Process for integrating dielectric optical coatings into micro-electromechanical devices

Microelectromechanical system (MEMS) deflectable structures such as cantilevers and membranes are used in a number of different optical applications. For example, they can be coated to be reflective to highly reflective and then paired with a stationary mirror to form a tunable Fabry-Perot (FP) filt...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Miller, Michael F, Le, Minh Van, Cook, Christopher C, Flanders, Dale C, Nagle, Steven F
Format Patent
LanguageEnglish
Published 14.09.2004
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Summary:Microelectromechanical system (MEMS) deflectable structures such as cantilevers and membranes are used in a number of different optical applications. For example, they can be coated to be reflective to highly reflective and then paired with a stationary mirror to form a tunable Fabry-Perot (FP) filter. They can also be used to define the end of a laser cavity. By deflecting the structure, the spectral location of the cavity modes can be controlled. They can also be used to produce movable lenses or movable dichroic filter material. A process for patterning dielectric layers of the type typically found in optical coatings in the context of MEMS manufacturing is disclosed. A dielectric coating is deposited over a device layer, which has or will be released, and patterned using a mask layer. In one example, the coating is etched using the mask layer as a protection layer. In another example, a lift-off process is shown. The primary advantage of photolithographic patterning of the dielectric layers in optical MEMS devices is that higher levels of consistency can be achieved in fabrication, such as size, location, and residual material stress. Competing techniques such as shadow masking yield lower quality features and are difficult to align. Further, the minimum feature size that can be obtained with shadow masks is limited to ˜100 m, depending on the coating system geometry, and they require hard contact with the surface of the wafer, which can lead to damage and/or particulate contamination.