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Honeywell

18 August 2025

OKI develops Tiling crystal film bonding

Tokyo-based Oki Electric Industry Co Ltd has developed Tiling crystal film bonding (CFB) technology using its proprietary CFB technology. The technology enables the heterogeneous integration of small-diameter optical semiconductor wafers onto 300mm silicon wafers, previously not possible due to wafer size restrictions, and will contribute to the advancement of rapidly growing photonics-electronics convergence technology. OKI aims to achieve early commercialization through collaboration with partner companies and universities.

Rapid advances in artificial intelligence (AI) in recent years has fueled growing demand for data centers, making it a serious social issue to suppress increases in power consumption while expanding data processing capabilities. One solution to such a challenge currently drawing attention is technologies that achieve high-density, high-speed transmission, and low power consumption, applying photonics-electronics convergence technology that combines electronic and optical circuits. In particular, the heterogeneous integration of optical semiconductors onto silicon wafers is expected to improve performance still further by enabling the integration of silicon photonics with optical semiconductors.

Nevertheless, heterogeneous integration presents various technical challenges. For example, while silicon photonics use large-diameter 200mm (8-inch) or 300mm (12-inch) silicon wafers, optical semiconductor wafers such as indium phosphide (InP) wafers are typically smaller 50mm (2-inch) to 100mm (4-inch) compound semiconductor wafers due to the difficulty of achieving epitaxial growth. Additionally, silicon optical waveguides require nanoscale roughness control, which in turn requires heterogeneous integration processes that avoid causing damage.

The Tiling CFB technology developed by OKI overcomes this disparity in wafer sizes and allows heterogeneous integration without causing damage. The technology allows for 52 repeated tiling operations over the entire surface of a 300mm silicon wafer using a single 2-inch InP wafer, enabling efficient use of InP-based materials. The InP wafer can be reused as-is after transfer to allow material recycling and reuse, helping to reduce the environmental burden. Placement accuracy is about ±1μm, with an angular accuracy of ±0.005°. This high accuracy, when combined with OKI’s proprietary 3D intersecting waveguide silicon photonics technology, realizes high-efficiency optical coupling between optical semiconductors and silicon waveguides.

In a demonstration, a sacrificial layer and InP-based crystal films functioning as optical semiconductors were epitaxially grown on a 2-inch InP wafer, then separated into individual elements. A protective structure to prevent chemical attack when etching the sacrificial layer and a support structure for batch transfer were formed on each element. This enabled the InP-based crystal films to be successfully batch-transferred to an intermediate transfer substrate without erosion. Batch transfer to an intermediate transfer substrate is carried out to protect the silicon wafer from damage during the subsequent removal process, as removing the protective structure and support structure on the intermediate transfer substrate prevents damage to the silicon wafer during the removal process. The unique design of the intermediate transfer substrate ensures that the InP-based crystal films do not peel off, maintain adhesion during the process of removing the protective structure and support structure, and are easily transferred during the transfer process.

Furthermore, by repeatedly transferring crystal films from the intermediate transfer substrate using a CFB stamp, OKI has established Tiling CFB technology that enables tiling over the entire surface of a 300mm silicon wafer. The CFB stamp has a structure capable of selectively transferring only the crystal films required, and repeated transfer enables efficient tiling. The capacity to repeatedly transfer lower-density arrays of crystal films required for the device from a high-density array of crystal films arranged on the intermediate transfer substrate allows effective use of materials without waste. Measuring 30mm x 30mm, the CFB stamp used in this demonstration completed 52 transfers onto the entire surface of a 300mm silicon wafer in about 10 minutes, sufficient for commercial production.

OKI says that the demonstration proved the feasibility of Tiling CFB technology in the transfer from 2-inch wafers to 300mm silicon wafers. The technology can also be adapted as necessary to allow use with 3- or 4-inch InP wafers and 200mm silicon wafers. Since it can also be applied with existing optical semiconductor products, it should help to improve performance by permitting transfer to high heat-dissipation substrates and productivity by allowing the use of larger wafer sizes.

OKI reckons that Tiling CFB technology can also contribute to the advancement of photonics-electronics convergence technology and reduced environmental burden. The firm plans to strengthen collaboration with device manufacturers to achieve early commercialization of the technology.

See related items:

OKI and NTT establish mass-production technology for high-power terahertz devices by heterogeneous material bonding

OKI develops GaN lifting-off/bonding technology on Shin-Etsu’s QST substrates

Tags: Silicon photonics PICs InP

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