SIMULTANEOUS ELECTRO-THERMAL TEST
METHOD FOR PYROELECTRIC MICROSENSORS
ABSTRACT
Pyroelectric film materials, including polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF)
and its copolymers (e.g., P(VDF/TrFe)), are attractive candidates for
low-cost infrared detection and imaging applications due to their compatibility
with CMOS processing and inexpensive packaging requirements compared to
semiconductor-based detectors. The pyroelectric coefficient (p) describes
the material's electric response to a change in sensor temperature and
is the main contributor to the sensitivity and detectivity of the system.
However, this value can vary greatly with film fabrication and poling
processes, and its measurement is often highly coupled to the material's
thermal diffusivity. This paper describes a new approach to film characterization
that combines the popular "3-omega" technique for thermal characterization
with a modified version of the laser intensity modulation method (LIMM)
for determining the film's pyroelectric coefficient. The new method is
capable of simultaneously measuring film conductivity, diffusivity, and
pyroelectric coefficient. It could increase the accuracy of the pyroelectric
measurements by providing in-situ thermal data to the electrical model
instead of relying on published values or thermal measurements of a different
sample. We also present a fabrication process that can be used to pole
and measure a variety of pyroelectric materials and a mathematical framework
to study the thermal phenomena of the setup. The thermal model is used
to highlight the methodology's sensitivity to uncertainties in the geometric
and material property values of the layers surrounding the pyroelectric
film.
Index Terms — film thermal conductivity, pyroelectric coefficient, measurement,
infrared sensor, IRFPA.
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