Large monolithic thermal ink jet printhead

An improved thermal ink jet printhead and method of fabrication thereof is disclosed of the type formed by the mating and bonding of first and second substrates. The first substrate is silicon with {100} crystal plane surfaces and has anisotropically etched in one surface thereof a linear series of separate through recesses and a plurality of parallel, elongated ink channels grooves. The second substrate has a plurality of heating elements and addressing electrodes patterned on one surface thereof. The through recesses serve as a segmented ink reservoir with each segment having an ink inlet, and the elongated ink channel grooves having one end adjacent the segmented reservoir and the opposite end open to serve as ink droplet emitting nozzles. Each segment of the segmented reservoir is isolated from each other by dividing walls. The dividing walls strengthen the printhead, and the separate through recesses reduce the effects of angular misalignment between mask and first substrate crystal planes. In the preferred embodiment, a thick film insulative layer is sandwiched between the first and second substrates and patterned to form recesses therein to provide the means for placing the segmented reservoir into communication with the ink channel grooves. To produce a multicolor printing printhead, the thick film layer is patterned to form a linear series of recesses, each substantially equal in length to an associated one of the reservoir segments, so that each reservoir segment may have a different colored ink supplied thereto that cannot mix with the ink of the other reservoir segments.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
1. Field of the Invention 
This invention relates to ink jet printing devices, and more particularly 
to larger silicon thermal ink jet printheads which have ink passageways 
fabricated by anisotropic etching of silicon. The invention reduces 
effects of angular misalignment between the etchant resistant mask and the 
silicon substrate {111} crystal plane in order to provide increased 
dimensional control of ink passageways and to produce printheads that are 
more robust without sacrificing resolution. 
2. Description of the Prior Art 
Thermal ink jet printing is a type of drop-on-demand ink jet system, 
wherein an ink jet printhead expels ink droplets on demand by the 
selective application of a current pulse to a thermal energy generator, 
usually a resistor, located in capillary-filled, parallel ink channels a 
predetermined distance upstream from the channel nozzles or orifices. The 
channel ends opposite the nozzles are in communication with an ink 
reservoir to which an external ink supply is connected. 
U.S. Pat. No. Re. 32,572 to Hawkins et al discloses a thermal ink jet 
printhead and several fabricating processes therefor. Each printhead is 
composed of two parts aligned and bonded together. One part is a 
substantially flat substrate which contains on the surface thereof a 
linear array of heating elements and addressing electrodes, and the second 
part is a substrate having at least one recess anisotropically etched 
therein to serve as an ink supply manifold when the two parts are bonded 
together. A linear array of parallel grooves is also formed in the second 
part, so that one end of each groove communicates with the manifold recess 
and the other end of each groove is open for use as an ink droplet 
expelling nozzle. Many printheads can be made simultaneously be producing 
a plurality of sets of heating element arrays with their addressing 
electrodes on a silicon wafer and by placing alignment marks thereon at 
predetermined locations. A corresponding plurality of sets of channel 
grooves and associated manifolds are produced in a second silicon wafer. 
In one embodiment, alignment openings are etched in the second silicon 
wafer at predetermined locations. The two wafers are aligned via the 
alignment openings and alignment marks, then bonded together and diced 
into many separate printheads. 
U.S. Pat. No. 4,638,337 to Torpey et al discloses an improved thermal ink 
jet printhead similar to that of Hawkins et al, but has each of its 
heating elements located in a recess. The floor of the recess contains the 
heating elements, while the recess walls prevent the lateral movement of 
the bubbles toward the nozzle and, therefore, the sudden release of 
vaporized ink to the atmosphere, known as blow-out, which causes ingestion 
of air and interrupts the printhead operation whenever this event occurs. 
In this patent, a thick film organic structure such as Riston.RTM. or 
Vacrel.RTM. is interposed between the heater plate and the channel plate. 
The purpose of this layer is to have recesses formed therein directly 
above the heating elements to contain the bubble which is formed over the 
heating elements, thus enabling an increase in the droplet velocity 
without the occurrence of vapor blow-out and concomitant air ingestion. 
