Category Archives: Materials and Equipment

March 15, 2012 — Semiconductor test and engineering services provider Presto Engineering selected an LTX-Credence Corporation (Nasdaq:LTXC) X-Series platform for testing wireless communications, automotive and industrial customer devices.

Presto Engineering based the tool expenditure decision on cost-of-test advantages, test time, and capabilities for advanced RF wireless, power management, and application-specific device test. Presto Engineering is seeing "constant growth for RF-related integrated test and product engineering services," said Dr. Michel Villemain, Presto Engineering founder and CEO.

Also read: Handling and test for RF devices by J. R. Schenk and Ken Kolden

The X-Series test platform, available in multiple configurations, supports a suite of DC, power, DSP, RF and digital instrumentation for mixed-signal device tests.

The tool was installed at the Presto Engineering Hub in Grenoble. "Europe is an important market for…wireless, communication, and automotive applications," said Steve Wigley, VP of marketing at LTX-Credence. Presto Engineering Hubs complement their wafer-level and packaged-part test services with test program generation, special probe technology development for high-frequency/RF applications, probe cards and load board development. Turn-key offerings include qualification (reliability testing for temperature, environmental and electrical stresses) both physical and electrical fault isolation and failure analysis, supply chain management, and more.

LTX-Credence provides semiconductor test products. Additional information can be found at www.ltxc.com.

Presto Engineering, an ISO 9001 company, delivers comprehensive test and product engineering solutions to IDM and fabless companies, with hubs in Silicon Valley, Europe and Israel. More information can be found at www.presto-eng.com.

Also read: Presto Engineering semiconductor service hub opens in Israel

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The 2012 Common Platform Technology Forum took place March 14 at the Santa Clara Convention Center, with registration topping 1200 attendees by noon. The Common Platform is a Samsung /IBM/GlobalFoundries foundry services entity created to provide a common design space with an assured production capability.

The meeting kicked off with Ana Hunter, Samsung’s foundry business VP. The Common Platform had its roots in 65nm, and is presently working with 20nm gate-last and 14nm FinFET. Pre-revenue investment in the 20nm to 14nm range approaches $10B, with $1-2B in process development, $250M in IP & design libraries, $100M in chip design and $7B in fab construction.

Gary Patton, VP of SRDC at IBM, gave the first keynote with prognostication on the kind of technology development that is in the pipeline beyond traditional CMOS scaling. We are presently in the 3D decade, both in terms of 3D transistor design and 3D packaging integration. Next will be the decade of nanotechnology materials, in which the critical device dimensions do not depend on photolithography. Long-term R&D for this coming decade is already underway, as an extremely long lead time is required for commercialization to manufacturing. In 2011 IBM broke its own US patent record with 6,000 filings, a position it has held for 19 straight years. He hopes EUV will be ready for 10nm, “but we have a dual path.” At 10nm, EUV will provide a bump in k1 factor from 0.15 to 0.55, better that we enjoyed at 90nm. The scanner still needs a 10x improvement in light power, but additional work is needed in photoresist materials and mask fabrication and inspection technology. A new EUV Center of Excellence at Albany CNSE is expected to be operational later this year. Below 80nm, resist development is focusing on directed self-assembly (DSA) of block copolymers. Presently, the 22/20nm work is being done in East Fishkill; 14/10nm at Albany; and 7nm & beyond at Yorktown Research. Fully depleted device structures are the recurring theme going forward. CNT devices provide advantages over FinFETs in terms an order of magnitude reduction in power consumption at the same operating frequency, or an order of magnitude increase in frequency at the same power. With these innovations in design constructs and materials, Gary noted that the transistors are still much more amenable to scaling than interconnects, in which RC performance and structural reliability in both the conductors and the insulators doth protest mightily with scaling. Photonic interconnects on chip continues to be an area of intense development, moving now from fundamental unit performance demonstrations to system integration. The packaging concepts that he reviewed, while challenging, we consistent with advanced packaging concepts that have been progressing over the past five years. TSV is currently in volume manufacturing for power system chips. For stacking large DRAM chips on top of high performance MPU, he expects TSV to be in production within 2 years.

