer (210 C.) from damaging the devices. In some embodiments, the decals were designed with a small cavity (e.g., 100 m height) in the zone where the active part of the devices is located.
[0062] In one embodiment, ring oscillator printing may include, first, printing a green background on a standard A4 photography level glossy paper. Next, the paper is loaded into the inkjet printer and the interconnections are printed using silver nanoparticles based ink. The inkjet printing is done using a 50 m piezoelectric nozzle and the drops are optimized using a pulse developer. The printing pulse consists of 2 main bursts for 65 s with short trailing retention pulses and a final retention pulse. The drop size was found to be 10 pL. for an operation voltage of the nozzle at 50 V. The printing speed was selected as 0.1 mm/sec. The final resolution of the inkjet-printed lines may be 400 m. The ink is cured at 120 C. to reduce the resistance of the inkjet-printed film and allow reliable interconnections between the fabricated electronic decals. Then, the decals are placed upside down on top of a low adhesion tape as a temporary substrate. Then, the decal system is printed on top of the inkjet-printed substrate using a manual roll printer with a speed of 1 mm/sec and a printing force of 50 N in order to allow complete adhesion between the decals and the final host substrate. Finally, the temporary low adhesion tape is removed from the final substrate by simply peeling it at an angle of 45 with respect of the horizontal axis of the substrate.
[0063] In one embodiment, flexible TFTs may be tested using a semiconductor analyzer and a probe station. First, the transfer characteristics of the transistors are measured by sweeping the gate voltage from 10 to 10 V while keeping the drain voltage at 10 V and measuring the drain current (I.sub.d). Then, the output transfer curves are obtained by sweeping the drain voltage from 0 to 10 V for each gate voltage step (5 to 10 V with step size of 5 V).
[0064] In one embodiment, the fabricated devices were tested in three different configurations. First, the devices are tested in bulk (before flexing) using a semiconductor analyzer and a probe station. Then, the devices are tested after BOSCH processing (flexible) and finally after embedding the devices in the 3D printed package. In the case of the inverter, the VTC was obtained by setting the V.sub.dd voltage to 10 V, the bias voltage (V.sub.B) to 10 V, and the input voltage is swept from 10 to 10 V while measuring the output voltage. Then, the inverters are connected to an AC signal generator with a frequency of 1 kHz and a peak-to-peak voltage (V.sub.pp) of 10 V and the output waveform is measured with an oscilloscope. In the case of the NAND and the NOR gates, the output curves are obtained by using a dual output waveform generator with a V.sub.pp of 10 V and two different frequencies (100 Hz and 200 Hz) while measuring the output voltage of the fabricated circuits using an oscilloscope. Performance measurements of the flexible circuits were measured for different bending radii (e.g., 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 5, and 10 cm) before and after embedding in the 3D printed packages.
[0065] In one embodiment, the decals containing the embedded strain sensors are subject to bending tests while measuring the end-to-end resistance of the sensor. The measurements are carried out using a semiconductor analyzer to obtain the resistance with respect of time while the sensor is bent from flat to the different bending radii (0.5, 1, 2.5, and 10 cm). In the case of the humidity sensors, the capacitance of the embedded sensors is first measured in a controlled environment (22 C. and 10% RH) in order to obtain the initial value. The humidity characterization setup contains paths for water vapor, for which the concentration can be accurately regulated by adjusting the flow rate through mass flow controllers (MFCs). The test cell, e.g., the humidity chamber, is connected to an LCR meter and a multimeter through BNC electrical connectors. Paths for vacuum pump and a humidifier (bubbler) are connected to the test cell through controlling valves and MFCs, with flow rates up to 200 mL/min for the bubbler path. A path of dry N.sub.2 is also used for purging the chamber. The vapor is generated through the flow of nitrogen inside the bubbler creating an air-water mixture. The ratio of the partial pressure of water vapor in the mixture to the saturated vapor pressure of water at ambient temperature is the relative humidity (RH %). The water vapor mixture reaches the testing chamber through a mass flow meter. The chamber contains two sensors: a commercial humidity sensor and our fabricated sensor. The commercial sensor is used as a reference to measure the humidity levels inside the chamber. Then, the output voltage of the commercial sensor is measured through the multimeter, while capacitance changes in our fabricated sensor are measured using the connected LCR meter. Then, both the Multimeter and LCR meter are interfaced to software through a GPIB to USB cable. Thus, data acquisition and collection is automated through software. For the humidity testing of the sensor, we perform data acquisition using purging cycles, which means in between every step of changing RH levels, we purge the chamber. In this case, the % RH was varied by changing the carrier flow of the bubbler's inlet and dilution of dry N.sub.2. This purge experiment was repeated three times to prove the reproducibility of the results.
[0066] In one embodiment, fabrication of flexible circuit boards with bonded flexible silicon chips may include, first, fabricating a silicon chip using mask-less lithography (e.g., laser patterning) with a positive photoresist. Next, 10 nm/150 nm Cr/Au are sputtered on top of the wafer and patterned using lift-off technique. Then, 10 nm/150 nm Cr/Au are sputtered on top of O.sub.2 plasma treated polyimide sheet (100 m thick) to enhance adhesion between the sputtered metal and the polyimide surface. Then, the substrate is spin coated with photoresist (PR) and patterned using standard wet Au etching (for 1 min) and wet Cr etching (for 20 sec). Next, the PR is removed using acetone and IPA. Then, the silicon chip is flexed using the same procedure described in the circuit flexing section. Next, the flexible PCB and the flexible chip are mounted on a flip-chip bonding machine (in order to allow correct alignment of the pads in the silicon sample and the contacts in the flexible PCB. Next, Ag-based epoxy is dispensed on top of the contact pads of the circuit board using the automated feature of the bonding tool to prevent circuit shorting. Finally, the chip is flip-chip bonded to the board pads using a dual camera system which allows correct alignment of the bonding pads.
[0067] The schematic flow chart diagrams of
[0068] Although the present disclosure and certain representative advantages have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims. For example, although 3D printing is described throughout the application, manufacturing methods described herein and resulting apparatuses may be produced through any additive manufacturing technique. Moreover, the scope of the present application is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments of the process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, means, methods and steps described in the specification. As one of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate from the present disclosure, processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps, presently existing or later to be developed that perform substantially the same function or achieve substantially the same result as the corresponding embodiments described herein may be utilized. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps.