ULTRASOUND ENDOSCOPE AND METHODS OF MANUFACTURE THEREOF
20190110773 ยท 2019-04-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B8/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Y10T29/49151
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
H05K3/0052
ELECTRICITY
H05K1/189
ELECTRICITY
Y10T29/49165
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
A61B8/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
H05K3/40
ELECTRICITY
A61B8/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
To address limitations of conventional transducers, a phased array transducer is provided with a form factor suitable for packaging into, e.g., an endoscope. A method of manufacture of small packaging transducers is also provided, whereby the overall package size is reduced by electrically connecting signal wires to array electrodes at an angle approximately normal to the array surface, thus largely eliminating the bend radius requirements of conventional printed circuit boards or flex circuits.
Claims
1. A printed circuit board comprising: a substrate comprising a set of electrically conductive paths; a linear array of vias formed within said substrate at an edge of said substrate, the vias intersecting respective electrically conductive paths within said substrate; wherein said vias are filled with an electrically conductive material; and wherein a lateral surface of said substrate is defined at a location that intersects the linear array of vias, such that a plurality of electrical contacts are formed in said lateral surface.
2. The circuit board according to claim 1 wherein the vias are partial vias.
3. The circuit board according to claim 1 wherein the printed circuit board is flexible.
4. A method of forming a plurality of lateral bonding pads on an edge of a printed circuit board, the method comprising: forming a linear array of vias within the printed circuit board, the vias intersecting respective electrically conductive paths that extend longitudinally through the printed circuit board; filling the vias with an electrically conductive material, thereby forming a linear array of filled vias within the printed circuit board; and cutting the printed circuit board transversely through the linear array of filled vias to form the edge of the printed circuit board, such that the linear array of filled vias are cut to form the plurality of lateral bonding pads and to expose the plurality of lateral bonding pads at the edge, wherein the lateral bonding pads are in electrical communication with respective electrically conductive paths within the printed circuit board.
5. The method according to claim 4 wherein the printed circuit board is flexible.
6. The method according to claim 4 wherein the vias are partial vias.
Description
DESCRIPTION
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PARTS LEGEND
[0016] 100 Flex circuit, printed circuit board [0017] 102 Transducer stack, backing [0018] 104 Wire bonding pads [0019] 106 Wire to/from array element [0020] 108 Piezoelectric material [0021] 110 Electrodes [0022] 112 Array, ultrasonic array [0023] 120 Cut [0024] 122 Discarded half of the board edge [0025] 124 Exposed conductive material at the board edge [0026] 126 Via [0027] 128 Signal wire
[0028] Miniaturized high-frequency, ultrasonic phased array endo scopes have been successfully designed and fabricated. An array with an electrical harness (such as flex or PCB or series of conductors) may be set a defined angle relative to a stack. There may be no bend required. The volumetric footprint can be minimized as well as the number of components.
[0029] The advantages of an endoscope of this invention, as well as methods of manufacture of such endoscopes, can be seen by contrast to a conventional endo scope design in
[0030] Note that in the conventional endoscope design of
[0031] We now turn to an embodiment of the endoscope of the present invention; see
[0032] Attaching a printed circuit board approximately perpendicular to an array creates a manufacturing challenge because wire bonds between the array and the printed circuit board must connect to the board edge-on. In particular, flex circuitry is built by attaching together laminar layers, thus bonding pads cannot easily be mounted on the edge of a flex circuit. Moreover, because wire bonds are usually made between two parallel surfaces, it is difficult to make connections to bonding pads on the surface of a printed circuit board in this configuration, whether it is flexible or inflexible. The present invention solves these challenges by providing a novel method of manufacture. In some embodiments, this method enables wire bonding of signal wires to array elements; electrical connection is also possible using conductive epoxy or thin film metal deposition.
[0033] In a wire bonding embodiment, the method of manufacture includes the following steps (see
[0034] See below for an example of endoscopes of the present invention constructed using a method of manufacture of the present invention.
Example
[0035] The array substrate was a 2.4 mm by 2.4 mm piece of PMN-32% PT lapped to 47 um thickness. An array of 64 electrodes was photolithographically defined on the top surface of this substrate with an electrode width of 27 um and an element-to-element pitch of 37 um. Each electrode was fanned out to a bonding pad arranged in two rows on each side of the array (four rows total). A 1.2 um layer of aluminum was sputtered onto the back side of the array to define a ground electrode, and a thick layer of conductive epoxy was attached to it to act as an absorbent acoustic backing layer. This epoxy was removed with a dicing saw in order to avoid making the bonding pads piezoelectrically active. Two 6-layer flex circuit boards were designed to connect to the elements from either side of the array. Each flex circuit had 32 traces terminating at individual copper-filled vias near the end of the board. The flex circuits were cut through the middle of the solid vias using a dicing saw. The two flex circuit boards were epoxied onto opposite sides of the transducer stack such that the diced vias were aligned with the bonding pads fanned out from the array. A jig was then machined to hold the flex+transducer stack upright in front of the wire-bonding tool. 15-micron thick aluminum wire bonds were used to connect the bonding pads on the array to the diced vias within the thickness of the array. The wirebonds were encapsulated with a thick insulating epoxy consisting of a 30% by volume mixture of Alumina powder and Epotek 301 (Epotek) insulating epoxy. A matching layer/lens combination was then epoxied onto the front face of the endoscope. Micro-coaxial cables were directly soldered to the flex circuit at the distal end of the probe.
[0036] Measurements of the impedance of the elements (see