United States Patent |
5,711,889
|
Buchsbaum
|
January 27, 1998
|
Method for making dichroic filter array
Abstract
A dichroic filter array is mounted on a wafer by combining microelectronic
and microlithography techniques. A release layer of copper is evaporated
onto a wafer, and the release layer is coated with a photoresist. The
assembly is masked, and the unmasked photoresist, after exposure to
ultraviolet light, is developed to expose a predetermined section of the
release layer. That section of release layer is then overetched to create
an undercut in its walls and to expose the underlying wafer. Dichroic
filter material is then deposited onto the wafer by a cold process, and
the release layer is then removed, leaving only the dichroic filter
material on the wafer. The process is repeated to create an array.
Inventors:
|
Buchsbaum; Philip E. (4973 Turtle Creek Trail, Oldsmar, FL 34677)
|
Appl. No.:
|
529113 |
Filed:
|
September 15, 1995 |
Current U.S. Class: |
216/5; 216/25; 216/39; 216/40 |
Intern'l Class: |
F21P 005/02; G02B 005/28 |
Field of Search: |
216/24,25,39,40,5
204/192.31,192.11
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
3839039 | Oct., 1974 | Suzuki et al. | 96/38.
|
3914464 | Oct., 1975 | Thomasson et al. | 427/54.
|
4182647 | Jan., 1980 | Yoshihara et al. | 430/314.
|
5217832 | Jun., 1993 | Joslin et al. | 430/7.
|
Foreign Patent Documents |
9404951 | Mar., 1994 | WO.
| |
Primary Examiner: Breneman; R. Bruce
Assistant Examiner: Goudreau; George
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Mason, Jr.; Joseph C., Foutch; Louise A.
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A method for manufacturing a dichroic filter array on a wafer,
comprising the steps of:
applying a releasing agent to a clean wafer to form a release layer;
applying a photoresist to said release layer;
masking preselected areas of the photoresist;
developing unmasked areas of the photoresist to create a preselected space
where the release layer is exposed;
over-etching the release layer to form an undercut in said release layer
and to expose a predetermined section of the wafer;
depositing dichroic filter material on said predetermined section of the
wafer;
removing the photoresist to expose the release layer; removing the release
layer; and
repeating the foregoing steps to deposit a predetermined number of dichroic
filters on said wafer in a predetermined array.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said release layer is applied to said
wafer by vacuum deposition until said release layer has a thickness of
about 2-4 thousand angstroms.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein said photoresist is applied to the
release layer until said photoresist has a thickness of about 1.0-1.2
microns, and said photoresist is baked to remove solvents therefrom.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the masking of the photoresist is
performed by contact printing.
5. The method of claim 3, wherein the masking of the photoresist is
performed by proximity printing.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of cleaning the wafer
after said step of over-etching.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the step of cleaning said wafer is
performed by placing it in a vacuum coating chamber and ion bombarding
said wafer with argon.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the dichroic filter material is deposited
onto said wafer by employing electron beam deposition with ion assist
specific for a preselected color bandpass.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the electron beam deposition with ion
assist deposits alternating nonquarterwave high low index stacks of
silicone dioxide and titanium dioxide onto said wafer.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the silicone dioxide is deposited at a
rate of one angstrom per second and the titanium dioxide is deposited at a
rate of three angstroms per second.
11. The method of claim 1, further comprising the steps of:
creating a witness sample when the dichroic filter material is being
deposited to said wafer, inspecting the witness sample on a
spectrophotometer, determining the color coordinates of the witness
sample, and marking a lot traveler with said observed color coordinates.
12. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of removing the
exposed release layer after the photoresist has been removed therefrom.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates, generally, to methods for making filter arrays that
may be coupled to LCD arrays and used in projection television, virtual
reality devices, projection computer media, flat panel displays, VCR view
finders, encoders, and the like.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Color-dyed gels positioned in front of LCDs are currently employed to
produce color images in miniature TV sets, virtual reality devices, VCR
view finders, and numerous other applications.
The gels have a number of shortcomings, however, that limit their utility.
For example, they do not function over a wide temperature range and thus
cannot meet strict specifications of the type that might be called for in
military applications, for example. Moreover, gels absorb relatively high
levels of light and thus require more power to produce a desired
illumination level than would a less absorptive material. Moreover, the
colors are not easily controlled, and the filtering and transmitting of
colors is problematic.
It has been recognized by the art that a dichroic filter array would be
superior to gels in numerous respects when used in conjunction with LCDs,
due to the superior optical qualities of a dichroic filter as compared to
that of gels. The colors of a dichroic filter can be controlled to match
the CIE chart (1976 UCS standard chromaticity diagram), and such filters
enable purer color filtering and transmission due to their higher
extinction ratio for each color as compared to gels. They are temperature
stable from a range of about -40 degrees to 400 degrees F., and they
absorb less than five per cent (5%) of the light transmitted through them.
They exhibit a ninety per cent (90%) transmission at each color band and
thus require less power to achieve greater brightness.
The industry still uses gels, however, because it has been unable to
overcome the manufacturing difficulties encountered in making an array of
dichroic filters on a wafer. A typical array includes a plurality of
discrete filters arranged in rows and columns on the face of the wafer.
The manufacturing of dichroic filter arrays is problematic because it is
difficult to manufacture a thin filter unit having sharply defined edges.
If a filter unit is too thick, it absorbs too much light and thus requires
high power consumption if a good image is to be produced, just like a gel.
If the edges are not sharply defined, it produces low quality, hard to
control color, just like a gel. These limitations exist in the manufacture
of dichroic filter arrays because the art has attempted to make optical
filter arrays employing etching techniques that have never been perfected.
Thus, although in theory a dichroic filter array should perform better
than an array of gels, in practice the thick, poorly defined dichroic
filters perform just as poorly.
Several large corporations, including electronic giants such as Sony, have
spent millions of dollars over several years trying, without success, to
develop arrays of thin, sharply edged dichroic filters on a wafer to
replace the gels. However, the efforts have been futile because they are
based on refinements of the optical arts. Specifically, the efforts relate
to improvements in etching techniques that are designed to reduce the
filter thickness and to sharpen the filter edges.
More particularly, in the etching process, the filter material is deposited
onto a wafer by an evaporation technique known as "hot process," and a
protective film of copper or other suitable material is then deposited
atop the filter. A photoresist layer is then deposited atop the copper;
the result is a sandwich including, from the top, a layer of photoresist,
a layer of protective copper, the filter material, and a wafer. Efforts
are then made to etch away the photoresist and the edges of the filter
material so that a square or rectangular block of filter material is left
on the wafer. The copper layer immediately atop the filter material must
also be etched away, but the contiguous copper must be left in place to
protect the contiguous filter material when the etching is repeated to
form the next block of filter material. Due to the small sizes of the
filters (typically, a filter is about 20 microns in width), and since each
filter must abut a contiguous filter, the task of producing an array of
thin filters with sharply defined edges by conventional etching techniques
is nearly impossible, as proven by the years of expensive yet unsuccessful
research mentioned above.
At the time the present invention was made, it was not obvious to those of
ordinary skill in the art how thin, sharply defined dichroic filters could
be applied to wafers.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present inventive method produces thin, sharply defined optical color
filters on wafers. They produce true, bright colors when illuminated at
relatively low power, and the color quality is not lost when the device
within which they are used is tilted.
This breakthrough in optical filter array production is made possible by
uniting two separate and divergent technologies. The art of
microlithography has long been employed to produce microelectronic
devices, and the optical arts have long been employed to produce dichroic
filter arrays. As mentioned earlier, the optical arts have failed to
produce thin filters having well-defined edges, and the art of
microlithography has been limited to the field of microelectronics.
The present invention merges the divergent arts of microlithography and
microelectronics. A "cold process," well known in the art of
microelectronics, is employed to deposit the filter material, in lieu of
the conventional "hot process." A releasing agent is applied to the wafer
prior to the deposition thereonto of a photoresist, and the release layer
is overetched to create an undercut, thereby weakening the walls formed by
the photoresist and the unetched releasing agent. The filter material is
then deposited onto the wafer in the space created by the etching. The
photoresist and releasing agent are then removed, thereby leaving on the
wafer a thin optical filter having sharply defined edges.
It is therefore clear that a primary object of this invention is to advance
the art of optical filter array manufacture.
A more specific object is to advance said art by providing a method for the
manufacture of thin optical color filters having sharply defined edges.
These and other important objects, features, and advantages of the
invention will become apparent as this description proceeds.
The invention accordingly comprises the features of construction,
combination of elements and arrangement of parts that will be exemplified
in the construction hereinafter set forth, and the scope of the invention
will be indicated in the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention,
reference should be made to the following detailed description, taken in
connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is the first diagram in an animation that depicts the steps of the
novel method;
FIG. 2 is the second diagram in the animation;
FIG. 3 is the third diagram in the animation;
FIG. 4 is the fourth diagram in the animation;
FIG. 5 is the fifth diagram in the animation;
FIG. 6 is the sixth diagram in the animation; it provides a side view, in
sectional form, of the assembly positioned in a vacuum coating chamber
FIG. 7 is the seventh diagram in the animation;
FIG. 8 is the eighth diagram in the animation; it provides a top plan view
of the wafer after the step of FIG. 6;
FIG. 9 is the ninth diagram in the animation;
FIG. 10 is the tenth diagram in the animation;
FIG. 11 is the eleventh diagram in the animation; and
FIG. 12 is a top plan view of the finished wafer.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1, it will there be seen that the first step in an
exemplary embodiment of the invention is denoted as a whole by the
reference numeral 10.
The first step includes cleaning a wafer 12 by conventional means; rouge
and acetone are typically employed in a well known way.
The second step, depicted in FIG. 2, is performed by applying a releasing
agent to wafer 12 by any suitable means to thereby create release layer
14. The preferred releasing agent is copper; chrome and other releasing
agents have less efficacy but may be employed. Release layer 14 is
preferably evaporated onto wafer 12 by vacuum deposition; the preferred
thickness of the release layer is 2-4 thousand angstroms.
A suitable photoresist, such as Shipley PR1818, for example, is then
applied to release layer 14. In FIG. 3, which depicts the third step of
the novel process, the photoresist is denoted by the reference numeral 16;
it is about 1.7-1.9 microns in thickness. Photoresist layer 16 is applied
to the release layer by a conventional spin technique, well known in the
art, and is then baked to remove solvents therefrom in the well-known way.
The assembly is then contact or proximity printed to a mask for one of the
three primary colors and the unmasked part of the photoresist is exposed
to ultraviolet light and developed. The resulting structure is depicted in
FIG. 4 and is denoted 18 as a whole; note the photoresist 16 is removed in
the area where the optical filter will be positioned. Note further that
the edges of the photoresist adjacent the removed part are disposed in a
substantially vertical plane, i.e., the edges form ninety degree corners
as at 15 with the underlying release layer 14.
The release layer is then etched in the manner depicted in FIG. 5. It is
critical to observe undercut 20 that is formed during this step of the
novel method, i.e., the included angle between wafer 12 and release agent
14 is less than ninety degrees as depicted. The undercut is formed by
slightly over-etching the release layer with FeCl, ammonium
peroxydisulfate, or other suitable etchant. Because of their angle, the
resulting walls of the release agent are unstable. In the prior art
etching process described above, maintaining stable, perfectly upright
walls is considered essential.
The sixth step of the novel process is depicted in FIG. 6 and is denoted
22; the assembly of FIG. 5 is cleaned in a vacuum coating chamber 23 by
ion bombardment with argon gas from gun 25; electron gun 27 is used to
evaporate material 24. This is a standard cleaning step, well known in the
art, for removing residual etchant. This step prepares the assembly of
FIG. 5 to receive the filter material.
