专利摘要:
The invention relates to a method for producing a pixel array of a thermal sensor, adapted for passive addressing. The matrix of pixels comprises: a layer comprising a first series of electrically conductive strips forming macroelectrodes for collecting charges; a layer comprising a pyroelectric material; and a layer comprising a second series of electrically conductive strips forming heating strips. The method according to the invention comprises a step of carrying one another over a first and second elementary stacks (302A, 302B), the first elementary stack (302A) comprising the first series of strips, and the second stack elementary (302B) comprising the second series of bands. The invention makes it possible to relax the manufacturing constraints of the series of strips.
公开号:FR3073651A1
申请号:FR1760652
申请日:2017-11-13
公开日:2019-05-17
发明作者:Amelie REVAUX;Joel Yann FOURRE;Jean-Francois Mainguet
申请人:Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique CEA;Idemia Identity and Security France SAS;Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives CEA;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

METHOD FOR PRODUCING A STACK OF LAYERS FOR A SENSOR
MATERIAL THERMAL
DESCRIPTION
TECHNICAL AREA
The invention relates to a method for producing a pixel matrix of a thermal sensor of the pyroelectric sensor type, suitable for implementing passive pixel addressing.
Such a sensor forms, for example, a papillary fingerprint sensor, in particular a fingerprint sensor.
PRIOR STATE OF THE ART
A pyroelectric sensor exploits the pyroelectricity properties of a material, that is to say its ability to generate electrical charges in response to a change in temperature.
Such a sensor comprises a matrix of pyroelectric capacities, each forming a transducer for translating a temporal variation of temperature into an electrical signal.
Each pyroelectric capacitor has a portion made of pyroelectric material, disposed between a lower electrode and an upper electrode. One of the electrodes is set to a constant potential, and forms a reference electrode. The other electrode, called charge collection electrode, collects pyroelectric charges generated by the pyroelectric material in response to a change in temperature. The charge collection electrode is connected to a read circuit, to measure the amount of charge collected.
In operation, an object is pressed against a contact surface of the sensor.
Detection can simply exploit a temperature difference between this object and said contact surface. The sensor then performs passive type detection.
In the case of a fingerprint detection, the finger is pressed against the contact surface.
At the crests of the imprint, the finger is in direct physical contact with the sensor. A thermal transfer between the skin and the contact surface of the sensor takes place by conduction, which leads to a first temporal variation of temperature.
At the level of the footprint valleys, the finger is not in direct physical contact with the sensor. A heat transfer between the skin and the contact surface of the sensor takes place through the air. Air has thermal insulating properties, which leads to a second, less significant temperature variation over time.
The difference between these two temporal variations of temperature results in a difference between the signals measured by the pyroelectric capacities, according to whether they are under a valley or under a crest of the imprint. The image of the imprint then presents a contrast which depends on this difference.
After a few seconds, the temperature of the finger and the temperature of the contact surface become homogenized, and it is no longer possible to obtain a satisfactory contrast.
To overcome this drawback, heating means are added under the contact surface, to dissipate a certain amount of heat in each pixel of the sensor. The temperature variation measured in each pixel of the sensor then relates to the extent to which this quantity of heat is removed from the pixel. This makes it possible to improve and maintain over time, the contrast of an image acquired using said sensor. The sensor then performs an active type detection.
In the case of a fingerprint detection, the temperature variation is significant at the level of the fingerprint valleys, where the heat is only transferred to the finger through the air, and lower at the level of the imprint ridges, where heat is efficiently transferred to the finger, by conduction.
In a matrix thermal sensor of pyroelectric type, the addition of the heating means can be used to achieve passive addressing of the pixels of the sensor.
Each pixel has a pyroelectric capacity, and a heating element.
The pixels are arranged in rows and columns. The terms “row” and “column” can be exchanged, which would correspond to a simple 90 ° rotation of the sensor.
The heating elements of the same line of pixels are electrically connected together to form a heating strip. Each heating strip is configured so that it can be activated independently of the other heating strips. In other words, the pixel heating elements of the same line of pixels are capable of heating the portions of pyroelectric material of the pixels of said line, independently of the pixel heating elements of the other lines.
In addition, the charge collection electrodes of the same column of pixels are electrically connected together to form a charge collection macro-electrode. Each charge collection macro-electrode is formed by an electrically conductive strip, in contact with the pyroelectric material portions of the pixels of said pixel column, and distinct from the electrically conductive strips forming the charge collection macro-electrodes of the other columns pixels.
Each charge collection macro-electrode makes it possible to measure the sum of the pyroelectric charges generated in the same column of pixels.
If only one of the heating bands is activated at each instant, in each column of pixels there is only one pixel which generates pyroelectric charges. The pyroelectric charges collected by the charge collection macro-electrode then relate to this single pixel.
Passive addressing of the pixels of the sensor is thus achieved, without a selection transistor within the pixel matrix.
Such a sensor is described in French patent application No. 16 57391, filed on July 27, 2016.
FIGS. 1A and 1B schematically represent a first embodiment of a stack of layers, 102, forming the pixel matrix of such a sensor.
For clarity, the axes (Ox), (Oy) and / or (Oz) of an orthonormal reference have been shown in the figures.
In Figure IA, the stack 102 is shown in a sectional view, in a plane parallel to the plane (xOz).