Subi Kengeri, head of the advanced architecture development group, filled in for GlobalFoundries CTO Gregg Bartlett to discuss the convergence of consumer mobility applications enabled by semiconductor technology advances. Foundries are a 300mm leading edge business growing at 15% CAGR. Since 90nm, the time between design start and tape out has been extending as design complexity increases. Design cost has been increasing at a 25% CAGR, whereas fab cost has been increasing at 18%, albeit a much larger number. Smart mobile computing is starting to move into the design driver seat that has up to now been occupied by MPU and GPU functions. Gate last HkMG at 20nm has been selected to meet these needs for 3rd generation HkMG FinFET mobile devices. At 14nm FinFET, you need 100 WPH (wafers per hour) throughput with EUV to break even with 193i with multiple patterning; 180 WPH provides a compelling advantage for EUV.

Jong Shik Yoon, Senior VP Semiconductor R&D at Samsung, spoke on opportunities and challenges in 3D device integration. SOI FinFETs were pioneered by IBM, while Samsung & Intel led the development of bulk FinFETs; the Common Platform supports bulk FinFET. SOI FinFET is used by IBM for server and specialty mobile applications. CNT FET work has been going on at Samsung as well.

Simon Segars, EVP & GM of the ARM Physical IP Division, wrapped up the morning with the fabless design and manufacturing implementation perspective. Industry drivers today are mobile computing, servers and the “internet of things.” Lower cost entry level smart phones represent another billion unit market globally. Mobile networks require about 1 server for every 600 phones, which puts the server demand into perspective, particularly as servers alone become a more significant percentage of world power consumption (still single digits for now). Global internet mobile traffic for 2015 will be about 966 exabytes (that’s a whole lot of gigabytes…). Simon is confident that the collaboration infrastructure that has gotten them to 20nm is extendable to 14nm.

A panel discussion featuring R&D leaders from the 3 Common Platform partners, ARM and CNSE on the R&D pipeline for future semiconductor technology innovation followed lunch. Michael Liehr, VP Research at CNSE pointed out several ways in which the fab there operates like an industrial site, with professors leading engineering teams that function as much like an IDM process development group as a graduate student research group. GlobalFoundries in Malta, NY is currently running 32nm production and 20nm full flow qualification. Work on DSA for photolithography started at IBM in 2000 and is still not ready for prime time. Similarly, copper interconnect development work started at IBM in 1984 and didn’t go into production until 1997, and even then came as a surprise to many outsiders. This is indeed a very long development pipeline.

Rama Divakaruni, IBM Chief Technologist, and Lars Liebmann, IBM Distinguished Engineer, opened a technology session on 14nm technology development with a review of the grand challenges. EUV shows up as a fuzzy transition some time in 2H14 shortly before the 14nm production ramp begins. Development started about 30 years ago in the national labs, but they hope to be able to support integrated process flow development at Albany by YE13. This seems to add gravitas to Gary Patton’s expressed hope that it will actually be ready for 10nm. Triple patterning with 198i is proposed for M1 to maintain design protocols on a path that will provide for a relatively easy return to the EUV goal of single exposure for M1. When pressed for a volume production implementation of EUV, Lars admitted ‘not before 2015’ but could be no more specific.

Yongjoo Jeon, Samsung’s Director of Foundry Technical Marketing gave an overview of their technology offerings at 20nm. Samsung has two versions of the 20nm platform: 20LPE available June 2012 and 20LPM, scheduled for full production May 2013. The 20LPM will use double patterning for isolation, via 0 and minimum pitch M1; both are HkMG gate last. Their 20nm devices are currently 10% below target for DC performance and 20% below target for AC performance, but the root causes are known and the program is considered on schedule to meet its release dates.

Mukesh Khare, Director of Semiconductor Technology at IBM Research, described the innovation pipeline beyond 14nm. Technology elements will include strain, HkMG and FinFET variations to leverage recent innovations, but nanowires will lead the way to a brave new world. We’ve transitioned to a domain in which scaling leads to degradation rather than improvement; new materials and process innovation are required in its place. A silicon nanowire is thought to represent the ultimate extension of the fin structure. The game is already afoot for applying strain to an individual nanowire. Alternative channel material candidates include III-Vs for nFET and Ge and high % Si-Ge for pFET, though challenges remain for silicon integration and contact resistance. Carbon electronics will provide extraordinary carrier mobility and extremely long carrier mean free paths. IBM’s 40nm epitaxial graphene transistor on SiC still holds the RF performance record at 280GHz. Polymer DSA is IBM’s pipeline alternative to EUV. The technology has already been used in the dielectrics used in air gap interconnects. The photoresist analog holds the promise of providing ‘pitch in a bottle.’ The double entendre will be better appreciated on days when it does not work. In combination with 193i, DSA has been used to produce 25nm line/space pairs with excellent line edge roughness.

