| United States Patent |
5,857,050
|
|
Jiang
,   et al.
|
January 5, 1999
|
Packaging for optoelectronic device
Abstract
A package for an optoelectronic device having an optical fiber in
communication therewith. The parts of the package are generally of polymer
material, preferably engineering thermoplastic, which is assembled to the
fiber having the device mounted on a printed circuit board type material,
FR4. The adhesion process of the individual parts of the package is done
typically through a solvent bonding or an epoxy curing process that is
done at room temperature, thereby eliminating the drawbacks of soldering
at high temperature which has the attendant disadvantage of built in
stress and thermal expansion resulting in misalignment of the individual
parts. The related packaging technique greatly reduces the requirements of
active alignment of the fiber to the device in the packaging of the device
and fiber. Accordingly, the overall cost of the device is reduced by
virtue of the reduced cost of the parts of the package as well as the
process for fabrication of the package.
| Inventors:
|
Jiang; Ching-Long (Bellemeade, NJ);
Mak; Eric Shek-Fai (Bellemeade, NJ);
O'Neill; Steven Patrick (Old Bridge, NJ);
Reysen; Bill Henry (Stewartsville, NJ)
|
| Assignee:
|
The Whitaker Corporation (Wilmington, DE)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
808299 |
| Filed:
|
February 28, 1997 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
385/92 |
| Intern'l Class: |
G02B 006/36 |
| Field of Search: |
385/88-94
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4186995 | Feb., 1980 | Schumacher | 350/96.
|
| 4222629 | Sep., 1980 | Dassele et al. | 350/96.
|
| 4273413 | Jun., 1981 | Bendiksen et al. | 350/96.
|
| 4302070 | Nov., 1981 | Nakayama et al. | 350/96.
|
| 4307934 | Dec., 1981 | Palmer | 350/96.
|
| 4386821 | Jun., 1983 | Simon et al. | 385/92.
|
| 4718744 | Jan., 1988 | Manning | 350/96.
|
| 4756590 | Jul., 1988 | Forrest et al. | 350/96.
|
| 4842360 | Jun., 1989 | Caro et al. | 350/96.
|
| 4897711 | Jan., 1990 | Blonder et al. | 357/74.
|
| 4911519 | Mar., 1990 | Burton et al. | 350/96.
|
| 4935856 | Jun., 1990 | Dragoon | 362/307.
|
| 4979791 | Dec., 1990 | Bowen et al. | 350/96.
|
| 5042891 | Aug., 1991 | Mulholland et al. | 385/93.
|
| 5056881 | Oct., 1991 | Bowen et al. | 359/19.
|
| 5073003 | Dec., 1991 | Clark | 385/33.
|
| 5127075 | Jun., 1992 | Althaus et al. | 385/94.
|
| 5347605 | Sep., 1994 | Isaksson | 385/92.
|
| 5386488 | Jan., 1995 | Oikawa | 385/92.
|
| 5500911 | Mar., 1996 | Roff | 385/33.
|
| 5515468 | May., 1996 | DeAndrea et al. | 385/88.
|
| 5594237 | Jan., 1997 | Kulick et al. | 250/214.
|
| 5649039 | Jul., 1997 | Benzoni et al. | 385/92.
|
| 5692083 | Nov., 1997 | Bennett | 385/88.
|
| Foreign Patent Documents |
| 0 375 251 | Jun., 1990 | EP | .
|
| 0 404 053 | Dec., 1990 | EP | .
|
| 35 43 558 | Dec., 1985 | DE | .
|
| 0 542 011 A1 | Oct., 1992 | DE | .
|
| 3031808 | Feb., 1991 | JP | .
|
| 0 573 941 A1 | Jun., 1993 | JP | .
|
| 2 162 336 | Jan., 1986 | GB | .
|
| 2178554A | Feb., 1987 | GB.
| |
| 0 545 555 A1 | Nov., 1992 | GB | .
|
Other References
Patent Abstracts of Japan; 06300942; Apr. 15, 1993.
|
Primary Examiner: Ngo; Hung N.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Francos; W.
Claims
We claim:
1. A package for an optoelectronic detector comprising:
a substrate having an optoelectronic detector mounted thereon;
a polymer housing having a first end and a second end and a substantially
cylindrical portion between said first end and said second end;
an optical fiber mounted in said cylindrical portion of said optical fiber
having a first end and a second end where said first end is in optical
communication with said optoelectronic detector; and
a spacer mounted between said first end of said housing and said substrate
for effecting alignment of said fiber to said detector in at least one
direction, wherein said substrate, said spacer, and said housing are
adhesively fixed.
2. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 1
wherein said optical fiber is housed in a ferrule, and said ferrule is
mounted in said substantially cylindrical portion of said housing.
3. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 2
wherein said optical fiber has as optic axis substantially parallel to the
geometric axis of said substantially cylindrical portion of said housing,
and said ferrule has a first end in communication with said photodetector,
said first end of said ferrule and said optical fiber being at an angle
other than orthogonal to said optical axis of said fiber.
4. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 1
wherein said adhesive fixing of said substrate, said spacer, and said
housing is by solvent bonding.
5. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 1
wherein said adhesive fixing of said substrate, said spacer, and said
housing is by other than soldering.
6. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 1
wherein said optical fiber has an optic axis substantially parallel to the
geometric axis of said substantially cylindrical portion.
7. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 6
wherein said first end of said optical fiber has an end face at an angle
other than orthogonal to the optic axis of said fiber.
8. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 7
wherein the geometric axis of said optical fiber is at an angle other than
an orthogonal to the optoelectronic photodetector.
9. A package as recited in claim 1, wherein said spacer comprises a polymer
material.
10. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector, comprising:
a substrate having a lower surface and an upper surface, and a
photodetector mounted on said upper surface;
a polymer spacer member mounted to said upper surface of said substrate;
a polymer housing member having a first end and a second end, said first
end connected to said polymer spacer member, and said housing having a
substantially cylindrical portion between said first end and said second
end, wherein said substrate, said spacer member, and said housing member
are adhesively fixed; and
an optical fiber mounted in a ferrule, said optical fiber and said ferrule
mounted in said substantially cylindrical portion of said housing, whereby
said optical fiber is in optical communication with said photodetector.
11. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 10
wherein said optical fiber has an optic axis substantially coincident with
the axis of said substantially cylindrical portion of said housing member
and said fiber has an endface in communication with said photodetector,
said endface forming an angle other than an orthogonal angle with said
optic axis.
12. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector as recited in claim 10
wherein said housing member, said spacer and said substrate are solvent
bonded.
13. A package for an optoelectronic photodetector comprising:
a substrate on which the detector is mounted;
a housing connected to the substrate having a spacer there between, wherein
said substrate, said spacer and said housing are adhesively fixed; and
an optical fiber disposed in said housing, the optical fiber in
communication with the detector, characterized in that:
the housing is made of a polymer material.
14. A package as recited in claim 1 or claim 13, wherein said polymer is a
thermoplastic material.
15. A package as recited in claim 13, wherein said spacer comprises a
polymer material.
Description
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application
60/012,463 filed on Feb. 28, 1996.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a reduced cost package for optoelectronic
devices.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is related to U.S. Pat. No. 5,594,237, to Kulick et
al., the disclosure of which is specifically incorporated herein by
reference. Fiber to the Home (FTTH) is gaining a great deal of approval in
the telecommunications industry, and accordingly there is a need to have a
large quantity of optoelectronic devices to effect the communication to
and from the home. However, as with most industries cost in the CATV
industry is a great driver in the design of the components of the CATV
market. While the devices used in the CATV industry may well have
experience a reduction in cost, and an increase in performance, one of the
major sources of cost in the industry is the required packaging of the
devices. To this end packaging is often a substantial factor in the cost
of the end product. To this end in the fiber to the home industry, where
most packaging of photodetectors is in metal and particularly brass, the
cost of the packaging is often proving to be prohibitive for large scale
use, particularly to the individual home.
The standard practice for packaging of photodetectors and other
optoelectronic devices has been to have a ceramic substrate having the
device mounted thereon, and the ceramic substrate mounted in a metal,
typically brass, housing. The various elements of the package are
thereafter soldered and effect the package device thereby. The cost of the
packaged device is driven generally by two factors, the cost of the
individual parts and the cost of complex fabrication. The cost of the
parts such as brass and a ceramic substrate, are generally much higher
than alternatives, and the alignment as well as soldering techniques are
generally complicated and thereby expensive. Accordingly what is needed is
a packaged product that is lower in cost through the intrinsic cost of the
individual parts, as well as lower in cost due to a much less complex
packaging process.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a package for an optoelectronic device
having an optical fiber in communication therewith. The parts of the
package are generally of polymer material, preferably engineering
thermoplastic, which is assembled to the fiber having the device mounted
on a printed circuit board type material, FR4. The adhesion process of the
individual parts of the package is done typically through a solvent
bonding or an epoxy curing process that is done at room temperature,
thereby eliminating the drawbacks of soldering at high temperature which
has the attendant disadvantage of built in stress and thermal expansion
resulting in misalignment of the individual parts. Furthermore, the
present invention enables the use of the above referenced CATV PIN
detector, which in combination with the packaging technique of the present
invention, reduces greatly the requirements of active alignment of the
fiber to the device in the packaging of the device and fiber. Accordingly,
the overall cost of the device is reduced by virtue of the reduced cost of
the parts of the package as well as the process for fabrication of the
package.
