JOURNAL ARTICLE

Fabrication of anodically bonded capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducers with vacuum-sealed cavities

Abstract

Capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducers (CMUTs) have demonstrated great promise for next-generation ultrasound technology. Wafer-bonding technology particularly simplifies the fabrication of CMUTs by eliminating the requirement for a sacrificial layer and increases control over device parameters. Anodic bonding has many advantages over other bonding methods such as low temperature compatibility, high bond strength, high tolerance to particle contamination and surface roughness, and cost savings. Furthermore, the glass substrates lower the parasitic capacitance and improve reliability. The major drawback is the trapped gas inside the cavities, which occurs during bonding. Earlier CMUT fabrication efforts using anodic bonding failed to demonstrate a vacuum-sealed cavity. In this study, we developed a fabrication scheme to overcome this issue and demonstrated vacuum-backed CMUTs using anodic bonding. This new approach also simplifies the overall fabrication process for CMUTs. We demonstrated a CMUT fabrication process with three lithography steps. A vibrating plate is formed by bonding the device layer of a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer on top of submicron cavities defined on a borosilicate glass wafer. The cavities and the bottom electrodes are created on the borosilicate glass wafer with a single lithography step. The recessed bottom metal layer over the glass surface allows bonding the plate directly on glass posts and therefore helps reduce the parasitic capacitance and improve the breakdown reliability. A surface roughness of 0.8 nm is achieved in the cavity using wet chemical etching. A 200-nm PECVD silicon nitride layer deposited on the 2 µm device layer of the SOI wafer prior to bonding serves as the insulation layer to prevent shorting after pull-in. The trapped gas inside the cavities is evacuated after anodic bonding by reactive ion etching. The 120-nm cavities are then sealed with PECVD silicon nitride. We measured the atmospheric deflection of the plates after fabrication, which proves the vacuum inside the cavities. Impedance and hydrophone measurements were performed both in conventional (2.8 MHz) and collapse (7.2 MHz) modes. Bonding on posts with widths as small as 2 µm was successfully demonstrated using anodic bonding which is difficult to achieve with other wafer bonding methods.

Keywords:
Anodic bonding Materials science Capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducers Fabrication Wafer bonding Wafer Silicon on insulator Optoelectronics Borosilicate glass Surface roughness Ultrasonic sensor Electropolishing Lithography Silicon Composite material Electrode Piezoelectricity

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Citation History

Topics

Ultrasound Imaging and Elastography
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging
Ultrasonics and Acoustic Wave Propagation
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanics of Materials
Innovative Energy Harvesting Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering

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