FIG. 7 depicts the assembly after dichroic filter material 24 has been
deposited upon the wafer. Significantly, said filter material is
evaporated onto the wafer by "cold process." More particularly, material
24 is deposited by alternating non quarterwave high low index stacks of
silicone dioxide and titanium dioxide via electron beam deposition with
ion assist specific for each color bandpass. Quarterwave high low index
stacks are of minimal effectiveness, because they produce a filter that is
unacceptably thick. The silicone dioxide is deposited at a rate of about
three angstroms per second and the titanium oxide is deposited at a rate
of about one angstrom per second. The ion gun should be set at a gas flow
of about 18 sccm (standard cubic centimeters per minute). A current of
about 1.75 amps and a voltage of about 75 volts should be applied to the
anode of the ion gun. The emission rate should be about 2.00 amps. All of
these values can vary by about twenty per cent (20% Empirical studies
might hereafter determine different ideal settings for the ion gun, and
such ideal settings are within the scope of this invention.
It is critical to note the space in FIG. 7 denoted 26; the electron beam
deposition described above produces filter material with vertical, i.e.,
ninety degree walls. Accordingly, there is a gap 26 between such walls and
the undercut walls 20 of the release agent 14.
As the process depicted in FIG. 7 is underway, the optical filter material
is simultaneously deposited on another substrate to create what is known
in the art as a "witness sample." The witness sample is inspected on a
spectrophotometer; it is not patterned with images. The data thereby
collected is interfaced with a suitable software program designed to
interpolate the data to the CIE colormetric scale. A lot traveler is then
marked with the observed color coordinates on the CIE chart.
A suitable stripper, i.e., a photoresist remover such as acetone, is then
employed to produce the assembly 30 depicted in FIG. 9. Preferably, the
wafer is soaked in acetone with agitation; this swells the photoresist 16
and removes it to expose the release layer deposited in the second step of
the novel method.
Release layer 14 is then removed in a conventional manner with a suitable
etchant such as ferric chloride (FeCl), i.e., in the same manner as
performed in the fifth step of the novel method. The resulting structure
of one item of filter material is depicted in FIG. 10 as at 32, and in
FIG. 8 as 24. It should be understood that a plurality of filter material
members 24, all having a common color, are manufactured simultaneously by
following the steps disclosed herein. As FIG. 8, after all of the filter
material members 24 of a first color have been deposited onto wafer 12, in
spaced apart relation to one another as indicated in FIG. 8, the spaces
are then filled by repeating the novel process a second time with filter
material 24 of a second color, and by then repeating the novel process a
third time with a third color. Thus, FIG. 12 depicts a finished wafer.
Note the sharply defined edges of the optical filter 24. Just as
importantly, filter material 24 has a thickness of approximately 1.4
microns, i.e., about one-fourth as thick as conventionally manufactured
filters. It is virtually impossible to produce a filter having such
sharply defined edges when following the steps of the conventional etching
method described earlier.
The filter unit depicted in FIG. 10 will have a blue, red, or green color
and when the novel process is finished, will be flanked by similar units
of filters having one of said primary colors. FIG. 11 depicts a three
color matrix 34. Significantly, it is a simple matter to construct
additional dichroic filter units 24 contiguous to the unit first
manufactured by following the steps disclosed above. Each unit will have
sharply defined edges and uniform thickness. The size of each dichroic
filter, the spacing between the filters, the overall design of the array,
and other parameters may be easily changed to meet customer
specifications. FIG. 12 depicts a finished wafer as aforesaid.
The implications of this breakthrough technology are significant, and it
has numerous applications. For example, current technology limits to a
single frequency the frequency at which encoders may be switched on and
off. A dichroic filter array made in accordance with this disclosure,
however, would enable multiple frequency on/off switching. Such
application could have implications as far reaching as the flat screen
applications for this invention.
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, and those made
apparent from the foregoing description, are efficiently attained. Since
certain changes may be made in the foregoing construction without
departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matters
contained in the foregoing construction or shown in the accompanying
drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover
all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein
described, and all statements of the scope of the invention which, as a
matter of language, might be said to fall therebetween.
* * * * *