OBJECTS, FEATURES, AND ADVANTAGES
It is an object of the present invention to reduce the cost of packaged
photodetectors without compromising performance.
It is a feature of the present invention to have polymer package elements
for the packaged detector.
It is an advantage of the present invention to have a fiber readily aligned
to the detector by use of the housing of the package.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a cross sectional view of the package of the present invention
showing the photodetector mounted on a substrate. The packaged elements
include the packaged housing and spacer as well as the ferrule for the
optical fiber and the fiber.
FIG. 2 is a side view of the package shown in cross section in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a top view of the substrate of the present invention having the
PIN photodetector mounted thereon.
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view of the present invention shown in FIG. 1
with the detector canted relative to fiber.
FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view showing the embodiment of the present
invention wherein the fiber is inserted directly into the housing without
the use of a ferrule.
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of the embodiment shown in FIG. 5 with the
detector canted relative to the fiber.
FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view of the embodiment shown in FIG. 5 with a
canted cylindrical portion in the housing.
FIG. 8 is a cross-sectional view of the embodiment shown in FIG. 1 with a
canted cylindrical portion in the housing.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Turning to FIG. 1 we see the package housing 101 as well as the spacer
member 102 and substrate member 103 and photodetector 104 for the present
invention. Furthermore member 105 is a ferrule for the optical fiber 106
of the present invention. The fiber to device coupling is effected through
the housing member, the housing member 101 spacer 102 and ferrule 105
which are preferable thermoplastic; although polymer material in general
will suffice. The substrate 103 having the PIN detector 104 is made of
preferably FR4, general circuit board material. The assembly of the
present invention is described presently. Note that it is possible to have
a fiber mounted directly into the housing, foregoing the use of the
ferrule. This embodiment is shown in FIG. 5 and 6, and in this case, the
diameter of the cylindrical portion of the housing would be tapered down
to on the order of outside diameter of the fiber cladding at the end
closest to the detector. The fiber would then be epoxied in place by well
known techniques.
The optical fiber 106 of the present invention is mounted in a ferrule, or
is attached directly by epoxy to the housing member 101, and is in optical
communication with the photodetector 104 mounted on the substrate 103. The
individual parts of the package are adhered via a curing process,
typically a room temperature solvent bond which is described in further
detail herein. The alignment of the various elements of the package is
described presently. By virtue of the PIN detector as described in the
parent application of the present invention, active alignment is generally
not critical. The only active alignment is in determination of
responsivity, a D.C. consideration. This is a determination of the
coupling of the light from the fiber 106 to the PIN detector 104. To this
end alignment is only required in the x and y direction as shown in FIG.
3, the plane of the detector, in the present invention, by virtue of the
fact that alignment in the z direction normal to dielectric is fixed by
the spacer and fixture that positions and stops the ferrule at the desired
predetermined z position. The z position of the fiber endface has to be
chosen to provide a trade off of light uniformity and intensity
distribution on the detector photosensitive area and alignment tolerance.
Thus, the z position of the fiber end-face is driven by the application of
the device. If used in single mode fiber applications where the spot size
is desired to be relatively large, for example 40-60 microns in diameter,
the height may be 150-200 microns from the device. In applications where a
smaller spot is acceptable the distance from the end-face of the fiber to
the device can be reduced. This reduced spot size allows for greater
alignment tolerance in the x and y directions.
In the CATV PIN detector above referenced, the D.C. considerations, as
described above determine the stopping point in the alignment process in
the z direction. By virtue of the fact that the CATV PIN detector, as
described in the parent application above-referenced, is substantially
uniform in responsivity across the entire active area, x and y alignment
is reduced greatly in criticality. Furthermore, the CATV PIN detector of
the present application enables reduced photosensitive area due to
uniformity of responsivity. Accordingly, the height of the fiber relative
to the device can be tailored to maximize the performance of the device.
In practice, this is on the order of 150-200 microns. Finally, it is of
interest to note that a back-illuminated detector would allow the endface
of the fiber to touch the device, thereby greatly reducing the precision
required for z-height alignment.
