Title: A Low-Cost CMOS Compatible Serpentine-Structured Polysilicon-Based Microbolometer Array
1A Low-Cost CMOS Compatible Serpentine-Structured
Polysilicon-Based Microbolometer Array
ERAN SOCHER YEHUDA SINAI and YAEL NEMIROVSKY
KIDRON MICROELECTRONICS RESEARCH
CENTER DEPARTEMENT OF ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING TECHNION - ISRAEL INSTITUTE OF
TECHNOLOGY
2OVERVIEW
- CMOS Compatible Microbolometers
- Serpentine CMOS Bolometer Design
- CMOS Bolometer Fabrication
- Sensor Array CMOS Readout Design
- Measured Results
- Summary
3MICROBOLOMETER PRINCIPLE OF OPERATION
resistor
membrane
air gap
CMOS readout
4MICROBOLOMETER SIGNAL
- For a voltage biased bolometer, the current
responsivity and the response time are
- For a current biased bolometer, the voltage
responsivity and the response time are
- The temperature rise is mainly due to electrical
heating, which may vary in time when using pulsed
bias
5MICROBOLOMETER SNR
- The Noise Equivalent Power of the bolometer,
e.g. for voltage bias is limited by temperature
fluctuations, Johnson noise and 1/f noise
- The resulting Noise Equivalent Temperature
Difference is
Johnson noise approximation
6CMOS COMPATIBILITY OF BOLOMETERS
- Conventional microbolometer arrays are based on
realizing non-CMOS layers, usually structured as
suspended membranes, on top of a processed CMOS
wafer - Common drawbacks include
- Non uniformity of resistors
- Chemical and temperature non-compatibility with
CMOS - Increased cost and complexity
- Our design is based on using standard CMOS
materials for integrated microbolometers with
simple postprocessing that enables realization of
low-cost sensor arrays
7 SERPENTINE CMOS BOLOMETERS
- We use the standard polysilicon layer as the
temperature-sensitive resistance and the process
dielectric layers as the structural and IR
absorbing layers - A suspended serpentine structure is used in
order to increase the effective thermal
resistance for a given pixel area
- The whole area of the structure serves as both
thermal isolation and absorbing layer - Definition of the structure is done as part of
the CMOS process
polysilicon
dielectrics
8STRUCTURE ANALYSIS
- The bolometers under study here are distributed
microbridge structures that can be modeled using
I
x
xL
x0
9STRUCTURE RESPONSIVITY
- The steady-state normalized temperature response
can be approximated as
- The resulting voltage responsivity can be
approximated by integration along the structure
as
10STRUCTURE NEP AND RESPONSE TIME
- Assuming a Johnson limiting noise, the NEP can
be approximated as
- The time response is composed from an infinite
number of response times
11PROCESS FLOW
- The first phase of the process a standard
AMI1.5mm CMOS process for readout circuits and
pre-sensors - The second step is bulk silicon isotropic
micromachining using SF6/O2 RIE - The third step is gold-black deposition for
absorption enhancement
12FABRICATED DEVICES
- Sensor structure is a microbridge of highly
doped polysilicon enclosed in the CMOS dielectric
layers - A serpentine structure is used to maximize the
total length - Dielectric mechanical supports were added with
minimal thermal effect
13SENSOR ARRAY READOUT AND LAYOUT
- A test-chip was designed based on the current
integration mode concept - It includes a 1616 bolometer array with
integrator per column - Timing circuits include a fast SR for individual
bias charge from on-chip 5bit DAC, slower SR for
row integration and output multiplexing to a
single output achieving a frame-rate of 60Hz
14SENSOR ARRAY READOUT AND LAYOUT
- A test-chip was designed based on the current
integration mode concept - It includes a 1616 bolometer array with
integrator per column - Timing circuits include a fast SR for individual
bias charge from on-chip 5bit DAC, slower SR for
row integration and output multiplexing to a
single output
15FABRICATED DEVICES
- A 1616 sensor array was also fabricated with
integrated CMOS readout circuitry - Pixel size is 100100 mm2, limited mainly by the
CMOS process feature size, and includes the
bolometer and PMOS transistors for biasing and
multiplexing
16DEVICE CHARACTERIZATION
- Average bolometer resistance was about 10-20
higher than designed (10kW), but non-uniformity
was better than 1 - A metal-like positive temperature coefficient of
resistance was measured as about 0.1/K - Noise measurements showed 1/f noise to be
negligible with a 1V bias down to 0.1Hz,
corresponding to KFlt10-16
17DEVICE CHARACTERIZATION
- I-V curves of released devices are measured to
characterize the effective thermal resistance - The effect of mechanical support was minimal,
but addition of the first metal layer enabled
thermal resistance smaller by an order of
magnitude for blind sensors
Gunsupported5.710-7 W/K Gsupported5.910-7
W/K Gblind6.310-6 W/K
Blind pixel
Pixel with supports
Unsupported pixel
18ELECTRO-OPTICAL CHARACTERIZATION
- Bolometers are voltage biased with the current
read by a lock-in amplifier through a
transimpedance amplifier - Sensors are irradiated by a black-body through a
chopper - The NETD of the sensor is estimated as 210mK for
f/1 based on the measurements
19SUMMARY
- Novel polysilicon serpentine microbolometers
were analyzed, designed, fabricated in standard
CMOS technology and tested - Characterization shows a response time of 14msec
and a NETD of 210mK assuming f/1 optics and
72msec integration time - A 1616 array demonstrator was designed in
standard CMOS technology with readout circuits
including differential current integration and
5bit DAC for individual pixel biasing to improve
non-uniformity, which is currently under testing - Use of a CMOS process with smaller feature size
is expected to increase performance
20Questions?