U.S. Pat. No. 4,774,530 to Hawkins discloses the use of an etched thick 
film insulative layer to provide the flow path between the ink channels 
and the manifold, thereby eliminating the fabrication steps required to 
open the channel groove closed ends to the manifold recess, so that the 
printhead fabrication process is simplified. 
U.S. Pat. No. 4,786,357 to Campanelli et al, discloses the use of a 
patterned thick film insulative layer between mated and bonded substrates. 
One substrate has a plurality of heating element arrays and addresing 
electrodes formed on the surface thereof and the other being a silicon 
wafer having a plurality of etched manifolds, with each manifold having a 
set of ink channels. The patterned thick film layer provides a clearance 
space above each set of contact pads of the addressing electrodes to 
enable the removal of the unwanted silicon material by dicing without the 
need for etched recesses therein. The individual printheads are produced 
subsequently by dicing the substrate having the heating element arrays. 
As disclosed in the above-discussed patents, thermal ink jet printheads are 
basically fabricated from two substrates. One substrate contains the 
heating elements and the other contains ink recesses. When these two 
substrates are aligned and bonded together, the recesses serve as ink 
passageways. A plurality of each substrate is formed on separate wafers, 
so that the wafers may be aligned, mated, and diced into many individual 
printheads. The wafer for the plurality of sets of recesses is silicon and 
the recesses are formed by an anisotropic etching process. The anisotropic 
or orientation dependent etching has been shown to be a high yielding 
fabrication process for precise, miniature printheads. They are low cost, 
high resolution, electronically addressable printers with high 
reliability. Such printheads are usually about a quarter of inch wide and 
print samll swaths of information being translated across a stationary 
recording medium such as paper. The paper is then stepped the distance of 
one swath and the printing process continued until the entire page of 
paper is printed. This is a low speed process. 
In efforts to increase the printing speed, larger arrays of nozzles are 
required. Each ink droplet emitting nozzle requires an ink channel which 
is in communication with an ink reservoir or manifold. In order to 
complete the etching from only one side of the wafer, the reservoir is 
etched through the wafer so that the open bottom may serve as an ink 
inlet. As the array size increases, so also does the reservoir and thus 
the ink inlet. As the area of the through etch for the reservoirs 
increase, the wafer strength diminishes and yield drops because many of 
the fragile wafers are damaged during subsequent assembly operations. 
There is another problem associated with long troughs or recesses. If the 
sides of the vias formed in the etch resistant masks are not perfectly 
aligned with the {111} crystal planes of the (100) silicon wafers or 
substrates, the resulting etched recesses will undercut the mask via and 
follow the {111} crystal planes nevertheless. Thus, any angular 
misalignment of the mask relative to the {111} crystal planes of the wafer 
will result in a rectangular etch recess having longer and wider 
dimensions than desired, as shown in FIG. 4 discussed later. This 
undercutting gets more severe as the desired recess or through slot length 
increases. Since the undercutting is a variable, depending on the 
pattern-crystal plane misorientation of a particular wafer, it cannot be 
easily compensated for in the mask design. 
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
It is an object of the present invention to minimize both the fragility 
problem and misorientation induced undercut problem associated with 
anisotropic etching of ink passages for larger printheads having increased 
numbers of droplet emitting nozzles without decrease in printing 
resolution. 
It is another object of the invention to develop techniques which allow 
anisotropic etching fabrication to be applied to the formation of closely 
spaced rectangular structures with high aspect ratios. 
It is still another object of the present invention to enable multicolor 
printing from a single printhead. 
In the present invention, an improved thermal ink jet printhead and method 
of fabrication thereof is disclosed of the type formed by the mating and 
bonding of first and second substrates. The first substrate is silicon 
with {100} crystal plane surfaces and has anisotropically etched in one 
surface thereof a through recess and a plurality of parallel, elongated 
ink channels grooves, the second substrate having a plurality of heating 
elements and addressing electrodes patterned on one surface thereof. The 
through recess in the first substrate serves as an ink reservoir with an 
ink inlet, while the elongated ink channel grooves having one end adjacent 
the ink reservoir and opposite end being opened, serve as ink droplet 
emitting nozzles. Each heating element is located in a respective one of 
the ink channel grooves a predetermined distance upstream from the 
nozzles. Means are provided to place the ink channel grooves into 
communication with the through recess, so that selective application of 
current pulses representing digitized data to the heating elements eject 
and propel ink droplets from the nozzles to a recording medium. The 
improvement comprises providing a segmented reservoir in which each 
segment of the reservoir is isolated from each other by dividing walls. 
