Kulite Leadless Technology - A Description
Historically, the interconnection between the silicon sensor and the rest of the transducer circuit
has been accomplished via fine gold wires. The wires are welded to metal contact pads on the sensor
and then to a pin or a printed circuit board elsewhere in the transducer. These wires and their welds
are susceptible to failure due to fatigue under conditions of high vibration or rapid pressure cycling.
This approach is still employed by other manufacturers of silicon pressure transducers.
In the "leadless" pressure transducer, these fine gold wires - and all the problems associated with
them - have been eliminated. The sensor is bonded to a glass layer to form a hermetically sealed,
solid mechanical structure. Gold pins embedded directly in the package insert into the glass with a
conductive paste facilitating electrical connection between the pins and sensor chip. The sensor
structure is secured and hermetically sealed to the package using specialized materials and
techniques to form a sealed, mechanically robust structure comprising the package and sensor chip.
Conventional electrical connection is made directly to the back of this sensor-header structure,
which can be installed in a wide variety of sensor housings. This allows it to be adapted to a wide
variety of applications. Even ultra-miniature pressure transducers based on this technology can be
used with any fluid, including conductive fluids, as long as they are not hostile to silicon or glass.
They can be used to temperatures as high as 1000°F (538°C). For a more
detailed description of this technology and its benefits, please visit the section of this
site titled Reference Library.