Patent Publication Number: US-9899717-B2

Title: Stacked low loss stripline circulator

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     This disclosure relates generally to radio frequency (RF) packages and circulators andmore particularly to a stacked low loss stripline circulator and fabrication. 
     BACKGROUND 
     As is known in the art, feed structures are used to couple a radar or communication system to an array of antenna elements. One component of a feed structure is a circulator. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/952,020 entitled “Dual Stripline Tile Circulator Utilizing Thick Film Post-Fired Substrate Stacking”, which is incorporated by reference, describes a dual stacked stripline circulator that includes multiple composite ferrite discs, each having an inner portion and an outer portion; a first substrate having an edge with a first composite ferrite disc disposed in the first substrate; a second substrate having an edge with a second composite ferrite disc disposed in the second substrate; a third substrate having an edge with a third composite ferrite disc disposed in the third substrate, the third substrate disposed adjacent the second substrate; a fourth substrate having an edge with a fourth composite ferrite disc disposed in the fourth substrate; a first pattern defining three ports of a first three-port circulator disposed between the first substrate and the second substrate; a second pattern defining three ports of a second three-port circulator disposed between the third substrate and the fourth substrate; and a metal film encircling the edge of the first, second, third and fourth substrate. The teachings of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/952,020 describe the advantages of such a configuration. 
     SUMMARY 
     In accordance with the present disclosure, a stacked stripline circulator includes a first ferrite disc, a second ferrite disc, a first substrate having a metalized edge with the first ferrite disc disposed in the first substrate, a second substrate having a metalized edge with the second ferrite disc disposed in the second substrate, a first metalized pattern defining ports of a circulator disposed on the first substrate, the first metalized pattern comprising copper, a second metalized pattern defining ports of a circulator disposed on the second substrate, the second metalized pattern comprising copper, and a bond ring bonding the metalized edge of the first substrate with the metalized edge of the second substrate. The first and second metalized pattern could be made of Ag or Au and includes resonator and matching network metallization that terminate at via pads. The first and second substrates have RF and ground via connections through the substrate. The mirrored metallization first and second substrates are bonded together with solder at selected location or all across the metalized surface. With such an arrangement, a reliable reproducible performance, high power, low loss stripline circulator is fabricated using unique thin film processing techniques. It should be appreciated the bonding ring can be a solder ring or compression bonding, diffusion bonding or adhesive bonding or other similar techniques can be used to bond the first substrate with the second substrate. 
     In at least one embodiment, the stacked stripline circulator includes a plurality of solder balls disposed between the first metalized pattern and the second metalized pattern. In another embodiment, solder is plated (or screen printed) across the entire first and second metalized pattern. AuSn and/or Pb/Sn among other solders could be used. In yet another embodiment, the substrate metallization includes only Cu, commercially available CuSn Ormet paste is screen printed on appropriate locations of the metalized pattern and both the substrates are bonded through transient liquid phase sintering of Ormet paste and electroless Ni/Au is plated on the external surface for corrosion protection. Furthermore, the stacked stripline circulator may include a plurality of mechanical spacers disposed between the first substrate and the second substrate to control the bond line thickness to assure reproducible good electrical performance and mechanical reliability. Also, the stacked stripline circulator may include a plurality of copper filled vias with glass encircling the copper or bore coated thick film conductor filled with Cu nano paste or Ormet paste. 
     In accordance with the present disclosure, a dual stacked stripline circulator includes a plurality of ferrite discs, a plurality of substrates, each substrate having a metalized edge with a corresponding ferrite disc disposed in the substrate, a first metalized pattern comprising copper defining three ports of a first three-port circulator disposed between a first substrate and a second substrate, and a second metalized pattern comprising copper defining three ports of a second three-port circulator disposed between a third substrate and a fourth substrate, and a bonding ring encircling a respective edge of the first, second, third and fourth substrate. With such an arrangement, a dual stacked stripline circulator is provided suitable for use with a dual polarized active electronically scanned array (AESA) antenna where each radiating element is being actively fed. 