The segmented reservoir is produced by patterning an etch resistant mask 
and anisotropically etching a linear series of separate through recesses. 
Adjacent through recesses are separated by the dividing walls, each having 
opposing wall surfaces that are in separate segments. The dividing walls 
strengthen the printhead when the number of nozzles and thus the length of 
the reservoir are increased and concurrently reduce the effects of angular 
misalignment between mask and first substrate crystal planes. 
In one embodiment, the means for providing communication between the ink 
channel grooves and the segmented reservoir is accomplished by sandwiching 
a thick film insulative layer between the first and second substrates. The 
thick film layer is patterned to form recesses therein which provide ink 
flow path between the segmented resevoir and the ink channel grooves. The 
thick film layer may be patterned to form a linear series of recesses, one 
for each separate through recess that forms the segmented ink reservoir, 
each recess in the thick film layer being substantially equal in length to 
an associated one of the reservoir segments, so that each reservoir 
segment may have a different colored ink supplied thereto. In this 
configuration, an integral color ink jet printhead is produced. 
A more complete understanding of the present invention can be obtained by 
considering the following detailed description in conjunction with the 
accompanying drawings, wherein the like index numerals indicate like parts 
.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
According to U.S. Pat. No. 4,638,337 to Torpey et al and U.S. Pat. No. Re. 
32,572 to Hawkins et al, thermal ink jet printheads may be mass produced 
be sectioning of at least two mated planar substrates containing on 
confronting surfaces thereof respective matched sets of linear arrays of 
heating elements with addressing electrodes and linear arrays of parallel 
elongated grooves, each set of grooves being interconnected with a common 
recess having an opening through the opposite substrate surface. The 
elongated grooves serve as ink channels, and the common recess serves as 
an ink reservoir or manifold. The recess opening is the ink inlet to which 
an ink supply is connected. Each ink channel contains a heating element 
and the sectioning operation, generally a dicing operation, opens the ends 
of the ink channels opposite the ends connecting with the manifold, if not 
already open, and forms the nozzle containing surface. After the 
sectioning operation, the heating elements are located at a predetermined 
location upstream from the nozzles. The main difference between the above 
identified patents is that Torpey et al contains an intermediate thick 
film polymer layer sandwiched between the mated substrates. The thick film 
layer is patterned to expose the heating elements, this effectively places 
the heating elements in a pit whose vertical walls inhibits vapor bubble 
growth in the direction parallel to the heating element surface. This 
prevents vapor blow-out and the resultant ingestion of air which produces 
a rapid printhead failure mode. U.S. Pat. No. 4,774,530 to Hawkins further 
improves the printhead of Torpey et al by using an additional etched 
recess in the thick film layer to provide a flow path between the ink 
channels and the manifold or reservoir, so that there is no need to remove 
the ink channel closed ends by additional dicing or etching steps. 
When the arrays of ink channels are enlarged to increase the width of 
printed swaths of information and thus increase the printing speed, the 
reservoir which supplies ink to the channels is also lengthened. The 
removal of this much silicon throughout the wafer causes a dramatic loss 
of wafer strength and results in a very fragile channel plate wafer. The 
fragility problem is exacerbated by the fact that the {111} crystal planes 
are not only etch termination planes but also are cleavage planes. As 
discussed above, any angular misorientation of the etch resistant channel 
and reservoir mask with the {111} crystal planes of the wafer causes 
undercutting which gets more severe as the reservoir length increases. 
This invention relates to an ink jet printhead that overcomes those two 
problems with larger array printheads and further enables the production 
of an integral color ink jet printhead. 
