Self-powered piezoelectric energy harvesting microsystem
09716446 · 2017-07-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02N2/22
ELECTRICITY
B81C1/00246
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H10N39/00
ELECTRICITY
H10N30/30
ELECTRICITY
B81C2203/075
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T29/42
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
H02N2/00
ELECTRICITY
B81C1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02N2/18
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A self-powered piezoelectric energy harvesting microsystem device has CMOS integrated circuit elements, contacts and interconnections formed at a proof mass portion of a die region of a semiconductor wafer. Piezoelectric energy harvesting unit components connected to the integrated circuit elements are formed at a thinned beam portion of the die region that connects the proof mass portion for vibration relative to a surrounding anchor frame portion. A battery provided on the proof mass portion connects to the integrated circuit elements. In a cantilever architectural example, the battery is advantageously located at a distal end of the proof mass portion, opposite the joinder with frame portion via the beam portion.
Claims
1. A method of forming a self-powered piezoelectric energy harvesting microsystem, comprising: forming integrated circuit elements including transistor gate structures and source/drain regions using CMOS processing steps at a proof mass first portion of a die region of a semiconductor wafer substrate; depositing and patterning dielectric layers and metal layers at the first portion of the die region to form contacts and interconnections for the integrated circuit elements; depositing and patterning first electrode, piezoelectric material and second electrode layers at a beam second portion of the die region to form piezoelectric energy harvesting unit components connected to the integrated circuit elements; etching fully through the substrate to form a support frame third portion of the die region separated by a gap from a majority of the first portion and joining by the second portion to a minority of the first portion; etching partially through the substrate to thin the second portion; and providing a battery connected to the integrated circuit elements at the first portion of the die region.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the integrated circuit elements are formed at a first region of the first portion, and the battery is provided at a second region laterally spaced from the first region of the first portion.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the third portion is separated by a gap along three sides of the first portion and joined by the second portion along a fourth side of the first portion.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the battery is provided at an end of the first portion laterally distal from the fourth side of the first portion.
5. A self-powered piezoelectric energy harvesting microsystem device, comprising: integrated circuit elements, including transistor gate structures and source/drain regions formed using CMOS processing steps, located at a proof mass portion of a die region of a semiconductor wafer substrate; contacts and interconnections for the integrated circuit elements formed by dielectric layers and metal layers over the proof mass portion of the die region; piezoelectric energy harvesting unit components connected to the integrated circuit elements formed by first electrode, piezoelectric material and second electrode layers at a beam portion of the die region; and a battery provided on the proof mass portion connected to the integrated circuit elements; wherein the die region includes a support frame portion separated by a gap from a majority of the proof mass portion; the beam portion has a thickness less than the proof mass and support frame portions and joins a minority of the proof mass portion to the support frame portion.
6. The device of claim 5, wherein the integrated circuit elements are provided at a first region of the proof mass portion; and the battery is provided at a second region of the proof mass portion laterally spaced from the first region.
7. The device of claim 6, wherein the device has a cantilever structural configuration with the proof mass portion separated by a gap from the support frame portion along three sides of the proof mass portion, and the beam portion joining the proof mass portion to the support frame portion along a fourth side of the proof mass.
8. The device of claim 7, wherein the battery is located adjacent a side of the proof mass portion which is opposite to the fourth side of the proof mass portion.
9. The device of claim 8, wherein the die region is a singulated die region defining a die.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
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(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
(6) A compact self-sustained system is provided that integrates piezoelectric (PZE) energy harvester, battery, power management (PM) and other functional blocks, such as microprocessor (MCU), sensors and their control/readout circuit, wireless telemetry, etc., on the same silicon substrate.
(7)
(8) The beams shown in
(9)
(10) The piezoelectric elements may be formed as segmented units on the beam, such as shown in application Ser. No. 14/323,996 entitled Piecewise Piezoelectric Energy Harvester, filed Jul. 3, 2014, incorporated herein by reference. During operation, strain is induced on the piezoelectric material by relative motion of the proof mass 102 relative to the stand-off structure 106. This relative motion can be achieved, for example, by fixing the stand-off frame 106 as an anchor to package supporting structure and leaving the proof mass 102 free to move, or by fixing the proof mass to the package and leaving the stand-off frame free to move. Alternatively, the positions of both the proof mass 102 and the frame 106 can be fixed, and the piezoelectric elements motivated by self-vibration of the flexible beams 106 between the proof mass 102 and the frame 106. The flexible beam substrate underlying the piezoelectric material can be formed using polymeric materials such as parylene.
(11) Conventional approaches locally separate the PZE components of the energy harvesting unit from the battery, power management and other circuit components, integrating at the board level. In the illustrated implementations, those components are integrated on the proof mass and/or stand-off portions of a same single substrate with the PZE elements, thereby fully utilizing silicon area to provide an efficient system. Among the advantages provided by the disclosed approach are: an integrated system solution, compactness or small form factor, lower parasitic losses, and large-scale wafer-level manufacturing and micropackaging processing capability that can potentially lower cost.
(12)
(13) As shown in
(14) The described implementation provides a compact self-sustained system applicable for human/structure/machine health condition monitoring or biomedical implantable devices. Using MEMS-CMOS process integration, the piezoelectric energy harvester components, battery, power management (PM) and other functional blocks (such as microprocessor, sensors and their control/readout circuit, wireless telemetry, etc.) are provided as a system-on-a-chip (SoC) integrated monolithically on a same silicon substrate. For instance, the integrated circuit (IC)(such as PM, microprocessor, signal processing or/and wireless telemetry) can be built first on the silicon substrate, following which the MEMS (micro-electromechanical system) piezoelectric stack and other sensor/actuators may be fabricated. The process ends up with substrate definition using DRIE or silicon etch. The IC and sensor may be located on the proof mass and/or frame anchor region of energy harvester.
(15) Using post-processing assembly techniques, all or some of the non-integrated circuit components can be integrated on the substrate of the energy harvester. The substrate of the energy harvester can be the movable proof mass or the fixed anchoring region. For instance, the battery or sensor/actuator dies which are difficult for monolithic integration can be integrated on the substrate using wire bonding. The substrate can be recessed or flat. Flip-chip bonding can be used as well in some cases. The sensor/actuator to be powered can be integrated in the system. As a result, the system is a closed system with no need for lead transfer.
(16) As a function mode, the sensor can be the harvester itself to detect vibration source abnormality when its performance degrades.
(17) The harvester architecture can have one beam as the cantilevers or multiple beams. The beam structure can vary from straight beam to serpentine structure.
(18) During operation, the strain induced on the piezoelectric material can be achieved by the proof mass motion with the frame fixed in package or by the frame motion with the mass fixed in position.
(19) Both mass and frame can be fixed in position, and self vibration of the flexible beams between them can be utilized. The flexible beam substrate underlying the piezoelectric material can be formed using dielectrics, metal or polymeric materials such as parylene without silicon.
(20)
(21) Integrated circuit elements are formed on the SOI substrate using CMOS processing steps.
(22) Next, as shown in
(23) Next, as shown in
(24) Next, as shown in
(25) Finally, as illustrated in
(26) Those skilled in the art will appreciate that modifications may be made to the described embodiments, and also that many other embodiments are possible, within the scope of the invention.