Low parasitic capacitance pressure transducer and etch stop method

A capacitive pressure transducer has a pedestal 25 formed in a silicon layer 14 surrounded by a moat 26 extending through the silicon layer, with borosilicate glass 17, 22 at the edges of the silicon layer forming the walls of the pressure chamber, with a wafer 28 of silicon bonded thereto. The pedestal 25 is joined to the walls of the vacuum chamber by borosilicate glass 16, whereby it is wholly, electrically isolated therefrom. A method of forming a capacitive pressure transducer utilizing the variable etch rates of aluminum, glass and silicon, together with field assisted bonding, is also disclosed.

DESCRIPTION 
TECHNICAL FIELD 
This invention relates to capacitive pressure transducers, and more 
particularly to capacitive pressure transducers having low residual 
(parasitic) capacitance, and capable of accurate manufacture without 
critical timing of etches. 
BACKGROUND ART 
The earliest and simplest type of a capacitive pressure transducer, in 
which diaphragm deflection as a function of fluid pressure causes a 
variation in the distance between a pair of surfaces which form the plates 
of a variable capacitor, is illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 3,634,727. 
Therein, a capacitor is formed of two wafers of silicon insulated from 
each other by glass and joined together by a low temperature glass or by 
brazing thin metal films deposited on the glass. In U.S. Pat. No. 
4,405,970, there is described capacitive pressure transducers, 
manufactured with microcircuit technology so as to produce a large number 
of transducers by processing of a pair of silicon wafers. Therein, a pair 
of wafers (one or both of which have been processed to provide proper 
materials, shaping and surfaces for the formation of pressure 
transducers), are joined together by field assisted vacuum bonding. In 
addition, the non-pressure-responsive (parasitic) capacitance is reduced 
by the utilization of borosilicate glass wall structures which separate 
the fixed portions of the two capacitors a long distance from each other, 
whereby the fixed capacitance is reduced. However, as described therein, 
there is a limit as to the extent of borosilicate glass which can be 
utilized with silicon due to the variation in temperature coefficient of 
expansion which can result in cracking, and the like, if an excessive 
amount of borosilicate glass is used. The use of borosilicate glass as in 
said '970 patent also provides the mechanism for controlling the spacing 
of the capacitive plates, rather than relying on the length of time of 
etching to control the spacing of the plates. 
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,415,948, a layer of borosilicate glass is applied to one 
of the plates of the capacitor to avoid arcing during field assisted 
vacuum bonding. However, the glass, occupying space between the plates of 
the variable capacitor, reduces the range of relative motion between the 
two plates, and lowers the sensitivity of the device. A commonly owned, 
copending U.S. patent application entitled "Three Plate, 
Silicon-Glass-Silicon Capacitive Pressure Transducer", Ser. No. 527,531, 
filed on Aug. 29, 1983 by Grantham and Swindal and now U.S. Pat. No. 
4,467,394 issued Aug. 21, 1984, discloses the use of a third conductive 
layer, thereby essentially providing parasitic capacitance in series, 
which reduces its effective capacitance to a small level. 
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION 
Objects of the invention include provision of a silicon capacitive pressure 
transducer having very low non-pressure-responsive (parasitic) 
capacitance, and capacitive pressure transducers capable of manufacture 
utilizing noncritical etch times to provide critical dimensions thereof, 
and which are immune to between-plate arcing during field assisted vacuum 
bonding. 
According to the present invention, a silicon capacitive pressure 
transducer includes a silicon pedestal surrounded by a moat which isolates 
it electrically from silicon vacuum chamber walls, the bottom wall being a 
silicon wafer and the top wall comprising borosilicate glass. According to 
the invention further, the method of forming pedestals and moats utilizes 
variable etch rates of aluminum, glass and silicon to provide precise 
dimensional control. 
The present invention provides residual or non-pressure-varying capacitance 
only between the circular wall of the pedestal and the circular interior 
wall of the chamber thereof, which dimension is wholly unrelated to the 
dimension required for the desired pressure-varying capacitance, and which 
can be made substantially as large as possible to reduce the non-varying 
capacitance to very nearly nil. The invention also utilizes the aluminum 
and silicon portions of the device to provide automatic etch stops, 
whereby accurate dimensional control can be achieved with only approximate 
timing control of the etching steps, thereby facilitating the making of a 
large number of precision pressure transducers on large silicon wafers, 
utilizing production techniques which do not require accurate control. 
Because the pedestals are electrically isolated from the walls, no arcing 
results during field assisted vacuum bonding. 
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the present 
invention will become more apparent in the light of the following detailed 
description of an exemplary embodiment thereof, as illustrated in the 
accompanying drawings.

BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION 
Referring to FIG. 1, the following description is of the manner of making a 
plurality of pressure transducers on a single pair of silicon wafers, 
utilizing a particular one of the transducers, between dash lines 9, 10, 
as an example. A large wafer 14 of doped silicon may be either N or P type 
having at least 10.sup.15 impurity per cc so as to achieve something under 
1 ohm centimeter conductivity. Then a first layer of aluminum 15, on the 
order of one-half micron thick, is RF sputtered or evaporated using 
electron beam or resistance methodology, to coat the entire surface of the 
wafer 14. After that, a first layer of borosilicate glass 16 may be RF 
sputtered utilizing well known techniques so as to achieve a layer on the 
order of 25-300 microns thick across the entire surface of the aluminum 
15, over the entire wafer 14. The glass 16 may, for instance, be Corning 
7070 Glass, or other borosilicate glass, such as "Pyrex". Between the 
steps of FIG. 1 and the steps of FIG. 2, the wafer is turned over for 
further processing. In FIG. 2, a second layer of borosilicate glass 17 is 
deposited across the entire surface of the wafer 14, the thickness thereof 
being that which will define the spacing between the capacitor plates 
(about 2 microns), when all of the devices on the wafer are completed, in 
a manner described in more detail in the aforementioned '970 patent. Then, 
as seen in FIG. 2, the layer 17 is etched at each site where a capacitive 
pressure transducer is to be formed, three such sites 18-20 being 
illustrated in FIG. 2. The etching for each site may be in the form of a 
circle defining essentially the overall size of the interior of the 
pressure sensor in that dimension, although other shapes may be utilized 
if desired (such as squares, etc.). In FIG. 3, the entire wafer including 
the glass layer 17 and the exposed sites 18-20 is coated with another 
layer of borosilicate glass, and is then etched in the same fashion as the 
layer 17, but leaving annular-shaped portions 22a at the base of each of 
the sites, such as the site 18, the annular-shaped portions 28a of the 
layer 22 define that which will ultimately become the pedestal 25 (FIG. 5) 
upon which one of the capacitive plates is formed, and the beginning of a 
moat 26 surrounding the pedestal, as described hereinafter. 
This thickness of the layer 22 is such as will cause the total thickness of 
glass layers 17, 22 to be sufficient for effective field assisted vacuum 
bonding, about 4 to 6 microns, typically, while allowing a lesser spacing 
between capacitor plates (about 2 microns). Then, the entire surface of 
the wafer is deposited with a layer 24 of aluminum on the order of 
one-half micron thick, and the aluminum is etched to expose the silicon 
surface of moat 26 (FIG. 4). The aluminum layer 24 provides a mask for 
plasma etching of silicon to extend the moat 26 through the entire wafer 
14. The plasma etching may be carried out in a manner which requires 
protecting the other side of the wafer, and if necessary, a suitable mask 
layer may be provided on the surface of the glass layer 16 prior to 
etching. After plasma etching of the silicon to form a pedestal 25, 
surrounded by an annular moat 26 as illustrated in FIG. 5, the aluminum 
mask layer 24 is stripped off the maximal surface area that forms the 
interstices between the device sites and the bottoms of the moats 26, but 
it is protected so as to remain on the top of the pedestal 25; the layer 
24 as seen in FIG. 5 comprises one plate of the pressure sensitive 
capacitor. Because the aluminum layer 15 is stripped at the base of the 
moats, each of the pedestals 25 is electrically isolated from the 
remainder of the related device. 
After stripping off the excess aluminum, the wafer, processed in accordance 
with the description thus far with respect to FIGS. 1 through 5, is 
registered with an unprocessed silicon wafer 28 of a suitable thickness to 
provide strength to the composite wafers to be formed, such as on the 
order of 250 to 2500 microns. Then field assisted vacuum bonding, of the 
type described more fully in the aforementioned '970 patent, is utilized 
to bond the processed and unprocessed wafers together while evacuating the 
chamber formed by the two wafers, resulting in the configuration shown in 
FIG. 5. Notice that the potential for field assisted bonding is to be 
applied to the aluminum layer 15, at some point across the wafer, but this 
will not be applied to the electrically isolated pedestals, so no arcing 
will occur across the capacitor. 
Between the steps illustrated in FIG. 5 and the steps illustrated in FIG. 
6, the wafer is again turned over. In FIG. 6, the borosilicate glass layer 
16 is etched, at two spots per device, so as to provide a plurality of 
through-holes 30, 31 for making respective contact to the two sides of the 
capacitive pressure transducer. Then, the entire surface of the wafer, 
including the borosilicate glass 16, and the exposed portions of the 
aluminum layers 15 beneath the through-holes 30, 31 is covered with a 
suitable layer of nickel or other suitable metal, such as by sputtering. 
