scholarly journals The Effect of an Ag Nanofilm on Low-Temperature Cu/Ag-Ag/Cu Chip Bonding in Air

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (20) ◽  
pp. 9444
Author(s):  
Yoonho Kim ◽  
Seungmin Park ◽  
Sarah Eunkyung Kim

Low-temperature Cu-Cu bonding technology plays a key role in high-density and high-performance 3D interconnects. Despite the advantages of good electrical and thermal conductivity and the potential for fine pitch patterns, Cu bonding is vulnerable to oxidation and the high temperature of the bonding process. In this study, chip-level Cu bonding using an Ag nanofilm at 150 °C and 180 °C was studied in air, and the effect of the Ag nanofilm was investigated. A 15-nm Ag nanofilm prevented Cu oxidation prior to the Cu bonding process in air. In the bonding process, Cu diffused rapidly to the bonding interface and pure Cu-Cu bonding occurred. However, some Ag was observed at the bonding interface due to the short bonding time of 30 min in the absence of annealing. The shear strength of the Cu/Ag-Ag/Cu bonding interface was measured to be about 23.27 MPa, with some Ag remaining at the interface. This study demonstrated the good bonding quality of Cu bonding using an Ag nanofilm at 150 °C.

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (DPC) ◽  
pp. 001531-001563
Author(s):  
Arnd Kilian ◽  
Gustavo Ramos ◽  
Rick Nichols ◽  
Robin Taylor ◽  
Vanessa Smet ◽  
...  

One constant in electronic system integration is the continuous trend towards smaller devices with increased functionality, driven by emerging mobile and high-performance applications. This brings the need for higher bandwidth at lower power, translating into increased I/O density, to enable highly-integrated systems with form factor reduction. These requirements result in the necessity of interconnection pitch-scaling, below 30 μm in the near future, and substrates with high wiring densities, leading to routing with sub 5 μm L/S where standard surface finishes (ENIG, ENEPIG) are no longer applicable. Copper pillar with solder caps technology is currently the prevalent solution for off-chip interconnections at fine pitch, dominating the high performance and mobile market with pitches as low as 40 μm in production. However, this technology faces many fundamental limitations in pitch scaling below 30 μm, due to solder bridging, IMC-solder interfacial stress management, and poor power handling capability of solders. All-copper interconnections without solder are very sought after by the semiconductor industry and have been applied to 3D-IC stacking, however no cost effective, manufacturable and scalable solution has been proposed to date for HVM and application to non CTE matched package structures. The low temperature Cu-Cu interconnection technology without solder recently patented by Georgia Tech PRC is one of the most promising solutions to this problem. The main bottleneck of copper oxidation is dealt with by application of ENIG on the Cu bumps and pads, enabling formation of a reliable metallurgical bond by thermocompression bonding (TCB) at temperatures below 200°C, in air, with cycle-times compatible with HVM targets. However, to ensure a bump collapse of 3 μm to overcome non-coplanarities and warpage, a pressure of 300MPa is used in the Process-of-Record (PoR) conditions, limiting the scalability of this technology. This paper introduces a novel Electroless Palladium / Autocatalytic Gold (EPAG) surface finish process, to enable the next generation of high density substrates and interconnections. With circa 100nm-thin Pd and Au layers, the EPAG finish can be applied to fine L/S wiring, with no risk of bridging adjacent Cu traces, even with spacing below 5 μm. Further, the EPAG finish is compatible with current interconnection processes; such as wire bonding, and the Cu pillar and solder cap technology for fine-pitch applications. For further pitch reduction, the EPAG surface finish was coupled to GT PRC's low-temperature Cu-interconnections, in an effort to reduce the bonding load for enhanced manufacturability without degrading the metallurgical bond or reliability. This paper is the first demonstration of such interconnections. The effect of the surface finish thickness and composition on the bonding load, assembly yield, quality of the metallurgical bond was extensively evaluated based on analysis of the metal interface microstructures and the chemical composition of the joints. The current PoR using Electroless Nickel / Immersion Gold (ENIG) coated Cu pillars and pads was used as reference. A novel surface finish is introduced, which allows formation of Cu-Cu interconnections without solder at lower pressure, between a silicon die and glass, organic or silicon substrate at fine pitch, allowing the performance improvements demanded by the IC Packaging Industry.


Author(s):  
Mu-Chun Wang ◽  
Kuo-Shu Huang ◽  
Zhen-Ying Hsieh ◽  
Shuang-Yuan Chen ◽  
Heng-Sheng Huang

While the process fabrication and the electronic applications develop quickly, the die size and the package type also confront the improvement from the customers’ request to achieve the better signal performance in IC products. In cost consideration and marketing competition, most of commercial IC products still adopt the wire-bond technology, except some high performance products with solder/gold balls adhesion process. For consumer ICs, the gold wire is the major material to connect the IC chip and the lead frame through the bondability technology. In the recent era, the bond pad size and pitch is always shrinking. Therefore, the bond performance strongly depends on wire bond machine to provide lighters, thinner, and more reliable IC. After pad size shrinkage, the quality of pad is more impressed for wire bond reliability, especially in fine-pitch assembly process. It’s a challenge in reliability requirement. In this study, the root cause and promising solution of bond pad contamination were investigated. One is to improve the bonding yield in wire-bond process; the other is to promote the bonding reliability after the whole assembly process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Asisa Kumar Panigrahy ◽  
Kuan-Neng Chen

Arguably, the integrated circuit (IC) industry has received robust scientific and technological attention due to the ultra-small and extremely fast transistors since past four decades that consents to Moore's law. The introduction of new interconnect materials as well as innovative architectures has aided for large-scale miniaturization of devices, but their contributions were limited. Thus, the focus has shifted toward the development of new integration approaches that reduce the interconnect delays which has been achieved successfully by three-dimensional integrated circuit (3D IC). At this juncture, semiconductor industries utilize Cu–Cu bonding as a key technique for 3D IC integration. This review paper focuses on the key role of low temperature Cu–Cu bonding, renaissance of the low temperature bonding, and current research trends to achieve low temperature Cu–Cu bonding for 3D IC and heterogeneous integration applications.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 927
Author(s):  
Jianfeng Yan

Metal nanoparticles (NPs) have attracted growing attention in recent years for electronic packaging applications. Ag NPs have emerged as a promising low-temperature bonding material owing to their unique characteristics. In this study, we mainly review our research progress on the interconnection of using polyol-based Ag NPs for electronic packaging. The synthesis, sintering-bonding process, bonding mechanism, and high-temperature joint properties of Ag NP pastes are investigated. The paste containing a high concentration of Ag NPs was prepared based on the polyol method and concentration. A nanoscale layer of organic components coated on the NPs prevents the coalescence of Ag NPs. The effects of organic components on the bondability of the Ag NP paste were studied. Compared to the aqueous-based Ag NP paste, the polyol-based Ag NP with the reduction of organic component can improve the bondability, and the coffee ring effect was successfully depressed due to the increased Marangoni flow. The sintering behaviors of Ag NPs during the bonding process were investigated using the classical sphere-to-sphere approach. The mechanical property of joints using this Ag paste was better than that using Pb95Sn5 solders after storage at high temperatures. The sintering–bonding technology using polyol-based Ag NPs was helpful to the low-temperature interconnection for electronic packaging applications.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 1310-1317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinhu Fan ◽  
Tielin Shi ◽  
Zirong Tang ◽  
Bo Gong ◽  
Junjie Li ◽  
...  

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