Michael A. Fury is a Director & Senior Technology Analyst at Techcet Group.

March 14, 2012 — Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment Inc. (AMEC) uncrated the Primo TSV200E compact, ultra-high-productivity etch tool for 200mm wafer-level packaging (WLP), micro electro mechanical systems (MEMS), light-emitting diodes (LEDs), CMOS image sensors (CIS), and other 3D IC applications.

The tool boasts a dual-station chamber architecture for faster throughput with single- or dual-wafer processing, integrated pre-heat stations, and a gas delivery design tailored for better uniformity and higher etch rates of through silicon vias (TSVs) in semiconductor die. A de-coupled high-density plasma source and bias increase etch rates at lower pressures and enable process control over a wide process window. This configuration can be extended to accommodate up to three dual-station process modules. An RF pulsing bias capability eliminates profile notching.

Also read: AMEC reactive ion etch tool enables sub-28nm nodes

AMEC claims a 30% capital-efficiency premium over other available TSV etchers. The system is flexible to etch a wide range of wafer-level features, said Tom Ni, VP at AMEC, noting a "constantly evolving" product mix at manufacturers.

Several Primo TSV200E tools are deployed for production at Q Technology Limited (Q Tech) and JCAP Corp. (JCAP) in China, supporting advanced packaging of semiconductors. 3D semiconductor packaging is "a key component of our technology roadmap, said JCAP president C.M. Lai. JCAP is meeting its product development milestones using the AMEC process modules for TSVs. JCAP has placed a repeat order, Lai noted.

AMEC expects orders soon from Taiwan and Singapore. AMEC notes that strong demand should come from China-based companies.

Development of a 300mm version is underway.

More data on the tool can be found at http://amec-inc.com/products/TSV.php.

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March 14, 2012 – PRNewswire — EV Group (EVG), semiconductor and MEMS fab equipment supplier, welcomed semiconductor materials supplier Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. Ltd. into its open platform for temporary bonding/debonding (TB/DB) materials supporting 3D semiconductor packaging. Shin-Etsu will work with customers to commercialize 3D IC packaging via wafer bond/debond in volume manufacturing environments.

Shin-Etsu’s advanced adhesives will be qualified with EVG’s EZR (Edge Zone Release) and EZD (Edge Zone Debond) process modules for ZoneBOND room-temperature debonding. Shin-Etsu MicroSi, a wholly owned subsidiary of Shin-Etsu Chemical, has worked closely with EVG’s process development teams to perform stringent test procedures for EVG ZoneBOND equipment.

A strong supply chain for temporary thin-wafer bonding is one step in "the advancement of 3D IC commercialization," noted Markus Wimplinger, EVG’s corporate technology development and IP director. Also read: EVG launches ZoneBond-capable modules and Brewer Science, EVG commercialize temporary wafer bonding with zoning laws

EVG offers ZoneBOND technology, EZR (Edge Zone Release), and EZD (Edge Zone Debond) modules for temporary wafer bonding, thin wafer processing, and debonding applications. The company touts its ability to use silicon, glass and other carriers; compatibility with existing, field-proven adhesive platforms; and the ability to debond at room temperature with virtually no vertical force applied to the device wafer. Strong adhesion occurs at the edge (perimeter) and minimal adhesion is applied to the wafer center, supporting grinding and backside processing at high temperatures and low-force carrier separation.

Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. Ltd. supplies semiconductor materials, semiconductor silicon, PVC resin, synthetic quartz glass and methylcellulose and materials including silicones and rare earth magnets. Shin-Etsu Chemical’s stock (TSE: 4063) is listed on three markets: The Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya Exchanges in Japan. Internet: http://www.shinetsu.co.jp

Shin-Etsu MicroSi Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. Ltd., providing materials and other products for photolithography, packaging, solar and flexible printed circuit applications. Internet: www.microsi.com.

EV Group (EVG) makes wafer-processing equipment for semiconductor, MEMS and nanotechnology applications.  Products include wafer bonding, lithography/nanoimprint lithography (NIL) and metrology equipment, as well as photoresist coaters, cleaners and inspection systems. More information is available at www.EVGroup.com.

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March 13, 2012 — Worldwide sales of semiconductor manufacturing equipment totaled $43.53 billion in 2011, representing a year-over-year increase of 9%, shows the Worldwide Semiconductor Equipment Market Statistics (SEMS) Report from SEMI.

Categories cover wafer processing and other front-end equipment, assembly and packaging, and test. Other front-end includes mask/reticle manufacturing, wafer manufacturing, and fab facilities equipment.

