Method for integrating a dispensable light transmissible aperture in the cap of a thin light sensor module
12125935 ยท 2024-10-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L31/0203
ELECTRICITY
B29C2043/3615
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C43/183
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01J1/0407
PHYSICS
B29C43/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L31/186
ELECTRICITY
International classification
B29C43/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C43/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C43/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L31/0203
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method of making a light sensor module includes connecting a light sensing circuit to an interconnect on a substrate, and forming a cap. The cap is formed by producing a cap substrate from material opaque to light to have an opening formed therein, placing the cap substrate top-face down, dispensing a light transmissible material into the opening, compressing the light transmissible material using a hot tool to thereby cause the light transmissible material to fully flow into the opening to form at a light transmissible aperture, and placing the cap substrate into a curing environment. A bonding material is dispensed onto the substrate. The cap is picked up and placed onto the substrate positioned such that the light transmissible aperture is aligned with the light sensing circuit, with the bonding material bonding the cap to the substrate to thereby form the light sensor module.
Claims
1. A cap for a light sensor, the cap comprising: a top wall; a sidewall extending perpendicularly from the top wall and extending therearound; a partition sidewall extending from one portion of the sidewall to another portion of the sidewall to thereby define first and second cavities; wherein the first cavity includes a central through-opening that extends through the top wall; a lens installed within the central through-opening, with the lens having a cavity defined in its exterior sidewall to completely encircle a lower portion of the exterior sidewall; the central through-opening being defined by an interior sidewall extending through the top wall, with a ridge extending outwardly from the interior sidewall, the interior sidewall and ridge being integrally formed as a monolithic unit; at least one relief blind-opening that extends into but not through the top wall, wherein the at least one relief blind-opening intersects the central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith; and wherein the ridge extends completely around the interior sidewall so that the lens is mechanically anchored in place by the ridge interfacing with the entirety of the cavity defined in the exterior sidewall of the lens, while an upper portion of the exterior sidewall of the lens extends into the at least one relief blind-opening and in physical contact with portions of the top wall defining the at least one relief blind-opening.
2. The cap of claim 1, wherein the central through-opening is circularly shaped.
3. The cap of claim 2, wherein the at least one relief blind-opening is semi-circularly shaped.
4. The cap of claim 2, wherein the at least one relief blind-opening comprises first and second relief blind-openings, the first relief blind-opening extending into but not through the top wall and intersecting the central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith, the second relief blind-opening extending into but not through the top wall and intersecting the central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith.
5. The cap of claim 1, wherein the at least one relief blind-opening is semi-circularly shaped.
6. The cap of claim 1, wherein the at least one relief blind-opening comprises first and second relief blind-openings, the first relief blind-opening extending into but not through the top wall and intersecting the central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith, the second relief blind-opening extending into but not through the top wall and intersecting the central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith.
7. The cap of claim 1, wherein the lens has a top surface that is convex in shape.
8. The cap of claim 1, wherein the lens has a bottom surface that is concave in shape.
9. A light sensor module comprising: a substrate: a light sensing circuit connected to a first interconnect on the substrate; a light sourcing circuit connected to a second interconnect on the substrate; and a cap affixed to the substrate to cover the light sensing circuit and light sourcing circuit, the cap comprising: a top wall; a sidewall extending perpendicularly from the top wall and extending therearound; a partition sidewall extending from one portion of the sidewall to another portion of the sidewall to thereby define first and second cavities, the first cavity being positioned over the light sensing circuit, the second cavity being positioned over the light sourcing circuit; wherein the first cavity includes a first central through-opening that extends through the top wall; a first lens installed within the first central through-opening, with the first lens having a cavity defined in its exterior sidewall to completely encircle a lower portion of the exterior sidewall; the first central through-opening being defined by a first interior sidewall extending through the top wall, with a first ridge extending outwardly from the first interior sidewall, the first interior sidewall and first ridge being integrally formed as a monolithic unit; at least one first relief blind-opening that extends into but not through the top wall, wherein the at least one first relief blind-opening intersects the first central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith; wherein the first ridge extends completely around the first interior sidewall so that the first lens is mechanically anchored in place by the first ridge interfacing with an entirety of the cavity defined in the exterior sidewall of the first lens, while an upper portion of the exterior sidewall of the first lens extends into the at least one first relief blind-opening and in physical contact with portions of the top wall defining the at least one first relief blind-opening; wherein the second cavity includes a second central through-opening that extends through the top wall; a second lens installed within the second central through-opening, with the second lens having a cavity defined in its exterior sidewall to completely encircle a lower portion of that exterior sidewall; the second central through-opening being defined by a second interior sidewall extending through the top wall, with a second ridge extending outwardly from the second interior sidewall, the second interior sidewall and second ridge being integrally formed as a monolithic unit; at least one second relief blind-opening that extends into but not through the top wall, wherein the at least one second relief blind-opening intersects the second central through-opening so as to be in fluid communication therewith; and wherein the second ridge extends completely around the second interior sidewall so that the second lens is mechanically anchored in place by the second ridge interfacing with the entirety of the cavity defined in the exterior sidewall of the second lens, while an upper portion of the exterior sidewall of the second lens extends into the at least one second relief blind-opening and in physical contact with portions of the top wall defining the at least one second relief blind-opening.
