Hermeticity
Pressure
Material Choices
High Temperature
Features, Fabrications
Hermeticity
Challenge:
Vacuum pressure gauge requires leak rates less than 1 X
10¯10 std cc/sec Helium at 14.7 psi
Solution: Tekna Seal's proprietary oxide free sealing
process for glass seals allows us
to exceed this requirement without the expense of a ceramic-to-metal
feedthrough.
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Pressure
Challenge:
Application required hermetic seal to retain pressure in
excess of 25,000 psi
Solution: Tekna Seal helped the customer identify the failure mode in their existing design which allowed the customer to redesign their product to withstand test pressures significantly greater than the specification required.
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Material Choices
Challenge:
Customer requires hermetic seals in
titanium housing. Housing must be free and clear of additional
oxide or nitride to be suitable for welding.
Solution: Tekna Seal's
proprietary oxide-free hermetic sealing
process in combination with silica-free glass creates
a hermetic seal to titanium surface without additional oxide
or nitride required.
Challenge:
Customer design requires higher current carrying capacity
than standard glass seal pins allow without overheating.
Solution: Seals were made with Copper pins using
newly available glass with a higher coefficient of thermal
expansion than traditionally available glass materials.
Challenge: Pins must provide
corrosion resistance without plating.
Solution: Hermetic seals
were made with stainless steel pins using newly available
glass with a higher coefficient of thermal expansion than
traditionally available glass materials.
Challenge: Photonics manufacturer
wishes to package a long attenuator crystal that has a coefficient
of thermal expansion incompatible with the standard Kovar
package material.
Solution: Glass-to-metal
sealed packages using Metal-Injection-Molded housings
with alloys custom tailored to the expansion rate of the
crystal.
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High Temperature
Challenge:
Application requires seals to withstand temperatures in
excess of 500°C.
Solution: Seals were
made using crystallizing ceramic glass. Crystals reinforce
the glass allowing for reliability of the seal up to 600°C.
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Features, Fabrications
Features cast into glass
Challenge:
Interconnection requires keyed orientation integrated into
the glass seal
Solution: A ceramic doped glass with a much higher
working point temperature than the sealing glass allows
for the key feature to be economically molded into shape.
Metal Injection Molded
Challenge:
Package geometry requires complex machined features in Kovar
Solution: The housing
was manufactured as a molded package, eliminating the need
for machining. This significantly reduced the cost of the
package.
www.flomet.com
Stamping
Challenge:
Customer's design required thick and thin sections incoporated
into the stamped housing.
Solution: Tekna Seal manufactured the feedthru from two inexpensive stampings simultaneously brazed and glass sealed into a single robust assembly.
Brazed components
Challenge:
Customer requires a low thermal expansion die mount surface
in a corrosion resistant stainless steel housing.
Solution: Tekna Seal's oxide free process allows
us to simultaneously braze and glass seal, providing a low
cost solution for combining dissimilar material properties.
Integrated ESD protection
Challenge:
Manufacturer of pyrotechnic devices required suppression
of ESD threats during assembly of their initiators.
Solution: Tekna Seal
incorporated a gas arrestor integral to the hermetic seal
providing protection in all stages of manufacture of the
initiator. See US Patent no. 5768083 and 5726854.
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