The global wafer processing equipment market segment increased 15%, the assembly and packaging segment decreased 14%, and total test equipment sales decreased 9%. Other front-end equipment sales grew by 5%.

Worldwide billings totaled $43.53 billion in 2011, compared to $39.93 billion in sales posted in 2010. Also read: Semiconductor fab equipment spending to hit a record in 2013

Spending rates varied for all the regions tracked in the WWSEMS report, with increases reported for Europe, North America, and Japan. North America surpassed Taiwan as the region with the highest amount of spending with $9.26 billion in equipment sales. The Korea market claimed the second place for the second year in a row with $8.66 billion in sales; Taiwan fell to the third position with a regional decrease of 24%.

Table. 2010-2011 Semiconductor Capital Equipment Market by World Region. (Dollars in US billions; Percentage Year-over-Year). Source: SEMI/SEAJ March 2012.

Region

2011

2010

% Change

North America

9.26

5.75

61%

South Korea

8.66

8.63

0%

Taiwan

8.52

11.25

-24%

Japan

5.81

4.44

31%

Europe

4.22

2.34

80%

China

3.65

3.68

-1%

Rest of World
(Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines,
other areas of Southeast Asia and
smaller global markets)

3.41

3.84

-11%

Total

43.53

39.93

9%

Note: Figures may not add due to rounding.

Compiled from data submitted by members of SEMI and the Semiconductor Equipment Association of Japan (SEAJ), the Worldwide SEMS Report is a summary of the monthly billings and bookings figures for the global semiconductor equipment industry. The report includes data for seven major semiconductor producing regions and 24 product categories. The Equipment Market Data Subscription (EMDS) from SEMI provides comprehensive market data for the global semiconductor equipment market. A subscription includes three reports: the monthly SEMI Book-to-Bill Report, which offers an early perspective of the trends in the equipment market; the monthly Worldwide Semiconductor Equipment Market Statistics (SEMS), a detailed report of semiconductor equipment bookings and billings for seven regions and over 22 market segments; and the SEMI Semiconductor Equipment Consensus Forecast, which provides an outlook for the semiconductor equipment market. For more information, visit www.semi.org.

March 13, 2012 — ULVAC Inc. developed solder deposition processes for silicon device packaging, including power devices, that sputters solder to deposit it rather than printing or evaporating the materials. The 2 processes eliminate gold, or gold and nickel, from the step.

Electrodes on the back of power devices (IGBTs, MOSFETs) make ohmic contact with silicon substrates and provide heat sinks for solder joints. A typical deposition composition is formed from the layer closest to the Si substrate by an aluminum or silicide ohmic contact layer; a titanium barrier metal layer; a nickel bonding film layer; and a gold deposition layer, which prevents surface oxidation and improves soldering.

In current device manufacturing processes, these electrode layers are deposited by sputtering or evaporation; then, electrodes are taken out of the vacuum for solder deposition at a given thickness. Finally, they are joined to a heat sink substrate by reflow soldering. Efforts are being made to reduce the thickness of the Au deposition layer on the electrode surface as well as to use alternative materials.

The ULVAC solder sputtering method claims the same or higher joining strength than the conventional process, with reduced cost. Sputtering deposition occurs in the vacuum immediately after Ni film deposition, without Au film deposition on the surface of Si device electrodes.

Process 1: Solder pasting/solder sputtering/Ni/Ti/Al/Si wafer (no use of Au)
This process deposits a 0.5um tin/silver/copper (Sn-Ag-Cu, SAC) lead-free solder layer by vacuum sputtering immediately after depositing the Ni film layer. The Ni film layer serves the solder layer is used as the joining layer on the electrode surface. Sputter deposition of Ni and solder not only provides soldering with solder paste and the same joining strength, but also makes it possible to reduce material costs by approximately 50% compared with conventional electrodes with Au layers.

Process 2: Solder pasting/solder sputtering/Ti/Al/Si wafer (no use of Au or Ni)
This process eliminates the use of Au and Ni, further reducing electrode film material costs. A Ti film is an alternative to Ni, forming an alloy with Sn at a reflow temperature of about 230C for similar solder joints as those made conventionally.

ULVAC’s SRH series sputtering deposition systems are used in these new processes, and form backside electrodes for power devices, electroplating seed layers in wafer-level chipscale packages (WLCSP), barrier metals for under-bump metallization (UBM), and other devices.

Demonstrations of the newly developed processes will be performed at ULVAC’s Chigasaki Plant, Japan, starting in April.