An enlarged, schematic isometric view of the front face 29 of the printhead 
10 showing the array of droplet emitting nozzles 27 is depicted in FIG. 1. 
Referring also to FIG. 2, discussed later, the lower electrically 
insulating substrate or heating element plate 28 has at least the heating 
elements 34 and addressing electrodes 33 patterned on surface 30 thereof, 
while the upper substrate or channel plate 31 has parallel grooves 20 
which extend in one direction and penetrate through the upper substrate 
front face edge 29. The other end of groves terminate at slanted wall 21. 
The through recesses 24, which are used as the ink supply manifold or 
reservoir for the capillary filled ink channels 20, has an open bottom 25 
for use an an ink fill holes or inlets. The surface of the channel plate 
with the grooves are aligned and bonded to the heater plate 28, so that a 
respective one of the plurality of heating elements 34 is positioned in 
each channel, formed by the grooves and the lower substrate or heater 
plate. Ink enters the manifold formed by the recess 24 and the lower 
substrate 28 through the inlets 25 and, by capillary action, fills the 
associated channels 20 by flowing through one or more recesses 38 
patterned in the thick film insulative layer 18, a photo-curable polymer, 
such as, for example, Riston.RTM. or Vacrel.RTM.. The ink at each nozzle 
forms a meniscus, the surface tension of which prevents the ink from 
weeping therefrom. The addressing electrodes 33 on the lower substrate or 
channel plate 28 terminate at terminals 32. The upper substrate or channel 
plate 31 is smaller than that of the lower substrate in order that the 
electrode terminals 32 are exposed and available for wire bonding to the 
electrodes on the daughter board 19, on which the printhead 10 is 
permanently mounted. Layer 18 is a thick film passivation layer, discussed 
later, sandwiched between upper and lower substrates. This layer is 
patterned to expose the heating elements, thus placing them in a pit 26, 
and is patterned to form a single elongated recess or a linear series of 
recesses 38 to enable ink flow between the manifold 24 and the associated 
ink channels 20. In addition, the thick film insulative layer is patterned 
to expose the electrode terminals. 
A cross sectional view of FIG. 1 is taken along view line 2--2 thrugh one 
channel and shown as FIG. 2 to show how the ink flows from the manifold 24 
and around the end 21 of the groove 20 as depicted by arrow 23. As is 
disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,638,337 to Torpey et al, a plurality of sets 
of bubble generating heating elements 34 and their addressing electrodes 
33 are patterned on the polished surface of a single side polished (100) 
silicon wafer. Prior to patterning, the multiple sets of printhead 
electrodes 33, the resistive material that serves as the heating elements, 
and the common return 35, the polished surface of the wafer is coated with 
an underglaze layer 39 such as silicon dioxide, having a thickness of 
about 2 micrometers. The resistive material may be a doped polycrystalline 
silicon which may be deposited by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) or any 
other well known resistive material, such as zirconium boride (ZrB.sub.2). 
The common return and the addressing electrodes are typically aluminum 
leads deposited on the underglaze and over the edges of the heating 
elements. The common return ends or terminals 37 and addressing electrode 
terminals 32 are positioned at predetermined locations to allow clearance 
for wire bonding 36 to the electrodes 48 of the daughter board 19, after 
the channel plate 31 is attached to make a printhead. The common return 35 
and the addressing electrodes 33 are deposited to a thickness of 0.5 to 3 
micrometers, with the preferred thickness being 1.5 micrometers. 
