Toward Industrial Exploitation of THz Frequencies: Integration of SiGe MMICs in Silicon-Micromachined Waveguide Systems

James Campion*, Yinggang Li, Herbert Zirath, Joachim Oberhammer, Ahmed Hassona, Zhongxia Simon He, Bernhard Beuerle, Adrian Gomez-Torrent, Umer Shah, Sandro Vecchiattini, Richard Lindman, Torbjorn S. Dahl

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

40 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A new integration concept for terahertz (THz) systems is presented in this article, wherein patterned silicon-on-insulator wafers form all DC, IF, and RF networks in a homogeneous medium, in contrast to existing solutions. Using this concept, silicon-micromachined waveguides are combined with silicon germanium (SiGe) monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs) for the first time. All features of the integration platform lie in the waveguide's H-plane. Heterogeneous integration of SiGe chips is achieved using a novel in-line H-plane transition. As an initial step toward complete systems, we outline the design, fabrication, and assembly of back-to-back transition structures, for use at D-band frequencies (110-170 GHz). Special focus is given to the industrial compatibility of all components, fabrication, and assembly processes, with an eye on the future commercialization of THz systems. Prototype devices are assembled via two distinct processes, one of which utilizes semiautomated die-bonding tools. Positional and orientation tolerances for each process are quantified. An accuracy of $\pm \text{3.5}\; \mu \text{m}$, $\pm \text{1.5} ^\circ$ is achieved. Measured $S$-parameters for each device are presented. The insertion loss of a single-ended transition, largely due to MMIC substrate losses, is 4.2-5.5 dB, with a bandwidth of 25 GHz (135-160 GHz). Return loss is in excess of 5 dB. Measurements confirm the excellent repeatability of the fabrication and assembly processes and, thus, their suitability for use in high-volume applications. The proposed integration concept is highly scalable, permitting its usage far into the THz frequency spectrum. This article represents the first stage in the shift to highly compact, low-cost, volume-manufacturable THz waveguide systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8848416
Pages (from-to)624-636
Number of pages13
JournalIEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology
Volume9
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Integrated circuit packaging
  • micromachined waveguide
  • monolithic microwave integrated circuit (MMIC)
  • silicon germanium (SiGe)
  • terahertz (THz)

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