In FIG. 1B, the stack 102 is shown in a top view, in a plane parallel to the plane (xOy).
The stack 102 extends on a mechanical support 101.
The support 101 is delimited vertically by two planes parallel to each other, parallel to the plane (xOy). The plane of the support designates a plane parallel to an upper face thereof, parallel to the plane (xOy).
The stack 102 comprises, superimposed one above the other, in this order, and along an axis (Oz) orthogonal to the plane of the support:
a layer 111 of charge collection electrodes, comprising a first series of electrically conductive strips 11, parallel to each other, forming the charge collection macro-electrodes;
a layer 112 comprising a pyroelectric material;
a heating layer 113, comprising a second series of electrically conductive strips 13, parallel to each other, forming the heating strips to provide Joule heating; and an optional protective layer 114.
In the example shown in Figures IA and IB, the heating layer 113 also comprises a third series of bands 15, electrically conductive, parallel to the heating bands 13, and forming macro-reference electrodes common to all the pixels of the same line of pixels.
The heating strips 13 extend here along the axis (Ox).
The charge collection macro-electrodes 11 extend along the axis (Oy).
Each pixel 10 extends, in the stack 102, in a region located at the intersection between a charge collection macro-electrode 11, and a pair of a reference macro-electrode 15 and a heating strip 13 neighbors.
The heating strips 13 each have a first end, adapted to be connected to a non-zero electrical potential, and a second end, preferably connected to ground. Here, the second ends of all the heating strips are connected to each other by means of a conductive portion 23.
Likewise, the reference macro-electrodes 15 each have a first end, adapted to be connected to a fixed electrical potential, and a second end, preferably connected to ground.
In FIG. 1C, a variant is shown, in which the functions of reference electrode and of heating are provided by the same electrically conductive strip, 13 ′. The electrically conductive strips 13 ′ each have a first end, adapted to be connected to a fixed and non-zero electrical potential, and a second end, preferably connected to ground.
FIG. 2 illustrates a second embodiment of a stack of layers, 202, forming the pixel matrix of such a sensor.
The stack 202 comprises, superimposed one above the other, in this order, and along an axis (Oz) orthogonal to the plane of the support:
a layer 211 of charge collection electrodes, comprising the charge collection macroelectrodes as described above;
a layer 212 comprising a pyroelectric material;
an electrically conductive electromagnetic shielding layer 216; a layer 217 of electrical insulation, of dielectric material;
a heating layer 213, comprising the heating strips as described above; and a protective layer 214, optional.
The electromagnetic shielding layer 216 is adapted to be connected to a constant potential, in particular to ground. It offers protection against electrostatic parasites, in particular around 50 Hz, brought for example by contact with the skin when the finger touches the contact surface of the sensor. It also forms a reference electrode common to all the pixels of the pixel matrix.
The layer 216 extends in one piece and preferably without opening, over the entire extent of the pixel matrix, in a plane (xOy). It also forms a common reference electrode for all the pixels in the pixel matrix.
The objective of the invention is to propose an advantageous method for producing a pixel matrix for a passive addressing thermal sensor of the pyroelectric sensor type, as described with reference to FIGS. 1A to 1C, and 2.
STATEMENT OF THE INVENTION
This objective is achieved with a method of producing a pixel matrix for a thermal sensor, each pixel comprising a pyroelectric capacitor formed by a portion comprising a pyroelectric material disposed between a charge collection electrode and a reference electrode, and a heating element, the pixel heating elements of the same line of pixels being formed together in one piece in the same heating strip, the charge collection electrodes of the pixels of the same column of pixels being formed together in one piece in a single charge collection macro-electrode, and the pixel matrix consisting of a stack of layers comprising:
a layer of charge collection electrodes, comprising a first series of electrically conductive strips parallel to each other, forming the charge collection macro-electrodes;
a layer comprising a pyroelectric material comprising the portions of pyroelectric material of each of the pixels; and a heating layer, comprising a second series of electrically conductive strips parallel to each other, forming the heating strips.
According to the invention, the method comprises a step of transferring to each other a first and second elementary stacks, to form said stack of layers. The first elementary stack comprises the layer of charge collecting electrodes, and the second elementary stack comprises the heating layer. In other words, the first elementary stack is transferred to the second, or vice versa, to form the pixel matrix of a pyroelectric thermal sensor with passive addressing.
In practice, each pixel comprises a pyroelectric capacity, that is to say a portion made of pyroelectric material, a charge collection electrode, and a reference electrode. If necessary, the same element forms both the reference electrode and the pixel heating element (see figure IC above).
In the stack, the layer comprising a pyroelectric material is located between the charge collection electrode layer, and the heating layer. The layer comprising a pyroelectric material is not necessarily in direct physical contact with the layer of charge collection electrodes and / or with the heating layer. One or more additional layers may be interposed between the layer comprising a pyroelectric material and the layer of charge collecting electrodes, and / or between the layer comprising a pyroelectric material and the heating layer.
Each pixel of the pixel matrix is therefore located, in the stack of layers, in a region at the intersection between a strip of the first series of strips and a strip of the second series of strips. For this, the bands of the first and second series of bands are not parallel to each other.