In the preferred embodiment, polysilicon heating elements are used and a 
silicon dioxide thermal oxide layer 17 is grown from the polysilicon in 
high temperature steam. The thermal oxide layer is typically grown to a 
thickness of 0.5 to 1 micrometer to protect and insulate the heating 
elements from the conductive ink. The thermal oxide is removed at the 
edges of the polysilicon heating elements for attachment of the addressing 
electrodes and common return, which are then patterned and deposited. If a 
resistive material such as zirconium boride is used for the heating 
elements, then other suitable well known insulative materials may be used 
for the protective layer thereover. Before electrode passivation and as 
disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,774,530 to Hawkins, a tantalum (Ta) layer 
(not shown) may be optionally deposited to a thickness of about 1 
micrometer on the heating element protective layer 17 for aded protection 
thereof against the cavitational forces generated by the collapsing ink 
vapor bubbles during printhead operation. The tantalum layer is etched off 
all but the protective layer 17 directly over the heating elements using, 
for example, CF.sub.4 /O.sub.2 plasma etching. For electrode passivation, 
a two micrometer thick phosphorous doped CVD silicon dioxide film 16 is 
deposited over the entire wafer surface, including the plurality of sets 
of heating elements and addressing electrodes. The passivation film 16 
provides an ion barrier which will protect the exposed electrodes from the 
ink. Other ion barriers may be used, such as, for example, polyimide, 
plasma nitride, as well as the above-mentioned phosphorous doped silicon 
dioxide, or any combinations thereof. An effective ion barrier layer is 
achieved when its thickness is between 1000 angstrom and 10 micrometers, 
with the preferred thickness being 1 micrometers. The passivation film or 
layer 16 is etched off of the terminal ends of the common return and 
addressing electrodes for wire bonding later with the daughter board 
electrodes. This etching of the silicon dioxide film may be by either the 
wet or dry etching method. Alternatively, the electrode passivation may be 
accomplished by plasma deposited silicon nitrite (Si.sub.3 N.sub.4). 
Next, a thick film type insulative layer 18 such as, for example, 
Riston.RTM., Vacrel.RTM., Probimer 52.RTM., or polyimide, is formed on the 
passivation layer 16 having a thickness of between 10 and 100 micrometers 
and preferably in the range of 25 to 50 micrometers. The insulative layer 
18 is photolithographically processed to enable patterning and removal of 
those portions of the layer 18 over each heating element (forming recesses 
or pits 26), the linear series of recesses 38 for providing ink passage 
from each separate manifold or reservoir 24 comprising the segmented 
reservoir 22 to the ink channels 20 associated with each reservoir 24 and 
inlet 25, and over each electrode terminal 32, 37. The recesses 38 are 
formed by the removal of these portions of the thick film layer 18. Thus, 
the passivation layer 16 alone protects the electrodes 33 from exposure to 
the ink in these recesses 38. 
Referring to FIG. 3, an enlarged, partially shown, plan view of a patterned 
and partially anisotropically etched channel plate wafer 12 for large 
array thermal ink jet printheads 10 is depicted. In a typical large array 
printhead 10, 200 ink channels 20 at 300 channels per inch covering the 
distance of about 0.66 inches are used. In FIG. 3, only a few channel 
grooves 20 are shown for clarity and ease of understanding the invention. 
Single through-etched reservoirs with open bottoms for use an ink inlets 
are shown to illustrate a fragile channel plate wafer and for comparison 
with the channel plate wafer in FIG. 5 depicting the present invention, 
discussed later. Elongated V-grooves 15 formed for providing clearance of 
the terminals of the addressing electrodes and common return as taught by 
the above referenced patents. Dashed lines 13 delineate the dicing lines 
for sectioning after the channel plate and heating element wafers are 
aligned and bonded together. 
With the development of larger arrays such as those shown and discussed in 
FIG. 3, the reservoir 14 has caused a problem in that it makes the etched 
silicon wafer 12 very fragile. After etching, the wafer must go through a 
hot phosphoric acid silicon nitride strip, a cool rinse, and then be 
mechanically aligned and bonded to the heating element wafer. In addition, 
there is another problem associated with the long, through-etched 
reservoir 14. FIG. 4 illustrates that the actual structure 40 resulting 
from some misalignment of the via pattern 42 to the {111} crystal planes, 
indicated by arrow 41, is a function of both the angular misorientation 
and the length "I" of the pattern. For example, the actual wdith "W" of 
the rectangular etched recess obtained by anisotropically etching the 
pattern, when it is misaligned with the {111} crystal plane by an angle 
.theta. degrees, is: W=I sin .theta.+w cos.theta., where "w" is the 
pattern width. Note that the length "I" is a major component of the width 
increase caused by the misalignment. This undercutting gets more severe as 
the array length increase. Since the undercutting is a variable, depending 
on the pattern-crystal misorientation of a particular wafer, it cannot be 
easily compensated for in the mask. 