     A method of providing a stacked stripline circulator includes forming a first substrate with a first metalized pattern and a metalized edge using copper and a first ferrite disc; forming a second substrate with a second metalized pattern and a metalized edge using copper and a second ferrite disc; disposing a solder ring around the edge of the first substrate and the second substrate; stacking the first substrate and the second substrate with the metalized pattern of the first substrate aligned with the metalized pattern of the second substrate; and heating the solder ring to attach the edge of the first substrate to the second substrate. With such a technique, a stacked stripline circulator is provided compact in size and suitable for use in a feed arrangement for an antenna feed with active elements. 
     The details of one or more embodiments of the disclosure are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the disclosure will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims. 
    
    
     
       DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS 
         FIG. 1  is a top perspective view of a stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 2  is a side perspective view of a portion of a stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIGS. 3A to 3C  are top perspective views of portions of the stacked stripline circulator during fabrication according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 3D  is a side view of a via in the stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 4  is a cross sectional view of a portion of the stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 4A to 4D  are top views of a via in a stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 5  is a diagram showing the various steps used to fabricate a stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 6  is a top perspective view of a dual stacked stripline circulator according to the disclosure; 
         FIG. 7  is a side view of a stacked RF circuit according to the disclosure; and 
         FIG. 7A  is a cross sectional view of a portion of the stacked RF circuit according to the disclosure; 
     
    
    
     Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements. 
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     It should be appreciated that an active electronically scanned array (AESA) antenna requires a circulator component connected to each radiating element. The circulator duplexes the signals from the antenna, routing the transmit signal to the radiating element and the receive signal from the radiating element, while providing isolation between the transmit path and the receive path. As AESA antennas become more common, it is desirable to drive the loss lower and the costs of such antennas down and providing a lower cost circulator for use in an AESA antenna is desirable. 
     Referring now to  FIGS. 1 and 2 , a stacked stripline circulator  100  is shown where the stacked stripline circulator  100  includes two substrates, substrate  102  and substrate  104  to provide a stacked substrate assembly  103 . A pole piece  108  is attached to substrate  102 . A magnetic bias is provided by a magnetic pole piece  108  and permanent magnet  106  on top of the stacked substrate assembly  103 . In a like manner, a magnetic pole piece (not shown) and permanent magnet (not shown) may be disposed on the bottom of the stacked substrate assembly  103 . A cold plate  110  may be attached to the substrate  104  with the provision for input and output ports. The interconnections between the circulators and the T/R modules (not shown) on the bottom and the circulators and the antenna radiators (not shown) on top are made using coaxial spring probe contacts to provide RF ports  112 . The stacked stripline circulator  100  has coaxial to stripline vertical transitions formed using via  30  through the substrate to be described further hereinafter and a metallization layer  40  (also referred to as a metalized pattern layer) as shown in  FIG. 2  within the stacked substrate assembly  103  and connected with RF ports  42 . Unlike the teachings of the above mentioned U.S. patent application where the substrates are bonded together using a thick film sealing glass paste, here the substrates are bonded at a reduced temperature (&lt;320 degree C.) instead of a thick film firing temperature of 850 degree C. which eliminates fabrication issues associated with coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) with composite substrates with multiple materials. Vias  30  are formed in each substrate layer individually and then connected together when the stacked substrate assembly  103  is bonded together. A metalized pattern layer  40  (also referred to as a metallization layer  40 ) is pattern plated with low resistivity Cu, a barrier layer such as Ni, Pd or Pt and protective thin Au layer and then connected together using solder balls  44  ( FIG. 3C ) and fired. The plating chemistry is chosen such that the resistivity of plated copper conductor approaches that of bulk copper (1.67 microohm-cm) to realize low loss in RF circuits including the circulator. Commercially available MICROFAB CU MSA 100 MU was used to realize low resistivity Cu conductor. The metallization layer  40  on substrate  102  is a mirrored pattern of the metallization layer  40  on substrate  104 . Grounds are connected together on the outside of the stacked substrate assembly  103  using a solder attachment ring  50  as to be described. 