Throughout the text, the term "strip" is not limited to a thin shape, of great length and of constant width. This term can designate any thin shape, longer than wide. The width is not necessarily constant along the axis of elongation of the strip. For example, a heating strip may consist of a succession of narrow and wide portions, where narrow portions are each centered on one pixel of the sensor and large portions are each arranged between two neighboring pixels.
It is understood that the portions comprising a pyroelectric material, each associated with one of the pixels of the pixel matrix, extend into the layer comprising a pyroelectric material.
For the reasons explained above, the pixel matrix is suitable for implementing passive addressing.
An obvious solution for making the stack of layers according to the invention consists in depositing successively, one above the other, each of the layers making up the stack.
It is proposed here to use rather two separate stacks, carried over one another to form the complete stack, that is to say the pixel array of the sensor.
Thus, the heating strips are not produced above the layer comprising a pyroelectric material.
This eliminates the need for compatibility between steps for producing the heating strips and the pyroelectric material.
For example, when the production of the heating strips involves the use of one or more solvent (s), it is no longer necessary for these solvents to be compatible with the pyroelectric material.
Similarly, when the heating strips are produced by depositing a metallic ink, it is no longer necessary for this ink to be compatible with the pyroelectric material.
The constraints on the production of the heating strips are therefore relaxed. In other words, the invention gives access to a wider range of materials and methods for producing the heating strips. This allows, in particular, to produce the heating strips at a finer distribution pitch than in the prior art. It is thus possible to obtain a sensor having an improved resolution.
In addition, the invention allows the heating strips to be produced on a surface having less roughness, in comparison with the upper surface of a layer of pyroelectric material. It is thus easier, and / or more precise, to control the geometry of the heating bands, as well as their distribution pitch.
For example, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and its derivatives (in particular the copolymer PVDF-TrFE, TrFE for Tri-fluoro-ethylene), commonly used to produce the layer comprising a pyroelectric material, have a high surface roughness (several hundred nanometers). It is therefore easy to find supports of less roughness, on which the heating strips are produced.
It is also noted that in the method according to the invention, the heating strips are not produced above the charge collecting macro-electrodes. This eliminates possible flatness defects on the surface receiving the heating strips, linked to the presence of the charge collecting macro-electrodes below.
When the charge collection electrodes are separate from each other, the pixel matrix comprises transistors for driving these electrodes, distributed in rows and columns. Each heating strip must then extend exactly above or near a control line of a line of transistors.
Here, the charge collection electrodes of the same column of pixels are formed together in one piece, in a charge collection macro-electrode. This eliminates the driving transistors distributed in rows and columns in the pixel matrix. This makes it possible to remove the constraint relating to the precise alignment of a heating strip with respect to a control line of a line of transistors. Consequently, in the method according to the invention, the transfer step does not require a high accuracy of relative orientation of the two elementary stacks. In particular, it is not necessary for the heating bands to be oriented exactly at 90 ° relative to the charge collecting macro-electrodes.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the first and second elementary stacks are configured so that, after the transfer step, the stack of layers comprises, superimposed one above the other in this order:
the charge collection electrode layer;
the layer comprising a pyroelectric material;
an electrically conductive electromagnetic shielding layer;
an electrical insulation layer; and the heating layer.
The electromagnetic shielding layer then further forms the reference electrodes of the pixels of the pixel matrix.
According to a first variant of this advantageous embodiment:
at least one of the first and second elementary stacks comprises an outer layer comprising an electrically insulating adhesive; and in the stack of layers, the glue is between the heating layer and the electromagnetic shielding layer, and forms the electrical insulation layer.
According to a second variant of this advantageous embodiment:
at least one of the first and second elementary stacks comprises an outer layer comprising an electrically conductive adhesive; and in the stack of layers, the adhesive is between the electrical insulation layer and the layer comprising a pyroelectric material, and forms the electromagnetic shielding layer.
Preferably, at least one of the first and second elementary stacks comprises an outer layer comprising an adhesive, and the transfer step is followed by a step of crosslinking the adhesive in order to secure the first and second stacks together.
The transfer step is advantageously carried out by folding a single substrate, the first elementary stack extending over a first region of the single substrate, and the second elementary stack extending over a second region of the single substrate .
An integrated circuit and electrically conductive lines may be located on the single substrate, the electrically conductive lines each extending between the integrated circuit and one end of a strip of the first series of strips, respectively of the second series of strips. .
The shape of the single substrate is advantageously adapted so that at the end of the folding, at least one end of each strip of the first series of strips is not covered by the second region of the single substrate, and at least one end of each strip of the second series of strips is not covered by the first region of the single substrate.
As a variant, the transfer step is carried out by transfer one above the other of a first substrate and of a second substrate distinct from the first substrate, the first elementary stack extending over the first substrate, and the second elementary stack extending over the second substrate.
The second substrate can be kept at the end of the transfer step, and form a protective layer in the thermal sensor.
Alternatively, the second substrate can be removed after the transfer step.
The method according to the invention may include a step of producing the first series of strips and the second series of strips, by depositing a metallic ink.
The invention also relates to a system suitable for implementing the method by folding a single substrate, the system comprising the first elementary stack, the second elementary stack and the single substrate, the first elementary stack extending over a first region of the single substrate, and the second elementary stack extending over a second region of the single substrate.
An integrated circuit and electrically conductive lines may be located on the single substrate, the electrically conductive lines each extending between the integrated circuit and one end of a strip of the first series of strips, respectively of the second series of strips. .