Referring to FIG. 5 and as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. Re. 32,572 and 
4,638,337, a plurality of upper substrates or channel plates 31 for the 
printhead 10 is fabricated from a (100) silicon wafer 44. After the wafer 
is chemically cleaned, a pyrolytic CVD silicon nitride layer (not shown) 
is deposited on both sides. Using conventional photolithography, a 
plurality of linear sets of vias 24 for through-etched recesses that will 
serve as segmented ink reservoirs or manifolds 22 and at least two vias 
for alignment openings (not shown) at predetermined locations are printed 
on one wafer side. The silicon nitride is plasma etched off of the 
patterned vias representing the segmented reservoirs, with open bottoms 
for ink inlets 25, and alignment openings. A potassium hydroxide (KOH) 
anisotropic etch may be used to etch the reservoirs and alignment 
openings. In this case, the {111} planes of the (100) wafer make an angle 
of 54.7 degrees with the surface of the wafer. The reservoirs are equal 
square surface patterns and the alignment openings are both about 60 to 80 
mils (1.5 to 2 mm) square. Thus, both are etched entirely through the 20 
mil (0.5 mm) thick wafer. Concurrently, the wafer is photolithographically 
patterned to form both the elongated V-grooves 15, which provide clearnace 
for the electrode terminals 32, 37, and the sets of elongated, parallel 
channel recesses 20 that will eventually become the channels of the 
printheads. The surface 45 of the wafer 44 containing the segmented 
manifolds and channel recesses are portions of the original wafer surface 
(covered by a silicon nitride layer) on which adhesive will be applied 
later for bonding it to the substrate containing the plurality of sets of 
heating elements. A final dicing cut along dashed cut lines 43 produced 
end face 29 and opens one end of the elongated groove 20 producing nozzles 
27. The other ends of the channel groove 20 remain closed by end 21. 
However, the alignment and bonding of the channel plate to the heater 
plate places the ends 21 of channels 20 directly over recesses 38 in the 
thick film insulative layer 18 sandwiched between the heating element and 
channel plate wafers, as shown in FIG. 2 enabling the flow of ink into the 
channels from the manifolds as depicted by arrows 23. The other dicing 
cuts along dashed dicing lines 13 complete the sectioning of the two 
bonded wafers into a plurality of individual, large array printheads. For 
monochrome printing, where the ink in the various separate reservoirs 24 
making up the segmented reservoir 22 may be mixed, the thick film recess 
38 may be a single elongated one. In other embodiment, discussed below, 
the thick film recesses must be patterned to produce one for each 
reservoir 24. 
The via patterns which produce the linear series of through-etched recesses 
24, the open bottoms 25 of which serve as separate ink inlets, are spaced 
from each other, so that individual reservoirs are formed which are 
separated from each other by dividing walls 46. The opposite surfaces 47 
of the dividing walls form part of respective adjacent reservoirs. The 
linear series of reservoirs form a segmented reservoir 22, each segment 24 
being the through-etched recess. The individual recesses 38 in the thick 
film layer 18 provides a separate ink flow paths to respective associated 
adjcent ink channels, so that each segment may be supplied with a 
different colored ink. Thus, this printhead configuration provides an 
integral color printhead as well as one which is more robust. The 
segmented reservoir increased the printhead strength and thus increases 
the yield over that obtainable with more fragile channel plate wafers 
which have single reservoirs for large arrays of ink channels. In 
addition, the smaller series of individual reservoirs which form the 
segmented reservoir, reduce the effects of angular misalignment between 
the mask and the channel plate wafer crystal planes. 
In summary, this invention reduces the effects of angular misalignment 
between mask and wafer crystal planes by segmenting the large reservoirs. 
This concurrently provides a strengthened wafer which increases 
manufacturing yield, and, more importantly, enables the printhead to 
function as an integral full color printer. 
Many modifications and variations are apparent from the foregoing 
description of the invention, and all such modifications and variations 
are intended to be within the scope of the present invention.