10. The light sensor module of claim 9, wherein the first central through-opening is circularly shaped; and wherein the second central through-opening is circularly shaped.
11. The light sensor module of claim 9, wherein the at least one first relief blind-opening comprises a pair of first relief blind-openings, each extending into but not through the top wall and intersecting a respective one of the first and second central through-openings so as to be in fluid communication therewith.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12) The following disclosure enables a person skilled in the art to make and use the subject matter disclosed herein. The general principles described herein may be applied to embodiments and applications other than those detailed above without departing from the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This disclosure is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed or suggested herein.
(13) Now described is a method for making a cap for a light sensor for use in consumer electronics, the cap having light transmissible apertures formed therein, with light transmissible aperture meaning a physical structure through which light or certain bandwidths of light may pass but through which physical objects may not pass. Initially, multiple such caps are formed, for example using injection molding, to each have openings defined therein. These caps are placed on a tape (e.g., Kapton) such that the tape is attached to the top side of the caps, and the resulting tape is loaded on a reel.
(14) The structure of each cap 22 is now described with reference to
(15) Shown in
(16) For the rest of this description, with initial reference to
(17) Then, a light transmissible material 25 and 27 is dispensed from needles or nozzles of automated dispensing equipment into the openings 24 and 26 defined in the cap structure 22, as shown in
(18) As to the light transmissible material itself, it may be fully transparent to light, or may act as a bandpass filter, allowing only certain frequency bands of light (for example, infrared) to pass. The light transmissible material may in some instances instead act as a low-pass filter or high-pass filter, filtering out light above or below a certain frequency. The light transmissible material may be silicon, epoxy, or acrylic based, as an example.
(19) Thereafter, as shown in
(20) The surface of the hot tools 30 and 32 facing the light transmissible material 25 and 27 may be convex in shape so as to form the bottom surface of the light transmissible material 25 and 27 into a concave shape; conversely, the surface of the hot tools 30 and 32 facing the light transmissible material 25 and 27 may be concave in shape so as to form the bottom surface of the light transmissible material 25 and 27 into a convex shape. As an alternative, the surface of the hot tools 30 and 32 facing the light transmissible materials may be flat in shape so as to form the bottom surface of the light transmissible material to be flat in shape.
(21) Depending upon the temperature of the hot tools 30 and 32, this action may also perform a pre-curing of the light transmissible material 25 and 27. Then, while the cap structure 22 is still attached to the tape 20, the cap structure 22 is placed into a curing environment (e.g., an oven that applies heat, or in the presence of a curing light) in order to fully cure the transmissible material 25 and 27 so that it becomes light transmissible apertures 25a and 27a, as shown in
(22) As an alternative to removing the hot tools 30 and 32 prior to curing, the hot tools 30 and 32 may instead be left in place during the curing, and removed thereafter, prior to removal of the tape 20.
(23) As an alternative to a single layer of light transmissible material 25 and 27 being dispensed then cured, multiple layers may be dispensed and cured, with the process order being the dispensing of one layer, the hot pressing of that layer with a hot tool, and the curing of that layer, before moving on to dispensing the next layer, hot pressing that next layer, curing that next layer, etc.
(24) Shown in
(25) The top surface of the cap 22 is shown in
(26) After removal of the tape 20, the cap 22 is picked up and placed onto a light sensor unit containing passive and/or active components. A sample light sensing unit 39 is shown in
(27) The light sensor module 19 as finished can be seen in
(28) As an alternative to the above steps being performed beginning with the cap 22 being on a length of tape, the cap 22 may instead be placed into a metal carrier, and the above steps them performed. In the instance where a metal carrier is used, the metal carrier may be shaped so as to influence the shape of the light transmissible apertures 25a and 27a formed. For example, the metal carrier may be shaped so as to form the top surface of the light transmissible apertures 25a and 27a into convex or concave shapes, or may be shaped so that the top surface of the light transmissible apertures 25a and 27a is above or below the top surface of the cap 22. As another alternative, the cap 22 can be placed in a live-bug position with the inner surface thereof (bottom surface) being sealed. The light transmissible material 25 and 27 may be dispensed from the top sides of the openings 24 and 26 defined in the cap 22. When a controlled volume of material is dispensed, its surface tension is then cured to a designed shape, such as a designed convex shape, without the of a hot tool.
(29) The advantages of the design and formation process described above are multiple. The formation of the light transmissible apertures 25a and 27a using the formation process described above greatly reduces the thickness of the top wall of the cap 22, for example down to 70 m to 80 m or even below. By reducing the thickness of the top wall of the cap 22 while still maintaining the internal room for the internal passive and/or active components, the thickness of the light sensor module 19 itself can be reduced to below 0.8 mm, allowing for the production of thinner consumer electronic devices that use the light sensor module 19, or freeing up extra room inside the consumer electronic devices that use the light sensor module 19. In addition, by using light transmissible dispensable material as opposed to glass or injection molded material to form the light transmissible apertures 25a and 27a, a wider selection of material is provided. In addition, production costs can be reduced, since installing glass into a cap can be expensive, and since injection molding produces a large amount of waste material not present with the formation process described above. Still further, the use of the formation process described above allows the production of light transmissible apertures and having shapes not easily or cheaply achievable with glass or injection molding.
(30) While the disclosure has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be envisioned that do not depart from the scope of the disclosure as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the disclosure shall be limited only by the attached claims.