The shape of the single substrate is advantageously adapted so that at the end of the folding, at least one end of each strip of the first series of strips is not covered by the second region of the single substrate, and at least one end of each strip of the second series of strips is not covered by the first region of the single substrate.
The invention finally relates to a system suitable for implementing the method by transferring one above the other of a first substrate and a second substrate distinct from the first substrate, the system comprising the first elementary stack. , the second elementary stack, a first substrate, and a second substrate distinct from the first substrate, the first elementary stack extending over the first substrate, and the second elementary stack extending over the second substrate.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention will be better understood on reading the description of exemplary embodiments given purely by way of non-limiting indication, with reference to the appended drawings in which:
- Figures IA to IC schematically illustrate two variants of a first embodiment of a pixel matrix which can be produced by the method according to the invention;
- Figure 2A schematically illustrates a second embodiment of a pixel matrix which can be produced by the method according to the invention;
- Figures 3A to 3C, and 4 schematically illustrate a first embodiment of a method according to the invention;
- Figures 5 and 6 illustrate different variants of this first embodiment;
- Figures 7A and 7B schematically illustrate a second embodiment of a method according to the invention; and
- Figure 8 illustrates a variant of this second embodiment.
DETAILED PRESENTATION OF PARTICULAR EMBODIMENTS
In the following, but in a nonlimiting manner, examples of methods for producing a stack of the type described with reference to FIG. 2 are described, this stack forming a matrix of pixels.
Methods of producing the first and second elementary stacks 302A, 302B are described below. However, the method according to the invention does not necessarily include the implementation of these steps.
The method according to the invention uses a first elementary stack, 302A (FIG. 3A), and a second elementary stack, 302B (FIG. 3B).
The first elementary stack, 302A, here extends over a first substrate, 301A.
The first substrate 301A is for example made of glass, silicon, a plastic such as poly (ethylene terephthalate) (PET), poly (ethylene naphthalate) (PEN), polyimide (Kapton film), etc. .
It is for example a flexible substrate.
The first elementary stack 302A comprises a series of layers, superposed one above the other along the axis (Oz), that is to say along an axis orthogonal to the plane of the first substrate 301A.
The first elementary stack 302A here comprises, superimposed above the first substrate 301A:
a layer 311 of charge collection electrodes, as described in the introduction, comprising metal strips parallel to each other forming macro charge collection electrodes;
a layer 312 comprising a pyroelectric material, for example PVDF or ΙΆΙΝ (aluminum nitride), or PZT (Lead Titano-Zirconate), etc. ;
an electrically conductive electromagnetic shielding layer 316, also forming a reference electrode common to all the pixels of the pixel matrix; and a layer of adhesive 317, preferably electrically non-conductive.
The charge collection macro-electrodes are distributed in a pitch less than or equal to 150 μm, preferably less than or equal to 100 μm, and more preferably still in a pitch less than or equal to 51 μm.
This step is, for example, around 80 μm (ie a resolution of 320 dpi). For example, the width (according to (Ox)) of a macro-electrode is 40 μm, and the width of the gap between two neighboring macro-electrodes is 40 μm.
As a variant, this step is 50.8 μm (ie a resolution of 500 dpi). For example, the width of a macro-electrode is 25.4 µm, and the width of the gap between two neighboring macro-electrodes is 25.4 µm.
Before producing the charge collection macro-electrodes, the first substrate 301A undergoes a cleaning step (ethanol or acetone or plasma, depending on the substrate).
The macro-electrodes are then produced on the first substrate 301.
Different techniques for producing macro-electrodes can be implemented:
lithography (lithography processes in the field of printed circuits), deposition of an electrically conductive full layer then laser ablation (for example a vacuum deposition of the physical vapor deposition or chemical vapor deposition type, or a sputtering deposition , etc.), screen printing type printing (with the use of a mask or stencil), gravure printing type (technique in which an ink is transferred directly from an engraved cylinder to a final surface, more particularly adapted to low steps distribution of metal strips), "offset engraving" type printing (technique in which an ink is transferred from an engraved cylinder to a final surface, by means of at least one intermediate cylinder, more particularly adapted to low no distribution of metal strips), etc.
inkjet printing, etc.
When the macro-electrodes are produced by printing, an electrically conductive ink, for example a metallic ink, is deposited, dried and then annealed. Annealing is carried out for example in an oven, at a temperature preferably between 20 ° C and 200 ° C depending on the nature of the substrate and the ink.
The macro-electrodes are, for example, bands of gold 30 nm thick, deposited by sputtering on a first substrate 301A constituted by a PEN sheet of 125 μm thick.
As a variant, the macro-electrodes are strips of silver 1.5 μm thick, printed by offset etching on a first substrate 301A consisting of a PEN sheet of 125 μm thick.
The layer 312 comprising a pyroelectric material has for example a thickness of between 2 μm and 4 μm.
It is deposited for example by screen printing or by centrifugal coating (spincoating, in English).
The pyroelectric material can be dispersed or dissolved in an ink, then deposited by a printing process. After being deposited, the ink is dried and then annealed, for example in an oven.
