Paper
12 December 2003 Frit bonding: a way to larger and more complex silicon components
Frank M. Anthony, Douglas R. McCarter, Matthew Tangedahl, Mallory Wright
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The value of glass frit bonding to assemble silicon parts wa demonstrated by the successful evaluation of cryostability of a small multi-piece silicon mirror. This bonding technique has been extended to the assembly of a 44kg block of silicon, 113 x 400 x 400 mm. Such an assembly was considered to be a cost competitive alternative to the purchase of a custom sized silicon boule. Various types of evaluation provided the foundation upon which this accomplishment is based. Included were cryocycling of frit bonded plates, comparison of the strength of bonded silicon bend bars with that of silicon bend bars, and the fabrication and cryotest of a small concave frit bonded silicon mirror. Of the 16 bonded bars in two groups only 2 had failures in the bondline, 11 failed in the silicon, and origins could not be determined for 3 bars. The two groups of bonded silicon bars had average strengths that were 84% and 91% of the average strength of the plain silicon bars. In view of the relatively small number of bars in each group this is not surprising. The cryostability of the concave bonded silicon mirror was demonstrated by a figure error of less than 0.06 wave rms at 633 nm, cold to warm, compared to a specification of 0.1 wave rms, and 0.014 wave rms, warm to cold to warm, over an 80% clear aperture. These results are reviewed before interesting features of the large block are discussed. Finally, projections are made regarding possible future applications for this bonding process.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Frank M. Anthony, Douglas R. McCarter, Matthew Tangedahl, and Mallory Wright "Frit bonding: a way to larger and more complex silicon components", Proc. SPIE 5179, Optical Materials and Structures Technologies, (12 December 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.501546
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Mirrors

Custom fabrication

Glasses

Lab on a chip

Cryogenics

Assembly tolerances

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