     To provide wideband circulators with a bandwidth greater than 2:1, composite ferrite substrates are typically used. These substrates include a center disc of one ferrite material having a high saturation magnetization material and a ring of another ferrite material having a lower saturation magnetization material surrounding the center disc, and a thermally coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) and electrically dielectric constant matched substrate material surrounding the ferrite materials. The matched substrate material can either be of any ceramic material including titanate, garnet, ferrite, BeO, alumina or other substrate material. It should be noted that the low saturation magnetization material, with Curie temperature less than the circulator operating temperature, could also be used as the matched substrate material. The unique aspects of the processes and materials employed in this disclosure to realize a low loss and low cost high power circulator in a small foot print are: a thin-film copper metalized edge of the substrate is also provided when resonator and ground plane metallization is formed on the two surfaces of the substrate; bond line thickness is controlled with precise stand-off using a mechanical spacer to reduce variability in performance; solder is used to stack and connect the substrate and no separate edge metallization forming step is needed; a solder ring around the edge is used to connect the substrates together and also interconnects ground planes on multiple substrates together through edge metallization. It should be appreciated instead of using the solder ring, compression bonding, diffusion bonding or adhesive bonding or other similar techniques can be used to bond the first substrate with the second substrate. 
     Referring now to  FIG. 2 , a substrate  104  is shown where a dual composite disc  22  (or disc  22 ) includes an inner central portion of high saturation magnetization material and an outer portion of low saturation magnetization material encircling the central inner portion and a substrate material  26  encircling the outer portion of the dual composite disc  22  as shown. The substrate material  26  can either be a garnet, ferrite or other ceramics including titanates, alumina, BeO substrate material. One technique to fabricate the substrate layer  104  as shown is to start with a block of dielectric material and drill out a hole and fill the hole with a low saturation magnetization material using a high temperature adhesive between the two materials. Once the low saturation magnetization material is bound to the substrate material, drill out a smaller hole in the low saturation magnetization material and fill the hole with high saturation magnetization material using a high temperature adhesive between the two materials. Once the high saturation magnetization material is bound to the low saturation magnetization material, the block can be sliced to the desired thickness and then ground to the final thickness to provide the substrate layer  104 . Thru-holes are drilled through the dielectric material  26  as required and filled with copper (Cu) with a glass coating to provide metalized thru-holes or vias  30  to correspond to the circuitry as described further herein. Vias could be filled with bore coated with low resistivity Cu paste, such as Heraeus CL 81-10562 followed by filling with low shrinkage Ormet paste 805 or CS510A. Alignment holes or other alignment provisions are also provided in each one of the substrates to facilitate alignment as the substrates are stacked on each other. A metallization layer  40  is shown where a copper conductor layer was sputter deposited on the surface of the substrate  104  on both the front and backside as well as the edges and then a photo resist is applied, developed and pattern plated on the front to provide the desired metallization pattern as shown in  FIG. 2 . It should be noted the backside of the substrate layer  104  is primarily a ground plane with openings disposed to accommodate the vias  30 . The latter is performed for each of the substrates  102  and  104  where the desired metallization pattern is formed on one side of the substrate layer and a ground plane with openings disposed to accommodate the vias  30  on the other side of the substrate layer. It should be appreciated desired metallization pattern is a mirror image of each other for substrates  102  and  104 . The requisite metallization pattern needed to fabricate each of the circulators is well known in the art and will depend on the frequency and bandwidth requirements of the application. The technique used to fabricate the stacked stripline circulator  100  is not dependent on any specific metallization pattern and any known metallization pattern used for y-junction circulators may be used. A metalized edge layer  52  is disposed on the outer edge of substrate  102  and substrate  104  and a solder attachment ring  50  is disposed around the edge of the resonator side of each of substrate  102  and substrate  104  and connects the ground plane on the backside through the edge metallization and which is also used to attach the substrate  102  with substrate  104  as described further hereinafter. Also shown in  FIG. 1  is an RF port  112  which extends through the substrate and is connected to metallization pattern  40  to provide a signal path. 
     Having described the elements of the stacked stripline circulator  100 , it should be appreciated a reliable reproducible performance, high power, low loss stripline circulator is described. High power and low loss requirements are met with low resistivity &amp; low loss Cu metallization whose thickness can be readily varied with pattern plate technique (instead of plate and etch technique). The described stripline circulator configuration requires bonding of two metalized resonator substrates with good ground connection between the two substrates. To facilitate good grounding connection between the stripline ground planes, a thin film conductor fabrication process is used to metallize all six sides of the substrate with solder compatible metallization. The conductor metallization is terminated with solder compatible Cu/Ni/Au or Cu/Pt/Au metallization. Conductor metallization fabricated with Ag or Au could also be used. The solder attachment ring  50  (sometimes referred to as conductor seal ring  50 ) formed around the metallization surface of the substrate  102  and substrate  104  connects the ground plane fabricated on the bottom surface of the substrate through the edge metallization. The latter provides a hermetic seal where the solder dispensed on the outer ring flows together and forming a continuous solder ring bonding the two substrates. The two substrates, substrate  102  and substrate  104 , with the required vias and mirrored metallization with solder mask are fabricated using appropriate known thin film fabrication techniques. Solder is dispensed on the substrate with screen printing or with a solder ball dispense tool or electroplated. A large area solder connection facilitated by thin layer (approximately 10 microns thick) of plated solder can be used. A stand-off using mechanical spacers to control the bond line thickness is formed on one of the substrates. Solder is dispensed on the seal ring formed around the edge of the metallization surface, the resonator, the matching network, RF signal pad and coaxial ground via. Specifically, the solder paste with the flux can be dispensed on one or both substrates, reflowed and cleaned before bonding the substrates together. The mirrored patterns on the substrate are aligned to each other in a pick and place tool with temporary tacking and then reflowed. With the solder bonding of the two substrates, the resonator metallization, the matching network, the via connections and the solder attachment ring on both substrates are connected with solder. The solder attachment ring ensures connection between the two ground planes of the stripline. A reliable solid filled high aspect ratio via is needed for consistent performance of devices and high yielding thin film resonator fabrication. High aspect ratio Dumet or a copper (Cu) filled via are formed with glass to metal seal process. Selecting materials with appropriate CTE ensures good via connection through the substrate with hermetic or semi-hermetic via seal. Dumet or Copper wire and soda lime glass can be used to form a conductive via connection and seal around the via through garnet and titanate substrate. Alternate method of filling the via is to bore coat the via with Cu paste and fill it with Cu nano paste or Ormet paste. 
     Referring now to  FIGS. 3A to 3C , a more detailed view of the metallization layer  40  disposed on the substrate material  26  is shown. A hermetic via  30  is formed through the substrate material  26  as shown. Referring now also to  FIG. 3D , a copper wire  32  having an appropriate diameter is disposed within a hole formed in the substrate material  26 . A glass dielectric  34  is provided on an outer surface of the copper wire  32  to bond the copper wire  32  to the substrate material  26 . Alternatively, instead of using a copper wire, a Dumet wire can be used. Dumet wire is a copper clad on a core wire (e.g. Nickel-Iron) where the copper cladded wire is welded to achieve an endless length and drawn to obtain the needed diameter. The surface of the Dumet is treated by borating, oxidizing or nickel-plating the surface to ensure a good adhesion to the glass to get the vacuum tight glass-to-metal seal. It should be noted that either copper wire or Dumet wire can be used for vias  30 , or alternatively a combination of copper wire and Dumet wire can be used to provide the vias  30 . Yet another method of providing a via connection is to bore coat the via with low resistivity Cu paste and fill it with low shrinkage Ormet paste 805 or CS510A. Any excess metal and the dielectric seal is polished to realize a smooth surface for resonator metallization. The hermetic via  30  provides protection from any condensation formed when the stacked stripline circulator  100  is powered down. 
     Referring now more specifically to  FIG. 3B , the metallization layer  40  is provided by a solderable metallization Cu/Ni/Au alloy or Cu/Pt/Au alloy that provides low loss and is a highly conductive thick Cu metallization that spreads and dissipates the heat generated in the stacked stripline circulator  100 . Solder balls  44 , here comprised of AuSn material, are disposed on the metallization layer  40 . The solder balls  44  are placed throughout the metallization layer  40  as shown to connect the metallization layer  40  in substrate layer  102  with the metallization layer  40  in substrate layer  104 . A mechanical spacer  46  is used to control the bond-line thickness. As shown, a spacer  46  is disposed, here, at three locations to control the bond-line thickness when substrate layer  102  is matched with substrate layer  104 . A solder attachment ring  50  connects the ground plane on the backside through the edge metallization. Solder is dispensed on the solder attachment ring and two mirrored substrates are bonded when the metallization layer  40  in substrate layer  102  is connected with the metallization layer  40  in substrate layer  104  when heated. An alternate method is to screen print solder paste with flux on one or both substrates in the required region, reflow solder and clean the residue before bonding the substrates together. The edge metallization connects the ground planes on the backside of the two substrates and provides grounding for the coaxial connection. It should now be appreciated the substrate metallization fabrication technique, the precision solder ball placement on the metallization and the substrate bonding while controlling the bond line thickness results in a strip-line circulator with coaxial feed through the substrate. Furthermore, fabricating the device at reduced temperature (&lt;350 degree C.) instead of thick film firing temperature of 850 degree C. eliminates fabrication issues associated with CTE with composite substrates with multiple materials. The disclosed circulator supports high power with lower loss, provides better thermal dissipation of heat with Cu metallization and potentially runs cooler. 
     Referring now to  FIG. 4 , a cross section view of the metallization layer  40  is shown disposed on substrate material  26 . As can be seen from  FIG. 4 , metallization layer  40  comprises a protection layer  40   c , a solderable barrier layer  40   b  and a copper layer  40   a.  Protection layer  40   c  comprises thin Au of thickness between 0.5 micron and 1.0 micron. Solderable barrier layer  40   b  comprises nickel (Ni) 2 to 4 microns thick or platinum (Pt) approximately 1 micron thick. The Cu conductor thickness varies between 10 microns and 20 microns depending on the application and frequency of operation. 
     Referring now to  FIGS. 4A to 4D ,  FIG. 4A  is a top detailed view of a via connection through the substrate formed with copper wire showing the smooth glass to metal seal,  FIG. 4B  is a top view of a via formed with copper wire with a glass seal between the copper wire and the substrate;  FIG. 4C  is a top detailed view of a via connection through the substrate formed with Dumet wire sealed with glass; and  4 D is a top view of a via formed with Dumet wire with a glass seal adjacent to the substrate. 
     Referring now to  FIG. 5 , a fabrication process  200  is shown to fabricate the stacked stripline circulator  100 . First, a laser machined or ultrasonic machined composite substrate is received where the substrate includes a composite disc fabricated within the substrate as shown by step  202 . Vertical ultrasonic machined edges provide advantages in substrate to substrate bonding. As described earlier in connection with  FIG. 2 , a substrate layer  102 ,  104  includes a disc  22  and a dielectric material  26  encircling the disc  22  with thru-holes formed in the substrate ready to accommodate metallization. Next, as shown in step  204 , a copper or Dumet wire coated with glass is disposed in each thru-hole and fired at 550 degree C. to provide a hermetic sealed via  30  or alternatively a bore coat with low resistivity copper paste and fill with low shrinkage copper nano paste or Ormet paste is applied. The hermetic sealed via  30  is void free. As shown in step  206 , the gap between disc  22  and dielectric material  26  is gap filled with glass paste such as ESL G481 or Aremco ceramic adhesives such as Aremoco 643-VF or Aremco 634-ZO among others. Any excess copper and glass is removed from the surface of the substrate as shown in step  20 B. The substrate is cleaned and the thin film metallization Cu/Ni/Au is pattern plated to form the resonator structure, the matching network, the solder attachment ring on one side and the ground plane on the other side of the substrate as shown in step  210 . During this step additional four edges of the substrate are also metalized with Cu/Ni/Au. Next, as shown in step  212 , solder balls are disposed throughout the metallization layer or screen print solder paste or electroplate solder is disposed throughout the metallization layer. Alternately, the solder could be dispensed on selective regions only. Commercially available CuSn Ormet paste could also be screen printed on appropriate locations of the metalized pattern as an alternate to solder on Cu metallization. Next, mechanical spacers or stand offs are placed on the substrate to control bond line thickness to reduce variability in performance as shown in step  214 . Next, as shown is step  216 , the substrate  102  is mated with the substrate  104  where the mirrored patterns on the substrate are aligned to each other with a pick and place tool with temporary tacking and then reflowed and fired at &lt;350 degree C. to bond the metallization of substrate  102  with the metallization of the substrate  104  with each other. Furthermore, the solder ring around the edge connects the substrate  102  with the substrate  104  as well as interconnects the ground planes on each substrate together through the edge metallization. AuSn and/or Pb/Sn among other solders could be used. Alternatively, compression bonding, diffusion bonding or adhesive bonding or other similar techniques can be used to bond the substrate  102  with the substrate  104 . If Ormet paste is used then pressure is applied to transient liquid phase sintering of both substrates together and electroless Ni/Au is plated on the external surfaces of the substrate for protection. 
     To complete the stacked stripline circulator  100 , pole pieces are placed on universal tape ring frame boats (not shown) and an adhesive is printed on each pole piece. A magnet is placed on the adhesive and the magnet assembly is cured in an oven. Next, the stack circulator assemblies are placed on universal tape ring frame boats and an adhesive is applied to each stacked circulator assembly. A magnet assembly (pole piece and magnet) is placed on each stacked circulator assembly and cured in an oven. Then the process is repeated to place a magnet assembly on the back side of each stacked circulator assembly. The latter steps provide a stacked stripline circulator  100  as shown in  FIG. 1 . 
     It should now be appreciated, a stacked stripline circulator  100  can be fabricated using less expensive materials and processes than using the techniques described in the above mentioned patent application Ser. No. 13/952,020. Here, less expensive copper is used for the metallization layer  40  and via fill  30  instead of gold and no later separate edge metallization step is needed to provide the edge metallization. 
     Having described the stacked stripline circulator  100 , it should also be appreciated a dual stacked stripline circulator or other stacked circulator configurations can be fabricated using the techniques disclosed herein including 3-dimensional integration of substrates. For example, referring now to  FIG. 6 , a dual stacked stripline circulator  200  is shown where two stripline circulators fabricated as described herein are stacked on top of each other for use in the 0.5 to 20.0 GHz band. The dual stacked stripline circulator  200  includes four substrates, substrate  201 , substrate  202 , substrate  203  and substrate  204 . A cold plate  110  is attached to substrate  204 . Each circulator includes two substrates, substrate  201  and  202  forming a first circulator and substrate  203  and  204  forming a second circulator, for a total of four substrates stacked together to provide the dual stacked stripline circulator  200 . A magnetic bias is provided by a magnetic pole piece  205  and permanent magnet  207  and a magnetic pole piece (not shown) and permanent magnet (not shown) positioned, respectively, on the top and the bottom of the stacked substrate assembly. 
     Referring now to  FIG. 7 , a stacked RF circuit  300  is shown to include a first RF substrate  302  and a second RF substrate  304  where multiple substrates can be stacked to form passive RF and DC circuit elements. The substrate material can include alumina, quartz, silicon, BeO, AlN, ferrites and garnet. A first metalized pattern  306  is disposed on the first RF substrate  302  to include stripline conductors  310  formed on one side of the first RF substrate  302  and conductors  312  formed on the other side of the first RF substrate  302  as shown using low loss copper (Cu), silver (Ag) or gold (Au) conductor material. A second metalized pattern  308  is disposed on the second RF substrate  304  to include stripline conductors  316  formed on one side of the second RF substrate  304  and a ground plane  318  formed on the other side of the second RF substrate  304  as shown using low loss copper (Cu), silver (Ag) or gold (Au) conductor material. The conductor material can be provided using low resistivity copper approaching the value of bulk resistivity of copper of 1.67 micro-ohms per centimeter. To connect conductor on front and back of the substrates  302  and  304  via through the substrate  314 ,  314   a  and  314   b  are is provided using low cost via fill formed with Cu wire, Cu paste, Ormet paste or Cu nano pastes. Edge metallization  322  is disposed on the edge of the substrate  302  and edge metallization  324  is disposed on the edge of the substrate  304  to connect the ground plane  318 . Solder  320  is used to electrically and mechanically connect the substrates  302  and  304  as shown to form strip line  310 , to connect edge metallization  322  to edge metallization  324  and provide signal path  326  through both substrates  302  and  304 . In this manner strip line is formed, grounds are connected and signal path through both substrates are defined at the solder attachment step. The latter also provides an electrical connection to connect to the ground plane and provide a hermetic edge seal. 
     Referring now to  FIG. 7A , a cross section view of the metallization layer  310  is shown disposed on substrate material  302 . As can be seen from  FIG. 7A , metallization layer  310  comprises a protection layer  310   c , a solderable barrier layer  310   b  and a copper layer  310   a.  The protection layer  310   c  comprises thin Au of thickness between 0.5 micron and 1.0 micron. The solderable barrier layer  310   b  comprises nickel (Ni) 2 to 4 microns thick or platinum (Pt) approximately 1 micron thick. 
     A number of embodiments of the disclosure have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.