For example, an ink based on a PVDF-TrFE copolymer is used. The relative amount of TrFE (trifluoroethylene) compared to the PVDF in the ink affects the pyroelectric coefficient and the Curie temperature of the ink (temperature above which a material loses its pyroelectric properties). Depending on the type of substrate used (and therefore the accessible annealing temperatures), different formulations and ratios of PVDF-TrFE can be used.
Alternatively, an ink based on PZT or BaTiCh (barium titanate) is used.
The invention is not however limited to a layer 312 produced from an ink.
The electromagnetic shielding layer 316 consists of an electrically conductive material, and preferably a poor thermal conductor. The poor thermal conduction makes it possible to limit the heat transfers in the layer 316, from one pixel to another of the pixel matrix. The layer 316 has a reduced thickness, promoting heat transfers in the thickness direction. It consists for example of a layer of 0.5 μm thick in PEDOT: PSS (mixture of poly (3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) and sodium polystyrene sulfonate (PSS)). If the material of layer 316 is more electrically conductive, layer 316 may be thinner. If the material of layer 316 is a better thermal conductor, layer 316 must be thinner.
The adhesive layer 317 is electrically insulating.
It is for example an epoxy type adhesive (epoxy polymer).
Layer 317 also forms the electrical insulation layer as described in the introduction, which makes it possible to limit the thickness of the pixel matrix, and thus to achieve greater image resolutions (see below).
The thickness of layer 317 is advantageously less than 5 μm, for example 1 μm.
The second elementary stack, 302B, here extends on a second substrate, 301B.
The second substrate 301B can be identical to the first substrate 301A. As a variant, it may have a thickness less than, less than or equal to 30 μm, for example 15 μm.
The second elementary stack 302B consists solely of the heating layer 313, as described in the introduction.
The heating strips of layer 313 are preferably distributed according to a distribution pitch identical to the distribution pitch of the charge collection macro-electrodes.
In any event, the heating strips of layer 313 are distributed in a pitch less than or equal to 150 μm, preferably less than or equal to 100 μm, and more preferably still in a pitch less than or equal to 51 μm.
This step is, for example, approximately 80 μm. For example, the width (according to (Oy)) of a heating strip is 40 μm, and the width of the gap between two neighboring heating strips is 40 μm.
Alternatively, this step is 50.8 µm. For example, the width of a heating strip is 25.4 µm, and the width of the gap between two adjacent heating strips is 25.4 µm.
In any event, this step is preferably identical to the distribution step of the charge collection macro-electrodes (to have square pixels).
Before making the heating strips on the second substrate 301B, the latter undergoes a cleaning step (ethanol or acetone or plasma, depending on the substrate).
The heating strips of layer 313 are then produced by methods similar to those which can be used to produce the charge collecting macro-electrodes.
If necessary, the heating bands and the charge collection macro-electrodes can be produced jointly, in the same manufacturing step.
The heating bands are for example gold bands, 30 nm thick (according to (Oz)), deposited by sputtering on a second substrate 301B consisting of a PEN sheet of 125 pm thick.
As a variant, the heating strips are silver strips 1.5 μm thick, printed by offset etching on a second substrate 301B consisting of a PEN sheet of 125 μm thick.
The charge collection macro-electrodes and the heating strips can have the same characteristics (material and dimensions), which means that they can be produced jointly. However, the charge collection macro-electrodes in practice support smaller currents than the heating bands, and may, as a variant, have smaller dimensions, or be made of materials which conduct electricity less well.
In FIG. 3C, the transfer step has been illustrated, defining the method according to the invention.
During this step, the assembly consisting of the second elementary stack 302B and the second substrate 302B is turned over (180 ° rotation, around (Ox) or (Oy)), then deposited on the adhesive layer 317 of the first stack 302A.
The transfer step is preferably followed by a step of crosslinking the adhesive, in order to secure the first stack 302A and the second stack 302B together. The crosslinking of the adhesive can be carried out under the action of heat, or by irradiation with a beam at a predetermined wavelength (for example infrared or ultraviolet), or by irradiation with an electron beam.
During the transfer step, the lateral and angular alignment of the second elementary stack 302B relative to the first elementary stack 302A is not crucial. This freedom of positioning is directly linked to the passive pixel addressing solution, without transistors between the pixels of the pixel matrix.
FIG. 4 schematically illustrates, from a top view, the total stack obtained at the end of the transfer step. Here, the charge collection macro-electrodes, 31, are oriented at 90 ° relative to the heating strips 33 '.
In the example illustrated in FIG. 4, the dimensions of the first substrate 301A and of the second substrate 302B are adapted so that, after the transfer step:
- Each macro-electrode 31 has one end not covered by the second substrate 301B; and
- Each heating strip 33 'has one end not covered by the first substrate 301A.
This configuration facilitates access to the heating strips and to the macro-electrodes, for connection to heating control circuits, respectively to reading circuits.
The heating reading and control circuits are for example produced on a substrate separate from the first and second substrates 301A, 301B. The connection with the macro-electrodes 31, respectively the heating strips 33 ', is ensured by flexible connectors (flex).
As a variant, the heating reading and control circuits are produced on one of the substrates 301A or 301B, and a flexible connector extends between the two substrates.
According to another variant, each of the substrates receives part of the circuits for reading and controlling the heating, and a flexible connector extends between the two substrates.
The idea underlying the invention lies in the carry-over step described above.
Optionally, the method according to the invention can comprise the steps of producing the first and second elementary stacks 302A, 302B, on the first, respectively the second substrates 301A, 301B.
The method according to the invention may also include a step of polarizing the pyroelectric material of the layer 312. This involves subjecting the layer 312 to an intense electric field, in order to durably modify the orientation of its molecules, and to give it thus properties of pyroelectricity.
The invention also covers a system suitable for implementing this first embodiment of a method according to the invention. The system comprises in particular the first elementary stack 302A, the second elementary stack 302B, the first substrate 301A and the second substrate 301B.
In a sensor as described here, the distance between the contact surface and an upper surface of the charge collection macro-electrodes, on the side of the contact surface, defines a maximum image resolution (the heat propagating vertically in the pixel matrix, but also horizontally, from one pixel to another of the pixel matrix).
Preferably, this distance less than or equal to the pixel pitch of the sensor.
This distance is therefore advantageously less than or equal to 150 μιτι, and even less than or equal to 50 μιτι or even 10 μιτι.
When it is desired to access small pixel steps (for example when the sensor is a fingerprint sensor), there is therefore a choice between handling a second thin substrate (for example less than 15 μιτι), or remove the second substrate after the transfer step (in this case, a protective layer can be added to the second stack, on the second substrate).
When a high resolution is not necessary (for example when the sensor forms a simple presence detector, to detect the presence or absence of a body on a surface, for example the presence or absence of a hand on a surface), the second substrate 301B can both have a great thickness (more than 100 μιτι), and be kept after the transfer step.
Figures 5 and 6 illustrate different variants of the process described above.
In FIG. 5, the adhesive layer 516 is electrically conductive. It forms the upper layer of the first elementary stack, and also acts as an electromagnetic shielding layer.
An electrically conductive adhesive is, for example, an epoxy type adhesive, loaded with metallic particles, for example loaded with silver particles.
This variant allows the first and second elementary stacks each to include:
- a layer comprising electrically conductive strips (depending on the stack, the layer of charge collection electrodes, or the heating layer); and
- A layer comprising a material capable of exhibiting properties of pyroelectricity, depending on whether one has been subjected or not to a polarization field (depending on the stack, the layer comprising a pyroelectric material, or the electrical insulation layer).
This variant facilitates a joint production of the first and second elementary stacks. It is particularly suitable when the second substrate is kept after the transfer step.
Many other variants can be implemented, where the adhesive layer forms the upper layer of the first elementary stack, and / or of the second elementary stack, on the side opposite to the first substrate, respectively second substrate.
In FIG. 6, the second substrate 601B forms a simple transfer substrate, or carrier, for example made of glass, intended to be separated from the second elementary stack at the end of the transfer step. It gives the second elementary stack 602B the mechanical stability necessary for the implementation of the transfer step. Surface treatments, or the insertion of an adhesive intermediate bonding layer, can be implemented on the second substrate 601B, before making the second elementary stack, to facilitate future delamination (delamination carried out, for example, with a laser).
Here, a thin protective layer 614 is added to the second elementary stack 602B, between the second substrate 601B and the heating layer 613. The protective layer 614 is for example a layer of DLC (Diamond Like Carbon), an anti resin - scratches, an ultra-thin substrate such as a kapton or a polyimide 5 to 25 μm thick, a thin glass substrate, etc.
Preferably, the thin protective layer 614 has a thickness less than or equal to 25 μm, or even less than or equal to 10 μm, and even less (for example a layer of DLC of thickness less than or equal to 1 μm or a layer of anti-scratch resin deposited by spray or by screen printing of thickness 3pm).
This embodiment makes it possible to limit a distance between the contact surface of the sensor and the charge collection macro-electrodes, and thus to improve the resolution of the sensor by limiting diathermy (or cross-talk, or heat exchange). between neighboring pixels.
Figures 7A and 7B schematically illustrate a second embodiment of a method according to the invention.
According to this embodiment, the first elementary stack 702A and the second elementary stack 702B each extend over two regions of the same substrate 701, and the transfer step is implemented by folding this single substrate 701, so that these two regions are found one above the other.
The single substrate 701 is here a flexible substrate, for example a polyimide substrate from 5 μm to 10 μm thick, or a plastic such as PET, or even glass.
In Figure 7A, there is shown schematically, in a top view, the substrate 701 in the unfolded state, with the two elementary stacks 702A, 702B. The fold line 701 'is shown in dotted lines.
Here, the shape of the substrate 701 is adapted so that the heating bands, respectively the charge collection macro-electrodes, each have a so-called “free” end, which is not framed along the axis (Oz) between two portions of substrate 701. These free ends facilitate connection to circuits, remote, for reading and controlling the heating.
In Figure 7B, there is shown schematically, in a sectional view, the substrate 701 partially folded, with the two elementary stacks 702A, 702B.
This embodiment makes it possible in particular to facilitate the production, in the same process step, of heating strips and macro-electrodes for collecting charges.
The invention also covers a system suitable for implementing this second embodiment of a method according to the invention. The system comprises in particular the first elementary stack 702A, the second elementary stack 702B, and the single substrate 701.
The variants described with reference to Figures 5 and 6 can be adapted to this second embodiment. One can in particular remove, after folding, a region of the substrate 701, initially forming a support for the second elementary stack.
According to another variant, the substrate 701 can have regions of different thicknesses, the first elementary stack 702A being located on a region of great thickness, and the second elementary stack 702B being located on a region of thinness.
FIG. 8 illustrates an advantageous variant of this second embodiment, in which an integrated circuit 840 is formed on the single substrate 801.
The integrated circuit here comprises a silicon chip, bonded to the single substrate 801.
Different tracks, or lines, electrically conductive extend over the single substrate, in particular:
- Heating control lines, 841, each extending between the integrated circuit 840 and a first end of each of the heating strips 83 ';
- a ground line, 842, passing through the second ends of each of the heating strips 83 ', and through at least one edge of the layer 816 of electromagnetic shielding;
- electrode lines, 843, each extending between the integrated circuit 840 and a first end of each of the charge collection macro-electrodes 81; and
- output lines, 844, for the electrical connection of the integrated circuit 840 with external elements.
In this embodiment, the heating reading and control circuits are produced on the same chip, which simplifies synchronization of the heating with the reading of the quantities of pyroelectric charges, and makes it possible to limit the number of output lines 844 to achieve with the outside by multiplexing data.
The idea behind the invention is therefore to make the pixel matrix in two parts, preferably assembled with glue. Thus, the prints requiring precision do not undergo a loss of resolution linked to the flatness of lower layers, in particular the layer comprising a pyroelectric material. These prints are also not affected by problems of adhesion and / or compatibility with lower layers, in particular the layer comprising a pyroelectric material. These prints can each be made directly on a substrate.
The transfer step uses two substrates, or two portions of the same substrate, each receiving part of the layers forming the pixel matrix of the sensor.
In operation, an object to be imaged or detected is pressed against a contact surface of the sensor. This contact surface can be located on one of these two substrates, or one of these two substrate portions.
In the description above, it is considered that it is the elementary stack comprising the heating strips which is turned over and moved. Equivalently, one can choose to return the elementary stack comprising the charge collection macroelectrodes instead.
Likewise, the adhesive layer can be deposited rather on the elementary stack comprising the heating strips (or even on the two elementary stacks).
Many other variants of the method according to the invention can be implemented without departing from the scope of the invention, for example with different elementary stacks. In particular, the method according to the invention can also be used to produce a stack as described with reference to Figures IA to IC.
It is possible to dispense with a layer of glue to secure the first and second elementary stacks together. For example, two elementary stacks can be produced, each comprising an upper layer of pyroelectric material, then sintering to secure these two layers of pyroelectric material together, after the transfer step.
It is possible to carry out a so-called collective transfer, in order to produce several pixel arrays simultaneously, from a single or two substrates receiving a plurality of first and second elementary stacks. The substrate or substrates may have through openings, to facilitate access by electrical connectors to the heating strips and / or to the charge collection macro-electrodes.
The first elementary stack can initially extend over an ultra-thin substrate. After the transfer step, the assembly obtained can be bonded to a more rigid support, for example on a smart card.
It is also possible to use the method according to the invention for producing a matrix thermal sensor with passive addressing, in which each pixel comprises two superimposed pyroelectric cells, one dedicated to the measurement of a total signal, and the other to the measurement of a noise signal.
The positions of the heating bands and the charge collecting electrodes can be changed. They do not necessarily consist of a conductive ink.
In the examples shown, heating bands are directly produced, respectively charge collecting macro-electrodes, independent of each other. Alternatively, they can be initially connected together, to facilitate a step of polarizing the layer comprising a pyroelectric material. Conductive portions connecting them together are removed after the transfer step, during a cutting step (for example to separate different pixel arrays after a collective transfer).
Although not shown, the sensor includes at least one reading circuit, for measuring a quantity of charges collected by a charge collecting electrode, and at least one heating control circuit, for sending electrical signals making it possible to heat the pixels of the sensor via the heating strips. It may also include an electronic processing circuit capable of constructing an overall image of a thermal pattern, from measurements made at each of the pixels of the sensor.
The thermal pattern that can be imaged by the sensor can be a papillary imprint, or any other pattern associated with an object having a thermal capacity and a specific heat.
The invention is particularly suitable for the manufacture of large-sized sensors (area of the pixel matrix greater than 1 cm 2 ). Such sensors are integrated for example on a smart card, a piece of clothing, or a portable accessory.
权利要求:
Claims (14)
[1" id="c-fr-0001]
1. Method for producing a pixel matrix for a thermal sensor, each pixel comprising a pyroelectric capacity formed by a portion comprising a pyroelectric material disposed between a charge collecting electrode and a reference electrode, and a heating element, the pixels heating elements of the same line of pixels being formed together in one piece in the same heating strip (13; 13 '; 33'; 83 '), the charge collecting electrodes of the pixels the same column of pixels being formed together in a single piece in the same charge collecting macroelectrode (11; 31; 81), and the pixel matrix consisting of a stack of layers (102; 202) comprising:
a layer (111; 211; 311) of charge collection electrodes, comprising a first series of electrically conductive strips parallel to each other, forming the charge collection macro-electrodes (11; 31; 81);
a layer (112; 212; 312) comprising a pyroelectric material, comprising the portions of pyroelectric material of each of the pixels; and a heating layer (113; 213; 313; 613), comprising a second series of electrically conductive strips parallel to each other, forming the heating strips (13; 13 '; 33'; 83 ');
characterized in that it comprises a step of transferring to each other a first and a second elementary stacks (302A, 302B; 402A; 602B; 702A, 702B), to form said stack of layers, the first elementary stack (302A; 402A; 702A) comprising the layer (111; 211; 311) of charge collection electrodes, and the second elementary stack (302B; 602B; 702B) comprising the heating layer (113; 213 ; 313; 613).
