Ultrafine-pitch C2 flip chip interconnections with solder-capped Cu pillar bumps
2009
PoP structures have been used widely in digital consumer electronics products such as digital still cameras and mobile phones. However, the final stack height from the top to the bottom package for these structures is higher than that of the current stacked die packages. To reduce the height of the package, a flip chip technology is used. Since the logic chips of mobile applications use a pad pitch of less than 80 µm or less, an ultra-fine-pitch flip chip interconnection technique is required. C4 flip chip technology is widely used in area array flip chip packages, but it is not suitable in the ultrafine-pitch flip chips because the C4 solder bumps melt and collapse on the wide opening Cu pads. Although the industry uses ultrafine-pitch interconnections between Au stud bumps on a chip and Sn/Ag pre-solder on a carrier, this flip chip technique has two major problems. One is that the need for bumps on both die and carrier drives up material costs. The other is that the long bonding process time required in the individual flip chip bonding process with associated heating and cooling steps demands large investments in equipment. To address these problems, we developed the mount and reflow with no-clean flux processes, and new interconnection techniques were developed with Cu pillars and Sn/Ag solder bumps on Al pads for wirebonding, were developed. It is very easy to control the gap between die and substrate by adjusting the Cu pillar height. Since it is unnecessary to control the collapse of the solder bumps, we call this the C2 process for direct Chip Connection (C2). The C2 bumps are connected to Cu substrate pads, which are a surface treated with OSP (Organic Solder Preservative), with reflow and no-clean processes. This technology creates the SMT/Flip Chip hybrid assembly for SoP (System on Package) use. We have produced 50 µm-pitch C2 interconnections and tested their reliability. The interconnection resistance increase caused by the reliability testing is quite small. It is clear that C2 flip chip technology provides robust solder connections at low cost. Also the C2 structure with a low-k device was evaluated and no failures were observed at 1,500 cycles in the thermal cycle test. This indicates that low-k C2 structures seem robust. For finer pitch flip chip interconnections, a wafer-level underfill process is needed to overcome the limitations of the standard capillary underfill process for ultra-narrow spaces. To date, a wafer- level underfill process exists for the C2 process with an 80-µm pitch. In addition to fine pitch interconnections, a die thickness of 70 µm is required to reduce the final stack height. Such thin die cannot be processed by the C2 process because such dies slip too easily during the reflow process. To resolve this issue, a Post-Encapsulation Grinding (PEG) method was developed. In this method the die is ground to less than 70 µm after joining and underfilling. This report presents the PEG method and reliability test results for die thicknesses 20 µm, 70 µm and 150 µm.
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