The details of the newly developed technology will be presented at the 59th Spring Conference of the Japan Society of Applied Physics (6.4 Novel materials for thin films: 16a-F2-12) to be held at Waseda University’s Waseda Campus in Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, March 15 to 17.

ULVAC, Inc., is a vacuum equipment manufacturer for flat panel displays, solar cells, semiconductors, electronic components, and general industrial equipment manufacturing. For more information, visit www.ulvac.co.jp/eng/

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March 12, 2012 — At the recent IMAPS Device Packaging Conference in Ft McDowell, AZ, Solid State Technology’s Insights from the Leading Edge (IFTLE) brought together a panel of manufacturers, users and market specialists to discuss the Evolving 2.5D / 3D Infrastructure.

Panel host and Solid State Technology contributing editor Phil Garrou was joined by Douglas Yu, Sr Director of front end and back end technology development for TSMC; Jonathon Greenwood, Director of Packaging R&D at GlobalFoundries; Remi Yu, Deputy Division Director of UMC; Nick Kim, VP of electronic packaging technologies at Hynix; Rich Rice, Sr VP of sales for ASE ; Ron Huemoeller, VP of Advanced 3D interconnect at Amkor; Matt Nowak, Sr Director of Engineering at Qualcomm and Jan Vardaman, President of TechSearch Inc.

Photo [l to r]: Yu (TSMC), Garrou (IFTLE), Huemoeller (Amkor), Vardaman (TechSearch), Greenwood (GlobalFoundries), Yu (UMC), Kim (Hynix), Nowak (Qualcomm), Rice (ASE).

 

While TSV technology appears to be stabilizing…

Panelists were unanimous in their descriptions of mainstream 3D packaging being represented by 5-8

March 9, 2012 — Kulicke & Soffa Industries Inc. (K&S, NASDAQ:KLIC) introduced its ConnX Plus high-speed ball bonder for semiconductor packaging.

The second-generation ball bonder is part of K&S’ Power Series, with higher productivity (more units per hour bonded and new tool features) than the previous generation in low pin count, discrete and cost/performance packaging applications, the company reports.

New features on the next-gen ball bonder include Interactive Programmable Look Ahead Vision to ease first time set-up; Power Series Xpress Loop to help increase the productivity of short wire applications; optional Dual Mag Optics Kit integration for stacked-die bonding; and 10% more units per hour (UPH) than the prior model. The ConnX Plus is field upgradable to the ConnX Plus LAPS, supporting an 87mm2 bondable area.

The ConnX Plus will debut at the Semicon China show at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre from March 20-22, 2012. Also debuting at K&S’ booth: LUMOS Capillary for LED wire bonding and new AccuPlus Hub Blades for discrete semiconductor dicing.

Kulicke & Soffa (NASDAQ: KLIC) designs and manufactures semiconductor and LED assembly equipment. Internet: www.kns.com.

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March 9, 2012 — Kulicke & Soffa Industries Inc. (K&S, NASDAQ:KLIC) launched the LUMOS Capillary for light-emitting diode (LED) die wire bonding. The capillary can bond with gold or gold-alloy wires and uses a new TG ceramic material for better workability.

The LUMOS is designed for LED packaging specifically, targeting better bond quality and more stable process, permitting lower level of assist and higher productivity throughout the bonding process. Its fine granular tip surface morphology helps maintain excellent second bonds over a longer bonding time.

The LUMOS Capillary will debut at the Semicon China show at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre from March 20-22, 2012. Also at K&S’ booth: New AccuPlus Hub Blades for discrete semiconductor dicing and the ConnX Plus high-speed ball bonder for low-pin-count semiconductor packaging.

Kulicke & Soffa (NASDAQ: KLIC) designs and manufactures semiconductor and LED assembly equipment. Internet: www.kns.com.

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March 9, 2012 — Kulicke & Soffa Industries Inc. (K&S, NASDAQ:KLIC) launched its AccuPlus Hub Blades product line, customizable blades for discrete wafer dicing.  

Discrete semiconductors are fabbed on thinned wafers, and die sizes are generally small. This presents die movement and blade loading challenges at the wafer dicing step, notes K&S.

To prevent die chipping and cracks during wafer dicing, key blade elements were optimized: diamond grit size, diamond concentration, and nickel bond hardness. The blades boast a shortened pre-cut process, two special nickel bond hardness series, multi-levels of diamond concentration, and a special hub material and design for high spindle frequency with lower vibration.

The Discrete Series