[2" id="c-fr-0002]
2. Method according to claim 1, characterized in that the first and second elementary stacks (302A, 302B; 402A; 602B; 702A, 702B) are configured so that, after the transfer step, the stack of layers comprises, superimposed one above the other in this order:
the charge collection electrode layer (311);
the layer (312) comprising a pyroelectric material;
an electrically conductive electromagnetic shielding layer (316; 416; 816);
an electrical insulation layer (317; 417); and the heating layer (313; 613).
[3" id="c-fr-0003]
3. Method according to claim 2, characterized in that:
at least one of the first and second elementary stacks comprises an outer layer comprising an electrically insulating adhesive; and in the stack of layers, the adhesive is between the heating layer (313) and the electromagnetic shielding layer (316), and forms the electrical insulation layer (317).
[4" id="c-fr-0004]
4. Method according to claim 2, characterized in that:
at least one of the first and second elementary stacks comprises an outer layer comprising an electrically conductive adhesive; and in the stack of layers, the adhesive is between the electrical insulation layer and the layer comprising a pyroelectric material, and forms the electromagnetic shielding layer (516).
[5" id="c-fr-0005]
5. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 4, characterized in that at least one of the first and second elementary stacks (302A, 302B; 402A; 602B; 702A, 702B) comprises an outer layer (317 ; 418; 516) comprising an adhesive, and in that the transfer step is followed by a step of crosslinking the adhesive in order to secure the first and second stacks together.
[6" id="c-fr-0006]
6. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that the transfer step is carried out by folding a single substrate (701; 801), the first elementary stack (702A) extending over a first region of the single substrate, and the second elementary stack (702B) extending over a second region of the single substrate.
[7" id="c-fr-0007]
7. Method according to claim 6, characterized in that an integrated circuit (840) and electrically conductive lines (841, 842, 843, 844) are located on the single substrate (801), the electrically conductive lines s' each extending between the integrated circuit (840) and one end of a strip of the first series of strips (81), respectively of the second series of strips (83 ').
[8" id="c-fr-0008]
8. Method according to claim 6, characterized in that the shape of the single substrate (701) is adapted so that after folding, at least one end of each strip of the first series of strips is not covered by the second region of the single substrate, and at least one end of each strip of the second series of strips is not covered by the first region of the single substrate.
[9" id="c-fr-0009]
9. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 8, characterized in that the transfer step is carried out by transfer one above the other of a first substrate (301A) and a second substrate (301B; 601B) distinct from the first substrate, the first elementary stack (302A; 402A) extending over the first substrate, and the second elementary stack (302B; 602B) extending over the second substrate.
[10" id="c-fr-0010]
10. Method according to claim 9, characterized in that the second substrate (301B) is retained at the end of the transfer step, and forms a protective layer in the thermal sensor.
[11" id="c-fr-0011]
11. Method according to claim 9, characterized in that the second substrate (302B; 602B) is removed after the transfer step.
[12" id="c-fr-0012]
12. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 11, characterized in that it comprises a step of producing the first series of strips (11; 31; 81) and the second series of strips (13; 13 ' ; 33 '; 83'), by depositing a metallic ink.
[13" id="c-fr-0013]
13. System suitable for implementing the method according to any one of claims 6 to 8, characterized in that it comprises the first elementary stack (702A), the second elementary stack (702B) and the single substrate ( 701; 801), the first elementary stack (702A) extending over a first region of the single substrate, and the second elementary stack (702B) extending over a second region of the single substrate.
[14" id="c-fr-0014]
14. System suitable for implementing the method according to any one of claims 9 to 11, characterized in that it comprises the first elementary stack (302A; 402A), the second elementary stack (302B; 602B), a first substrate (301A), and a second substrate (301B; 601B) distinct from the first substrate, the first elementary stack (302A; 402A) extending over the first substrate, and the second elementary stack (302B; 602B) extending on the second substrate.
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
US20190148618A1|2019-05-16|
US10580956B2|2020-03-03|
EP3483787A1|2019-05-15|
FR3073651B1|2022-01-21|
引用文献:
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法律状态:
2019-05-17| PLSC| Publication of the preliminary search report|Effective date: 20190517 |
2019-10-22| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 |
2020-10-21| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 4 |
2021-11-30| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 5 |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR1760652|2017-11-13|
FR1760652A|FR3073651B1|2017-11-13|2017-11-13|METHOD FOR PRODUCING A STACK OF LAYERS FOR A MATRIX THERMAL SENSOR.|FR1760652A| FR3073651B1|2017-11-13|2017-11-13|METHOD FOR PRODUCING A STACK OF LAYERS FOR A MATRIX THERMAL SENSOR.|
EP18205671.3A| EP3483787A1|2017-11-13|2018-11-12|Method for making a stack of layers for a thermal matrix sensor|
US16/186,926| US10580956B2|2017-11-13|2018-11-12|Method for producing a stack of layers for a matrix thermal sensor|
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