Beam Lead Technology

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Beam Lead Technology


Beam Lead Technology is the name given to the structure and method of micro-fabricating a semiconductor device structure. Its original application was to high-frequency silicon switching transistors and ultra-high-speed integrated circuits.  In the early 1960's M.P.Lepselter developed the  techniques for fabricating a structure consisting of electroforming an array of thick, self-supporting gold patterns on a thin film Ti-Pt Au base, hence the name "beams", deposited on the surface of a silicon wafer . The excess semiconductor from under the beams was removed, thereby separating the individual devices and leaving them with self-supporting beam leads, or internal chiplets, cantilevered beyond the semiconductor. The contacts served as electrical leads in addition to serving the purpose of structural support for the devices.Today this micro-machining technology is also known as MEMS.

Legacy

This technology, also known as air-bridge technology, has established itself for its unsurpassed reliability in high-frequency silicon switching transistors and ultra-high-speed integrated circuits for telecommunications and missile systems. The Beam Lead devices, produced by the hundreds of millions, became the first example of a commercial microelectromechanical structure (MEMS). A specific example of what is today called a MEMS device is the air isolated cross over, aka the "Lepselter Crossover",used in the ESS System.

Other omnipresent uses of Beam Lead Technology are the silicide process and structure (Schottky Diodes and contacts) used in every silicon integrated circuit today; plasma etching, and precision electro-forming, etc.



[BSTJ_Beam_Lead_Technology.pdf‎]File:BSTJ Beam Lead Technology.pdf[original IEEE paper.pdf]File:Original IEEE paper-1965.PDF

  [BSTJ air isolated crossovers.pdf]                                       

[Image:BSTJ_air_isolated_crossovers.pdf]                                        

Air-Isolated IC 1964 IEDM talk

Image:LOAD_RESISTOR_ISOLATION_AIM_Circuit.JPG