As stated above, the materials used in the packaging of the present
invention enable a reduction in the cost by their very nature as well as
by the process of the assembly and fabrication of the package device. To
this end, the spacer 102, housing member 101 and ferrule 105 are
preferably made of polymer material, preferably engineering the
thermoplastic, however other polymer materials within the purview of the
artisan of ordinary skill will suffice. The ferrule member could be a
molded holder/ferrule assembly with a fiber fixed therein or could be a
direct epoxy of the fiber in a pig-tailing fashion, known well in the art.
The curing process in the prior packaging techniques is typically a solder
process or an epoxy/welding process that requires a high curing
temperature, usually too high for standard fiber. Furthermore, this
process causes thermal expansion due to the high temperature of the
soldering and welding processes when a metal housing and a ceramic
substrate are used. Accordingly, the alignment of the fiber to the PIN
detector once established is often disturbed by thermal expansion of the
various elements through the heating during the curing adhesion process
and during subsequent cooling of the various elements. Furthermore, high
temperature soldering processes typically used in assemblies with built-in
stresses, which over time or through subsequent temperature cycling can be
relieved resulting in misalignment. Accordingly, the yields are generally
much lower than is achievable in the present invention and the resulting
overall cost per part is further reduced by virtue of room temperature
solvent bonding of the various parts. To this end, the parts are aligned
in place. Solvent is then applied at the intersection of the spacer and
housing thus fixing the assemblies in place. Prior to the alignment
process, the substrate is bonded to the spacer by epoxy. The materials
used herein is polymer such as polyethersulfone and polyetherimide and the
solvent used in the bonding process of the various elements of the package
is preferably methylene chloride although other solvent families are
possible.
For the purposes of increasing performance, the end face of the
fiber/ferrule assembly shown at 107 is angle polished or angle cleared by
standard technique. This is to reduce back reflections when light
traveling in the fiber is incident upon the fiber end face and is
reflected back into the fiber. This is a standard practice in the art, and
the angle .alpha. is as shown in FIG. 4. The angle relative to the normal
to the optic axis of the fiber is preferably between 4.degree. and
15.degree.. However, this angle can be varied as is discussed below.
Furthermore, in a further embodiment, the PIN detector is canted at an
angle .beta. relative to the optic axis of the fiber or the fiber is
canted at an angle .beta. relative to the normal of the PIN detector. This
angle is also preferably in the range of 4.degree.-15.degree.. This cant
is effected to reduce back reflection from the device back into the fiber.
To this end, while an anti-reflective (AR) coating can be applied to the
device to assist in reducing back reflection to the fiber, AR coatings
usually are not perfectly anti-reflecting and increase the cost of the
device. Accordingly, it is required to cant the device and fiber relative
to one another, so reflected light from the device is not impingent within
the acceptance angle of the fiber. The present invention effects the cant
by having one side of the spacer of a lower height than the other side.
This effects the cant. Of course, the fiber can be canted by various means
including canting the fiber in a ferrule or canting the cylindrical
portion of the housing 101.
As stated, the angle .alpha. and .beta. required to obtain a given back
reflection into the fiber are related. To this end, the smaller .alpha.
is, the smaller the refraction angle of the light exiting the fiber. This
refracted light is incident on the device, and this light is partially
reflected back to the fiber from the device. Accordingly, as angle .alpha.
is decreased the angle .beta. must be increased in order to assure no
light is reflected back into the fiber. Should the angle a be made larger,
the light is refracted at a larger angle. This refracted light is incident
on the device and reflected therefrom toward the fiber. In this case the
angle .beta. can be made smaller. It is thus the case that the chosen
angle for .alpha. affects the required angle .beta. to achieve minimal
back reflection and vice-versa. The exemplary angles for .alpha. and
.beta. are 8.degree. and 6.degree. respectively. It is of interest to note
that a less preferred embodiment would be effected by a large angle
polish, greater than or equal to about 18.degree.. In this embodiment, the
light emerges from the fiber endface at substantially elliptical
cross-section due to refractive effects. It is then impingent on the
detector at a sufficient high angle that light which is reflected from the
detector is thus not incident upon the fiber core. Accordingly, no cant is
required (.beta.=0). A detector optimized for use with a beam of
elliptical cross section is disclosed in U.S. Provisional application
60/003,355 to Wilson.
The invention having been described in detail, it is clear that there are
variations in keeping with the theme in spirit of the invention to the
artist of ordinary skill. To this end, there are other materials as well
as other components that could be utilized to reduce the cost of the
device through a reduction in the cost of the particular materials as well
as the fabrication process, without sacrificing if not improving the
overall performance of the device and its interaction with the fiber. Such
variations are considered within the purview of the present invention.
* * * * *