Bump non-wet issue in large-die flip chip package with eutectic Sn/Pb solder bump and SOP substrate pad

Author(s):  
Z.P. Xiong ◽  
Ho Pei Sze ◽  
K.H. Chua
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
George F. Gaut

Abstract Access to the solder bump and under-fill material of flip-chip devices has presented a new problem for failure analysts. The under-fill and solder bumps have also added a new source for failure causes. A new tool has become available that can reduce the time required to analyze this area of a flip-chip package. By using precision selective area milling it is possible to remove material (die or PCB) that will allow other tools to expose the source of the failure.


Author(s):  
Jin Yang ◽  
Charles Ume

Microelectronics packaging technology has evolved from through-hole and bulk configuration to surface-mount and small-profile ones. In surface mount packaging, such as flip chips, chip scale packages (CSP), and ball grid arrays (BGA), chips/packages are attached to the substrates or printed wiring boards (PWB) using solder bump interconnections. Solder bumps, which are hidden between the device and the substrate/board, are no longer visible for inspection. A novel solder bump inspection system has been developed using laser ultrasound and interferometric techniques. This system has been successfully applied to detect solder bump defects including missing, misaligned, open, and cracked solder bumps in flip chips, and chip scale packages. This system uses a pulsed Nd:YAG laser to induce ultrasound in the thermoelastic regime and the transient out-of-plane displacement response on the device surface is measured using the interferometric technique. In this paper, local temporal coherence (LTC) analysis of laser ultrasound signals is presented and compared to previous signal processing methods, including Error Ratio and Correlation Coefficient. The results show that local temporal coherence analysis increases measurement sensitivity for inspecting solder bumps in packaged electronic devices. Laser ultrasound inspection results are also compared with X-ray and C-mode Scanning Acoustic Microscopy (CSAM) results. In particular, this paper discusses defect detection for a 6.35mm×6.35mm×0.6mm PB18 flip chip and a flip chip (SiMAF) with 24 lead-free solder bumps. These two flip chip specimens are both non-underfilled.


2008 ◽  
Vol 47-50 ◽  
pp. 907-911
Author(s):  
Chang Woo Lee ◽  
Y.S. Shin ◽  
J.H. Kim

The growth behaviour of the intermetallic compounds (IMCs) in Pb-free solder bump is investigated. The Pb-free micro-bump, Sn-50%Bi, was fabricated by binary electroplating for flip-chip bond. The diameter of the bump is about 506m and the height is about 60 6m. In order to increase the reliability of the bonding, it is necessary to protect the growth of the IMCs in interface between Cu pad and the solder bump. For control of IMCs growth, SiC particles were distributed in the micro-solder bump during electroplating. The thickness of the IMCs in the interface was estimated by FE-SEM, EDS, XRF and TEM. From the results, The IMCs were found as Cu6Sn5 and Cu3Sn. The thickness of the IMCs decreases with increase the amount of SiC particles until 4 g/cm2. The one candidate of the reasons is that the SiC particles could decrease the area which be reacted between the solder and Cu layer. And another candidate is that the particle can make to difficult inter-diffusion within the interface.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (1) ◽  
pp. 000008-000016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio La Manna ◽  
K. J. Rebibis ◽  
C. Gerets ◽  
E. Beyne

A key element for improving 3D stacking reliability is the choice of the right Underfill materials. The Underfill is a specialized adhesive that has the main purposes of locking top and bottom dies; it must fill the gap between bumps and between dies, while reducing the differential movement that would occur during thermal cycling. Traditional underfill processes are based on local dispensing after solder bump reflow (Capillary dispensing), or before flip chip operation with no need of reflow (No Flow Underfill, NUF). In case of 3D stacking, such processes present some limitations: need of a dispensing area (die size increase); material flowing (spacing between dies) and cost (low throughput). After an introduction on typical underfill applications like die-to-package and die-die assembly, we report the work done to assess the properties of several Wafer Applied Underfill (WAUF) materials and their integration in 3D stacking. These materials have been initially applied on silicon wafers in order to assess the minimum achievable thickness and the material uniformity. The wafers have been coated by using different methods: spin coating and film lamination. After this initial assessment, the most promising materials have been used for 3D stacking. The test vehicle used has Cu/Sn μbumps with a pitch of 40μm. The quality of the materials is judged by electrical test, SAM (Surface Acoustic Microscope) and X-SEM (Scanning Electron Microscope).


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 (1) ◽  
pp. 000891-000905 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rainer Dohle ◽  
Stefan Härter ◽  
Andreas Wirth ◽  
Jörg Goßler ◽  
Marek Gorywoda ◽  
...  

As the solder bump sizes continuously decrease with scaling of the geometries, current densities within individual solder bumps will increase along with higher operation temperatures of the dies. Since electromigration of flip-chip interconnects is highly affected by these factors and therefore an increasing reliability concern, long-term characterization of new interconnect developments needs to be done regarding the electromigration performance using accelerated life tests. Furthermore, a large temperature gradient exists across the solder interconnects, leading to thermomigration. In this study, a comprehensive overlook of the long-term reliability and analysis of the achieved electromigration performance of flip-chip test specimen will be given, supplemented by an in-depth material science analysis. In addition, the challenges to a better understanding of electromigration and thermomigration in ultra fine-pitch flip-chip solder joints are discussed. For all experiments, specially designed flip-chips with a pitch of 100 μm and solder bump diameters of 30–60 μm have been used [1]. Solder spheres can be made of every lead-free alloy (in our case SAC305) and are placed on a UBM which has been realized for our test chips in an electroless nickel process [2]. For the electromigration tests within this study, multiple combinations of individual current densities and temperatures were adapted to the respective solder sphere diameters. Online measurements over a time period up to 10,000 hours with separate daisy chain connections of each test coupon provide exact lifetime data during the electromigration tests. As failure modes have been identified: UBM consumption at the chip side or depletion of the Nickel layer at the substrate side, interfacial void formation at the cathode contact interface, and - to a much lesser degree - Kirkendall-like void formation at the anode side. A comparison between calculated life time data using Weibull distribution and lognormal distribution will be given.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 (1) ◽  
pp. 000420-000423
Author(s):  
Kwang-Seong Choi ◽  
Ho-Eun Bae ◽  
Haksun Lee ◽  
Hyun-Cheol Bae ◽  
Yong-Sung Eom

A novel bumping process using solder bump maker (SBM) is developed for fine-pitch flip chip bonding. It features maskless screen printing process with the result that a fine-pitch, low-cost, and lead-free solder-on-pad (SoP) technology can be easily implemented. The process includes two main steps: one is the thermally activated aggregation of solder powder on the metal pads on a substrate and the other is the reflow of the deposited powder on the pads. Only a small quantity of solder powder adjacent to the pads can join the first step, so a quite uniform SoP array on the substrate can be easily obtained regardless of the pad configurations. Through this process, an SoP array on an organic substrate with a pitch of 130 μm is, successfully, formed.


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