The metal is then back etched to leave soldering pads 32, 33 corresponding 
to the through-holes 30, 31 respectively, as illustrated in FIG. 7. 
The wafer may then be sawed into dice along lines such as lines 9 and 10, 
and lines perpendicular thereto, to provide a plurality of individual 
pressure transducers such as transducer 36, as seen in FIG. 8. After 
dicing, a layer of nickel 38 is deposited on any one of the four side 
surfaces of the transducer 36 to provide conductivity between the silicon 
14 wall and the silicon wafer 28 across the Pyrex layers 17, 22. In this 
manner, contact with the silicon layer 28 may be had from the top of the 
dice through the bonding pad 32, the annular outer aluminum layer 15 which 
is in contact therewith, the annular silicon 14, the nickel edge layer 38, 
to the silicon wafer 28. Contact is made with the other capacitive plate 
24, through the bonding pad 33, the circular central remaining portion of 
the aluminum layer 15, the central pedestal portion of the silicon layer 
14. Of course, if contact can be made directly to the bottom wafer 28, the 
layer 38 can be omitted. 
What results is a capacitive pressure transducer 36, one plate of which is 
the aluminum layer 24 at the bottom of the central pedestal, the other 
plate of which is the silicon wafer 28. Because the annular moat 26 
extends not only through the silicon 14 but also through the aluminum 15, 
there is no path to provide parasitic capacitance between the annular 
silicon portion 14 and the silicon wafer 28 across the Pyrex layer 17, 22. 
Instead, the only parasitic or residual capacitance (that which does not 
change with pressure) exists across the moat 26 between the annular 
silicon portion 14 and the silicon portion 14 of the pedestal 25. In 
formulating a capacitive pressure transducer on a small die, where small 
size is important, the plate 24 can be made very close to the plate 28 so 
as to have adequate capacitance with an adequate sensitivity to variations 
in the distance between the two plates as a function of pressure 
differences. However, the moat 26 can have virtually any dimension 
consistent with the number of dice (the number of pressure transducers) 
which it is desired to fabricate on a given pair of silicon wafers. The 
distance between the layer 24, 28 may be on the order of 2 microns; on the 
other hand, the distance across the moat 26 may be on the order of 350 
microns. Thus, even though there are a pair of relatively large 
cylindrical surfaces, comprising the silicon 14, facing each other, the 
distance between them can be made such as to reduce the inherent, 
invariant capacitance to an extremely small level. This is one aspect of 
the capacitive pressure transducer in accordance with the present 
invention. 
Another aspect of the present invention is that the device is so designed 
that its processing steps provide automatic etch stops. For instance, the 
etching of aluminum in the steps that transpire between FIG. 3 and FIG. 4 
utilizes silicon as an etch stop. This is achieved by using a mixture of 
nitric and phosphoric acids as an etchant, which is capable of etching 
aluminum at least 1000 times faster than silicon, making it relatively 
easy to stop at the silicon interface without being too accurate in the 
timing. Similarly, etching of the silicon layer 14 so as to provide the 
pedestal surrounded by a moat, in the steps between FIG. 4 and FIG. 5, 
will utilize the aluminum layers as a mask and an etch stop (the layer 15 
first extending entirely across the moat). This may be achieved by 
utilizing plasma etching to etch the silicon, which etches silicon at a 
rate which is at least 100 times faster than the rate at which it will 
etch aluminum. Then, the aluminum layer 15 is etched out to complete the 
moat 26 utilizing borosilicate glass 16 as an etch stop. Because the 
etching can be closely controlled, the only other care that must be taken 
is definition of the thicknesses of the layers of borosilicate glass 17 
and 22 and the thickness of the aluminum layer 24, which defines the 
plate-to-plate spacing of the capacitive plates. The borosilicate glass is 
subject to be damaged by a wide variety of chemicals, which may pose a 
problem in some environments. Further if a very stiff hinge is required 
(layer 16), the borosilicate glass may be so thick as to create stresses 
as a result of the difference in temperature coefficient of expansion 
between the glass and the silicon. Therefore, in some applications of the 
invention, it may be desirable to provide only a 4-6 micron layer of glass 
16 and use field assisted vacuum bonding to bond a wafer of silicon over 
the layer 6. The silicon may then be polished to desired thickness. Any 
electrical contact through such a layer would, of course, have to be 
provided with suitable insulation. Further, if desired in some 
applications, the borosilicate glass layer 16 could be provided in the 
form of a thick wafer, field assisted vacuum bonded to the aluminum layer 
15, and polished to the desired thickness. 
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to an 
exemplary embodiment thereof, it should be understood that the foregoing 
and various other changes, omissions and additions may be made therein and 
thereto, without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention.