Category Archives: Wafer Level Packaging

Qualcomm Incorporated today announced that it has reached a resolution with China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) regarding the NDRC’s investigation of Qualcomm under China’s Anti-Monopoly Law (AML). The NDRC has issued an Administrative Sanction Decision finding that Qualcomm has violated the AML. Qualcomm will not pursue further legal proceedings contesting the NDRC’s findings. Qualcomm has agreed to implement a rectification plan that modifies certain of its business practices in China and that fully satisfies the requirements of the NDRC’s order.

Although Qualcomm is disappointed with the results of the investigation, it is pleased that the NDRC has reviewed and approved the Company’s rectification plan. The following are the key terms of the rectification plan:

  • Qualcomm will offer licenses to its current 3G and 4G essential Chinese patents separately from licenses to its other patents and it will provide patent lists during the negotiation process. If Qualcomm seeks a cross license from a Chinese licensee as part of such offer, it will negotiate with the licensee in good faith and provide fair consideration for such rights.
  • For licenses of Qualcomm’s 3G and 4G essential Chinese patents for branded devices sold for use in China, Qualcomm will charge royalties of 5% for 3G devices (including multimode 3G/4G devices) and 3.5% for 4G devices (including 3-mode LTE-TDD devices) that do not implement CDMA or WCDMA, in each case using a royalty base of 65% of the net selling price of the device.
  • Qualcomm will give its existing licensees an opportunity to elect to take the new terms for sales of branded devices for use in Chinaas of January 1, 2015.
  • Qualcomm will not condition the sale of baseband chips on the chip customer signing a license agreement with terms that the NDRC found to be unreasonable or on the chip customer not challenging unreasonable terms in its license agreement. However, this does not require Qualcomm to sell chips to any entity that is not a Qualcomm licensee, and does not apply to a chip customer that refuses to report its sales of licensed devices as required by its patent license agreement.

In addition, the NDRC imposed a fine on the Company of 6.088 billion Chinese Yuan Renminbi (approximately $975 million at current exchange rates), which Qualcomm will not contest. Qualcomm will pay the fine on a timely basis as required by the NDRC.

“We are pleased that the investigation has concluded and believe that our licensing business is now well positioned to fully participate in China’s rapidly accelerating adoption of our 3G/4G technology,” said Derek Aberle, president of Qualcomm. “We appreciate the NDRC’s acknowledgment of the value and importance of Qualcomm’s technology and many contributions to China, and look forward to its future support of our business in China.”

“Qualcomm has played an important role in the success of the mobile and semiconductor industries in China for many years, and we look forward to building upon this foundation as we grow our investments, engagement and business in China,” said Steve Mollenkopf, CEO of Qualcomm. “We are pleased that the resolution has removed the uncertainty surrounding our business in China, and we will now focus our full attention and resources on supporting our customers and partners in China and pursuing the many opportunities ahead.”

Qualcomm is proud to have contributed extensively for many years to the growth and success of the mobile and semiconductor industries in China, and plans to continue to grow its investments and collaborations going forward, including with China’s mobile operators and handset and other device suppliers, and within the Chinese semiconductor sector. Some recent examples of these investments and support include:

  • Providing extensive engineering assistance and support to China’s mobile operators in rolling out their 4G LTE networks in China.
  • Working closely with Chinese handset manufacturers to build their businesses both inside and outside of China as they seek to become top global brands and leading global suppliers of smartphones.
  • Expanding Qualcomm’s longstanding relationship with Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), one of China’s largest and most advanced semiconductor foundries, which has led to SMIC’s major milestone of producing high-performance, low-power mobile processors using cutting-edge advanced 28nm technology.
  • Creating a China-specific investment fund of $150 million to further the development of mobile and semiconductor technologies, including initial investments from the fund in five innovative Chinese companies.

Leading industry experts provide their perspectives on what to expect in 2015. 3D devices and 3D integration, rising process complexity and “big data” are among the hot topics.

Entering the 3D era

Ghanayem_SSteve Ghanayem, vice president, general manager, Transistor and Interconnect Group, Applied Materials

This year, the semiconductor industry celebrates the 50th anniversary of Moore’s Law. We are at the onset of the 3D era. We expect to see broad adoption of 3D FinFETs in logic and foundry. Investments in 3D NAND manufacturing are expanding as this technology takes hold. This historic 3D transformation impacting both logic and memory devices underscores the aggressive pace of technology innovation in the age of mobility. The benefits of going 3D — lower power consumption, increased processing performance, denser storage capacity and smaller form factors — are essential for the industry to enable new mobility, connectivity and Internet of Things applications.

The semiconductor equipment industry plays a major role in enabling this 3D transformation through new materials, capabilities and processes. Fabricating leading-edge 3D FinFET and NAND devices adds complexity in chip manufacturing that has soared with each node transition. The 3D structure poses unique challenges for deposition, etch, planarization, materials modification and selective processes to create a yielding device, requiring significant innovations in critical dimension control, structural integrity and interface preparation. As chips get smaller and more complex, variations accumulate while process tolerances shrink, eroding performance and yields. Chipmakers need cost-effective solutions to rapidly ramp device yield to maintain the cadence of Moore’s Law. Given these challenges, 2015 will be the year when precision materials engineering technologies are put to the test to demonstrate high-volume manufacturing capabilities for 3D devices.

Achieving excellent device performance and yield for 3D devices demands equipment engineering expertise leveraging decades of knowledge to deliver the optimal system architecture with wide process window. Process technology innovation and new materials with atomic-scale precision are vital for transistor, interconnect and patterning applications. For instance, transistor fabrication requires precise control of fin width, limiting variation from etching to lithography. Contact formation requires precision metal film deposition and atomic-level interface control, critical to lowering contact resistance. In interconnect, new materials such as cobalt are needed to improve gap fill and reliability of narrow lines as density increases with each technology node. Looking forward, these precision materials engineering technologies will be the foundation for continued materials-enabled scaling for many years to come.

Increasing process complexity and opportunities for innovation

trafasBrian Trafas, Chief Marketing Officer, KLA-Tencor Corporation

The 2014 calendar year started with promise and optimism for the semiconductor industry, and it concluded with similar sentiments. While the concern of financial risk and industry consolidation interjects itself at times to overshadow the industry, there is much to be positive about as we arrive in the new year. From increases in equipment spending and revenue in the materials market, to record level silicon wafer shipments projections, 2015 forecasts all point in the right direction. Industry players are also doing their part to address new challenges, creating strategies to overcome complexities associated with innovative techniques, such as multipatterning and 3D architectures.

The semiconductor industry continues to explore new technologies, including 3DIC, TSV, and FinFETs, which carry challenges that also happen to represent opportunities. First, for memory as well as foundry logic, the need for multipatterning to extend lithography is a key focus. We’re seeing some of the value of a traditional lithography tool shifting into some of the non-litho processing steps. As such, customers need to monitor litho and non-litho sources of error and critical defects to be able to yield successfully at next generation nodes.  To enable successful yields with decreasing patterning process windows, it is essential to address all sources of error to provide feed forward and feed backward correctly.

The transition from 2D to 3D in memory and logic is another focus area.  3D leads to tighter process margins because of the added steps and complexity.  Addressing specific yield issues associated with 3D is a great opportunity for companies that can provide value in addressing the challenges customers are facing with these unique architectures.

The wearable, intelligent mobile and IoT markets are continuing to grow rapidly and bring new opportunities. We expect the IoT will drive higher levels of semiconductor content and contribute to future growth in the industry. The demand for these types of devices will add to the entire value chain including semiconductor devices but also software and services.  The semiconductor content in these devices can provide growth opportunities for microcontrollers and embedded processors as well sensing semiconductor devices.

Critical to our industry’s success is tight collaboration among peers and with customers. With such complexity to the market and IC technology, it is very important to work together to understand challenges and identify where there are opportunities to provide value to customers, ultimately helping them to make the right investments and meet their ramps.

Controlling manufacturing variability key to success at 10nm

Rick_Gottscho_Lam_ResearchRichard Gottscho, Ph.D., Executive Vice President, Global Products, Lam Research Corporation 

This year, the semiconductor industry should see the emergence of chip-making at the 10nm technology node. When building devices with geometries this small, controlling manufacturing process variability is essential and most challenging since variation tolerance scales with device dimensions.

Controlling variability has always been important for improving yield and device performance. With every advance in technology and change in design rule, tighter process controls are needed to achieve these benefits. At the 22/20nm technology node, for instance, variation tolerance for CDs (critical dimensions) can be as small as one nanometer, or about 14 atomic layers; for the 10nm node, it can be less than 0.5nm, or just 3 – 4 atomic layers. Innovations that drive continuous scaling to sub-20nm nodes, such as 3D FinFET devices and double/quadruple patterning schemes, add to the challenge of reducing variability. For example, multiple patterning processes require more stringent control of each step because additional process steps are needed to create the initial mask:  more steps mean more variability overall. Multiple patterning puts greater constraints not only on lithography, but also on deposition and etching.

Three types of process variation must be addressed:  within each die or integrated circuit at an atomic level, from die to die (across the wafer), and from wafer to wafer (within a lot, lot to lot, chamber to chamber, and fab to fab). At the device level, controlling CD variation to within a few atoms will increasingly require the application of technologies such as atomic layer deposition (ALD) and atomic layer etching (ALE). Historically, some of these processes were deemed too slow for commercial production. Fortunately, we now have cost-effective solutions, and they are finding their way into volume manufacturing.

To complement these capabilities, advanced process control (APC) will be incorporated into systems to tune chemical and electrical gradients across the wafer, further reducing die-to-die variation. In addition, chamber matching has never been more important. Big data analytics and subsystem diagnostics are being developed and deployed to ensure that every system in a fab produces wafers with the same process results to atomic precision.

Looking ahead, we expect these new capabilities for advanced variability control to move into production environments sometime this year, enabling 10nm-node device fabrication.

2015: The year 3D-IC integration finally comes of age

SONY DSCPaul Lindner, Executive Technology Director, EV Group

2015 will mark an important turning point in the course of 3D-IC technology adoption, as the semiconductor industry moves 3D-IC fully out of development and prototyping stages onto the production floor. In several applications, this transition is already taking place. To date, at least a dozen components in a typical smart phone employing 3D-IC manufacturing technologies. While the application processor and memory in these smart devices continue to be stacked at a package level (POP), many other device components—including image sensors, MEMS, RF front end and filter devices—are now realizing the promise of 3D-IC, namely reduced form factor, increased performance and most importantly reduced manufacturing cost.

The increasing adoption of wearable mobile consumer products will also accelerate the need for higher density integration and reduced form factor, particularly with respect to MEMS devices. More functionality will be integrated both within the same device as well as within one package via 3D stacking. Nine-axis international measurement units (IMUs, which comprise three accelerometers, three gyroscopes and three magnetic axes) will see reductions in size, cost, power consumption and ease of integration.

On the other side of the data stream at data centers, expect to see new developments around 3D-IC technology coming to market in 2015 as well. Compound semiconductors integrated with photonics and CMOS will trigger the replacement of copper wiring with optical fibers to drive down power consumption and electricity costs, thanks to 3D stacking technologies. The recent introduction of stacked DRAM with high-performance microprocessors, such as Intel’s Knights Landing processor, already demonstrate how 3D-IC technology is finally delivering on its promises across many different applications.

Across these various applications that are integrating stacked 3D-IC architectures, wafer bonding will play a key role. This is true for 3D-ICs integrating through silicon vias (TSVs), where temporary bonding in the manufacturing flow or permanent bonding at the wafer-level is essential. It’s the case for reducing power consumption in wearable products integrating MEMS devices, where encapsulating higher vacuum levels will enable low-power operation of gyroscopes. Finally, wafer-level hybrid fusion bonding—a technology that permanently connects wafers both mechanically and electrically in a single process step and supports the development of thinner devices by eliminating adhesive thickness and the need for bumps and pillars—is one of the promising new processes that we expect to see utilized in device manufacturing starting in 2015.

2015: Curvilinear Shapes Are Coming

Aki_Fujimura_D2S_midresAki Fujimura, CEO, D2S

For the semiconductor industry, 2015 will be the start of one of the most interesting periods in the history of Moore’s Law. For the first time in two decades, the fundamental machine architecture of the mask writer is going to change over the next few years—from Variable Shaped Beam (VSB) to multi-beam. Multi-beam mask writing is likely the final frontier—the technology that will take us to the end of the Moore’s Law era. The write times associated with multi-beam writers are constant regardless of the complexity of the mask patterns, and this changes everything. It will open up a new world of opportunities for complex mask making that make trade-offs between design rules, mask/wafer yields and mask write-times a thing of the past. The upstream effects of this may yet be underappreciated.

While high-volume production of multi-beam mask writing machines may not arrive in time for the 10nm node, the industry is expressing little doubt of its arrival by the 7nm node. Since transitions of this magnitude take several years to successfully permeate through the ecosystem, 2015 is the right time to start preparing for the impact of this change.  Multi-beam mask writing enables the creation of very complex mask shapes (even ideal curvilinear shapes). When used in conjunction with optical proximity correction (OPC), inverse lithography technology (ILT) and pixelated masks, this enables more precise wafer writing with improved process margin.  Improving process margin on both the mask and wafer will allow design rules to be tighter, which will re-activate the transistor-density benefit of Moore’s Law.

The prospect of multi-beam mask writing makes it clear that OPC needs to yield better wafer quality by taking advantage of complex mask shapes. This clear direction for the future and the need for more process margin and overlay accuracy at the 10nm node aligns to require complex mask shapes at 10nm. Technologies such as model-based mask data preparation (MB-MDP) will take center stage in 2015 as a bridge to 10nm using VSB mask writing.

Whether for VSB mask writing or for multi-beam mask writing, the shapes we need to write on masks are increasingly complex, increasingly curvilinear, and smaller in minimum width and space. The overwhelming trend in mask data preparation is the shift from deterministic, rule-based, geometric, context-independent, shape-modulated, rectangular processing to statistical, simulation-based, context-dependent, dose- and shape-modulated, any-shape processing. We will all be witnesses to the start of this fundamental change as 2015 unfolds. It will be a very exciting time indeed.

Data integration and advanced packaging driving growth in 2015

mike_plisinski_hiMike Plisinski, Chief Operating Officer, Rudolph Technologies, Inc.

We see two important trends that we expect to have major impact in 2015. The first is a continuing investment in developing and implementing 3D integration and advanced packaging processes, driven not only by the demand for more power and functionality in smaller volumes, but also by the dramatic escalation in the number and density I/O lines per die. This includes not only through silicon vias, but also copper pillar bumps, fan-out packaging, hyper-efficient panel-based packaging processes that use dedicated lithography system on rectangular substrates. As the back end adopts and adapts processes from the front end, the lines that have traditionally separated these areas are blurring. Advanced packaging processes require significantly more inspection and control than conventional packaging and this trend is still only in its early stages.

The other trend has a broader impact on the market as a whole. As consumer electronics becomes a more predominant driver of our industry, manufacturers are under increasing pressure to ramp new products faster and at higher volumes than ever before. Winning or losing an order from a mega cell phone manufacturer can make or break a year, and those orders are being won based on technology and quality, not only price as in the past. This is forcing manufacturers to look for more comprehensive solutions to their process challenges. Instead of buying a tool that meets certain criteria of their established infrastructure, then getting IT to connect it and interpret the data and write the charts and reports for the process engineers so they can use the tool, manufacturers are now pushing much of this onto their vendors, saying, “We want you to provide a working tool that’s going to meet these specs right away and provide us the information we need to adjust and control our process going forward.” They want information, not just data.

Rudolph has made, and will continue to make, major investments in the development of automated analytics for process data. Now more than ever, when our customer buys a system from us, whatever its application – lithography, metrology, inspection or something new, they also want to correlate the data it generates with data from other tools across the process in order to provide more information about process adjustments. We expect these same customer demands to drive a new wave of collaboration among vendors, and we welcome the opportunity to work together to provide more comprehensive solutions for the benefit of our mutual customers.

Process Data – From Famine to Feast

Jack Hager Head ShotJack Hager, Product Marketing Manager, FEI

As shrinking device sizes have forced manufacturers to move from SEM to TEM for analysis and measurement of critical features, process and integration engineers have often found themselves having to make critical decisions using meagre rations of process data. Recent advances in automated TEM sample preparation, using FIBs to prepare high quality, ultra-thin site-specific samples, have opened the tap on the flow of data. Engineers can now make statistically-sound decisions in an environment of abundant data. The availability of fast, high-quality TEM data has whet their appetites for even more data, and the resulting demand is drawing sample preparation systems, and in some cases, TEMs, out of remote laboratories and onto the fab floor or in a “near-line” location. With the high degree of automation of both the sample preparation and TEM, the process engineers, who ultimately consume the data, can now own and operate the systems that generate this data, thus having control over the amount of data created.

The proliferation of exotic materials and new 3D architectures at the most advanced nodes has dramatically increased the need for fast, accurate process data. The days when performance improvements required no more than a relatively simple “shrink” of basically 2D designs using well-understood processes are long gone. Complex, new processes require additional monitoring to aide in process control and failure analysis troubleshooting. Defects, both electrical and physical, are not only more numerous, but typically smaller and more varied. These defects are often buried below the exposed surface which limits traditional inline defect-monitoring equipment effectiveness. This has resulted in renewed challenges in diagnosing their root causes. TEM analysis now plays a more prevalent role providing defect insights that allow actionable process changes.

While process technologies have changed radically, market fundamentals have not. First to market still commands premium prices and builds market share. And time to market is determined largely by the speed with which new manufacturing processes can be developed and ramped to high yields at high volumes. It is in these critical phases of development and ramp that the speed and accuracy of automated sample preparation and TEM analysis is proving most valuable. The methodology has already been adopted by leading manufacturers across the industry – logic and memory, IDM and foundry. We expect the adoption to continue, and with it, the migration of sample preparation and advanced measurement and analytical systems into the fab. 

Diversification of processes, materials will drive integration and customization in sub-fab

Kate Wilson PhotoKate Wilson, Global Applications Director, Edwards

We expect the proliferation of new processes, materials and architectures at the most advanced nodes to drive significant changes in the sub fab where we live. In particular, we expect to see a continuing move toward the integration of vacuum pumping and abatement functions, with custom tuning to optimize performance for the increasingly diverse array of applications becoming a requirement. There is an increased requirement for additional features around the core units such as thermal management, heated N2 injection, and precursor treatment pre- and post-pump that also need to be managed.

Integration offers clear advantages, not only in cost savings but also in safety, speed of installation, smaller footprint, consistent implementation of correct components, optimized set-ups and controlled ownership of the process effluents until they are abated reliably to safe levels. The benefits are not always immediately apparent. Just as effective integration is much more than simply adding a pump to an abatement system, the initial cost of an integrated system is more than the cost of the individual components. The cost benefits in a properly integrated system accrue primarily from increased efficiencies and reliability over the life of the system, and the magnitude of the benefit depends on the complexity of the process. In harsh applications, including deposition processes such as CVD, Epi and ALD, integrated systems provide significant improvements in uptime, service intervals and product lifetimes as well as significant safety benefits.

The trend toward increasing process customization impacts the move toward integration through its requirement that the integrator have detailed knowledge of the process and its by-products. Each manufacturer may use a slightly different recipe and a small change in materials or concentrations can have a large effect on pumping and abatement performance. This variability must be addressed not only in the design of the integrated system but also in tuning its operation during initial commissioning and throughout its lifetime to achieve optimal performance. Successful realization of the benefits of integration will rely heavily on continuing support based on broad application knowledge and experience.

Giga-scale challenges will dominate 2015

Dr. Zhihong Liu

Dr. Zhihong Liu, Executive Chairman, ProPlus Design Solutions, Inc.

It wasn’t all that long ago when nano-scale was the term the semiconductor industry used to describe small transistor sizes to indicate technological advancement. Today, with Moore’s Law slowing down at sub-28nm, the term more often heard is giga-scale due to a leap forward in complexity challenges caused in large measure by the massive amounts of big data now part of all chip design.

Nano-scale technological advancement has enabled giga-sized applications for more varieties of technology platforms, including the most popular mobile, IoT and wearable devices. EDA tools must respond to such a trend. On one side, accurately modeling nano-scale devices, including complex physical effects due to small geometry sizes and complicated device structures, has increased in importance and difficulties. Designers now demand more from foundries and have higher standards for PDK and model accuracies. They need to have a deep understanding of the process platform in order to  make their chip or IP competitive.

On the other side, giga-scale designs require accurate tools to handle increasing design size. The small supply voltage associated with technology advancement and low-power applications, and the impact of various process variation effects, have reduced available design margins. Furthermore, the big circuit size has made the design sensitive to small leakage current and small noise margin. Accuracy will soon become the bottleneck for giga-scale designs.

However, traditional design tools for big designs, such as FastSPICE for simulation and verification, mostly trade-off accuracy for capacity and performance. One particular example will be the need for accurate memory design, e.g., large instance memory characterization, or full-chip timing and power verification. Because embedded memory may occupy more than 50 percent of chip die area, it will have a significant impact on chip performance and power. For advanced designs, power or timing characterization and verification require much higher accuracy than what FastSPICE can offer –– 5 percent or less errors compared to golden SPICE.

To meet the giga-scale challenges outlined above, the next-generation circuit simulator must offer the high accuracy of a traditional SPICE simulator, and have similar capacity and performance advantages of a FastSPICE simulator. New entrants into the giga-scale SPICE simulation market readily handle the latest process technologies, such as 16/14nm FinFET, which adds further challenges to capacity and accuracy.

One giga-scale SPICE simulator can cover small and large block simulations, characterization, or full-chip verifications, with a pure SPICE engine that guarantees accuracy, and eliminates inconsistencies in the traditional design flow.  It can be used as the golden reference for FastSPICE applications, or directly replace FastSPICE for memory designs.

The giga-scale era in chip design is here and giga-scale SPICE simulators are commercially available to meet the need.

Amkor Technology, Inc. today announced the settlement of its outstanding litigation and arbitration proceedings with Tessera, Inc.

Under the terms of the settlement, Amkor has agreed to pay Tessera a total of $155 million in equal quarterly installments over the next four years, and the parties have agreed to a mutual release and dismissal of all claims relating to their pending litigation and arbitration proceedings, including the previously awarded judgment of $128.3 million plus interest. The settlement agreement also provides that Tessera and Amkor will look for opportunities to engage in potential technology collaboration.

“We are pleased to have reached a comprehensive resolution in this long-running dispute and look forward to exploring technical collaboration with Tessera,” said Gil Tily, Amkor’s Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer and General Counsel.

Amkor expects to record an after-tax charge to earnings in the fourth quarter of 2014 for most of the total settlement amount, net of amounts previously reserved. Amkor will provide more detail in its upcoming earnings release for the fourth quarter and full year 2014.

Amkor is a provider of semiconductor packaging and test services to semiconductor companies and electronics OEMs.

Orbotech Ltd. today announced that SPTS Technologies, an Orbotech company and a supplier of advanced wafer processing solutions for the global semiconductor industry and related markets, is collaborating with Fraunhofer IZM, an international institute specializing in applied and industrial contract research, on next generation wafer level packaging of microelectronic devices.  

“To meet the technical requirements of future microelectronic products, 3D-IC architectures using through silicon vias (TSVs) are being employed to overcome scaling limits while delivering better device performance,” stated Kevin Crofton, President of SPTS Technologies and Corporate VP at Orbotech. “SPTS has over 300 DRIE modules being used for advanced packaging applications around the world. Together with Fraunhofer IZM, we aim to develop the techniques needed for cost-effective volume manufacturing of 2.5D and 3D-IC devices.”

For the joint development project, Fraunhofer IZM is using SPTS’ Rapier process module to etch a range of silicon features, such as deep cavities and tapered or vertical TSVs with high aspect ratios.  Leveraging its multi-process capability, the Rapier is also used for other 3D processes, including blanket Si etching for via reveal, post grind stress relief and general wafer thinning.  The Rapier carries SPTS’ endpoint detection (EPD) systems: Claritas for etches to stop layers and low exposed areas, and ReVia, the industry’s only in-situ EPD for via reveal etching, ensuring repeatable and accurate exposure of TSV tips from the wafer back-side, at via densities as low as 0.01 percent.  With the APM CVD chamber, Fraunhofer IZM is benefiting from SPTS’ ability to deposit PECVD SiN/SiO film stacks at <190°C with tunable stress, low electrical leakage and excellent diffusion barrier performance. Both technologies are on the single Versalis fxP platform, saving capex and valuable floor space.  The ability to run multiple process recipes inside the same system gives Fraunhofer IZM significant flexibility: a valuable resource when working with clients from diverse sectors including automotive, healthcare and industrial electronics.

Martin Wilke, the expert in plasma etching at Fraunhofer IZM, commented, “Our researchers and customers expect us to use the latest state-of-the-art equipment. The SPTS Versalis fxP system was selected for our cleanroom facility in Berlin as it combines industry leading DRIE and CVD modules on a single platform, with the option to add additional modules as our capacity demands increase. The multi-technology Versalis fxP allowed us to reduce initial capital outlay and therefore cost of ownership, within a small footprint.”

Crofton added, “Fraunhofer IZM is a leading institute with a key competence in wafer level packaging and system integration. By working with renowned R&D institutes who specialize in industry-oriented applied research, we are able to provide our customers with production ready wafer processing solutions that give them competitive advantage and lower their cost of manufacture.”

JEOL USA and the University of California’s Irvine Materials Research Institute (IMRI) have entered into a strategic partnership to create a premier electron microscopy and materials science research facility. The IMRI will serve as an interdisciplinary nexus for the study and development of new materials, enabling advances in solar cell, battery, semiconductor, biological science, and medical technologies.

The IMRI is headed by Dr. Xiaoqing Pan, an internationally-recognized researcher in the physics of materials who joined the UC Irvine faculty in 2015 to lead the $20 million initiative.

The new electron microscopy cluster, to be known as the JEOL Center for Nanoscale Solutions, will house JEOL’s highest performing Transmission Electron Microscopes (TEM) for characterizing and analyzing materials to determine their potential for a myriad of advanced applications.

This will be the first research lab in the Americas to install the newly-introduced JEOL Grand ARM, which exceeds atomic resolution boundaries for any commercially-available TEM today. The Grand ARM offers 63 pm resolution at 300 keV for atom-by-atom characterization and chemical mapping. It features JEOL-proprietary spherical aberration correctors integrated in the image-forming system and illumination system, and an ultra-stable cold-cathode field emission electron gun.

The center will also house the high throughput, nano-analysis JEM-2800 TEM/STEM, a versatile microscope favored for its ease of use while maintaining the highest level of performance.  The JEM-2800 features dual large area Silicon Drift Detectors with unprecedented sensitivity for high throughput EDS analysis.

Researchers will also utilize the cryogenic and atomic level structural analysis capabilities of the JEOL JEM-2100F TEM to examine biological materials, large molecules, and medical biopsy samples in efforts to improve delivery of pharmaceuticals to the human body.

“The electron microscopy initiative and the IMRI at UC Irvine will provide new tools and great opportunities for potential collaborations with the many researchers on campus and in southern California,” said Pan.  In his work he has pioneered the development of advanced functional materials and the characterization of their structure-property relationships at the atomic scale, which range from ceramics and semiconductors to biological materials and nanomaterials.

“This foremost facility will be an important resource for some of the most renowned scientists in the world,” said JEOL USA President Peter Genovese.” With the installation of our flagship atomic resolution TEM, the JEOL Center for Nanoscale Solutions will be the most advanced electron microscopy cluster available for probing the atomic structure and properties of materials.”

MEMSensing Microsystems Co. and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation jointly announced the launch of the world’s smallest 3-axis accelerometer MSA330, which utilizes SMIC’s CMOS integrated MEMS device fabrication and TSV-based wafer level packaging technologies.

By vertically integrating the 3-axis accelerometer device with CMOS ASIC into a single package of 1.075×1.075×0.60mm3 (LxWxH), MSA330 achieves about 30% shrink in footprint and 70% reduction in the total size compared to the latest commercial products. It is also the thinnest of its kind, only 0.5mm after SMT and 0.6mm in total height including 0.2mm solder balls. MSA330 would be competitive not only in overall fabrication costs through all wafer level fabrication and packaging but also in miniaturization particularly for mobile and wearable applications.

“The success in MSA330 signifies SMIC the major breakthrough achieved in its fabrication of CMOS integrated MEMS devices and TSV-based wafer level packaging technologies, which is expected to enter commercial production within 2015. Such accomplishment would further benefit SMIC in broadening its manufacturing capabilities and foundry services into fabricating MEMS devices and wafer level packaging open to global MEMS customers,” said Dr. Shiuh-Wuu Lee, Executive Vice President of Technology Development of SMIC.

“MEMSensing is SMIC’s 1st domestic MEMS customer, and also one of its earliest customers worldwide which can be dated back to as early as 2009. MSA330 is the world’s 1st MEMS accelerometer enabled by WLCSP (Wafer Level Chip Scale Packaging), which is based on WLP and TSV technology. This approach belongs to the latest generation for MEMS accelerometer fabrication while other competitors are still lagging one step behind. The success for MSA330 product development proves that MEMSensing has now broadened its MEMS sensor product portfolio beyond the existing MEMS microphone and pressure sensors. We plan to allocate more resources to cooperate with SMIC to develop other advanced products and make an effort to further enrich China’s domestic MEMS industry chain,” said Dr. Li Gang, CEO of MEMSensing.

Worldwide semiconductor market revenue is on track to achieve a 9.4 percent expansion this year, with broad-based growth across multiple chip segments driving the best industry performance since 2010.

Global revenue in 2014 is expected to total $353.2 billion, up from $322.8 billion in 2013, according to a preliminary estimate from IHS Technology (NYSE: IHS). The nearly double-digit-percentage increase follows respectable growth of 6.4 percent in 2013, a decline of more than 2.0 percent in 2012 and a marginal increase of 1.0 percent in 2011. The performance in 2014 represents the highest rate of annual growth since the 33 percent boom of 2010.

“This is the healthiest the semiconductor business has been in many years, not only in light of the overall growth, but also because of the broad-based nature of the market expansion,” said Dale Ford, vice president and chief analyst at IHS Technology. “While the upswing in 2013 was almost entirely driven by growth in a few specific memory segments, the rise in 2014 is built on a widespread increase in demand for a variety of different types of chips. Because of this, nearly all semiconductor suppliers can enjoy good cheer as they enter the 2014 holiday season.”

More information on this topic can be found in the latest release of the Competitive Landscaping Tool from the Semiconductors & Components service at IHS.

Widespread growth

Of the 28 key sub-segments of the semiconductor market tracked by IHS, 22 are expected to expand in 2014. In contrast, only 12 sub-segments of the semiconductor industry grew in 2013.

Last year, the key drivers of the growth of the semiconductor market were dynamic random access memory (DRAM) and data flash memory. These two memory segments together grew by more than 30 percent while the rest of the market only expanded by 1.5 percent.

This year, the combined revenue for DRAM and data flash memory is projected to rise about 20 percent. However, growth in the rest of the market will swell by 6.7 percent to support the overall market increase of 9.4 percent.

In 2013, only eight semiconductor sub-segments grew by 5 percent or more and only three achieved double-digit growth. In 2014, over half of all the sub-segments—i.e., 15—will grow by more than 5 percent and eight markets will grow by double-digit percentages.

This pervasive growth is delivering general benefits to semiconductor suppliers, with 70 percent of chipmakers expected to enjoy revenue growth this year, up from 53 percent in 2013.

The figure below presents the growth of the DRAM and data flash segments compared to the rest of the semiconductor market in 2013 and 2014.

2014-12-18_Semi_Sectors_Growth

Semiconductor successes

The two market segments enjoying the strongest and most consistent growth in the last two years are DRAM and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). DRAM revenue will climb 33 percent for two years in a row in 2013 and 2014. This follows often strong declines in DRAM revenue in five of the last six years.

The LED market is expected to grow by more than 11 percent in 2014. This continues an unbroken period of growth for LED revenues stretching back at least 13 years.

Major turnarounds are occurring in the analog, discrete and microprocessor markets as they will swing from declines to strong growth in every sub-segment. Most segments will see their growth improve by more than 10 percent, compared to the declines experienced in 2013.

Furthermore, programmable logic device (PLD) and digital signal processor (DSP) application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) will experience dramatic improvements in growth. PLD revenue in 2014 will grow by 10.2 percent compared to 2.1 percent in 2013, and DSP ASICs will rise by 3.8 percent compared to a 31.9 percent collapse in 2013.

Moving on up

Among the top 20 semiconductor suppliers, MediaTek and Avago Technologies attained the largest revenue growth and rise in the rankings in 2014. Both companies benefited from significant acquisitions.

MediaTek is expected to jump up five places to the 10th rank and become the first semiconductor company headquartered in Taiwan to break into the Top 10. Avago Technologies is projected to jump up eight positions in the rankings to No. 15.

The strongest growth by a semiconductor company based purely on organic revenue increase is expected to be achieved by SK Hynix, with projected growth of nearly 23 percent.

No. 13-ranked Infineon has announced its plan to acquire International Rectifier. If that acquisition is finalized in 2014 the combined companies would jump to No. 10 in the overall rankings and enjoy 16 percent combined growth.

The table below presents the preliminary IHS ranking of the world’s top 20 semiconductor suppliers in 2013 and 2014 based on revenue.

2014-12-18_Semi_Ranking_Final

Troubles for consumer electronics and Japan

Semiconductor revenue in 2014 will grow in five of the six major semiconductor application end markets, i.e. data processing, wired communications, wireless communications, automotive electronics and industrial electronics. The only market segment experiencing a decline will be consumer electronics. Revenue will expand by double-digit percentages in four of the six markets.

Japan continues to struggle, and is the only worldwide region that will see a decline in semiconductor revenues this year. The other three geographies—Asia-Pacific, the Americas and the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region—will see healthy growth. The world will be led by led by Asia-Pacific which will post an expected revenue increase of 12.5 percent.

By DAVE HEMKER, Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, Lam Research Corp.

Given the current buzz around the Internet of Things (IoT), it is easy to lose sight of the challenges
– both economic and technical. On the economic side is the need to cost-effectively manufacture up to a trillion sensors used to gather data, while on the technical side, the challenge involves building out the infrastructure. This includes enabling the transmission, storage, and analysis of volumes of data far exceeding anything we see today. These divergent needs will drive the semiconductor equipment industry to provide very different types of manufacturing solutions to support the IoT.

In order to fulfill the promise of the IoT, sensor technology will need to become nearly ubiquitous in our businesses, homes, electronic products, cars, and even our clothing. Per-unit costs for sensors will need to be kept very low to ensure the technology is economically viable. To support this need, trailing-edge semiconductor manufacturing capabilities provide a viable option since fully depreciated wafer processing equipment can produce chips cost efficiently. For semiconductor equipment suppliers, this translates into additional sales of refurbished and productivity-focused equipment and upgrades that improve yield, throughput, and running costs. In addition to being produced inexpensively, sensors intended for use in the IoT will need to meet several criteria. First, they need to operate on very low amounts of power. In fact, some may even be self-powered via MEMS (microelectromechanical systems)-based oscillators or the collection of environmental radio frequency energy, also known as energy harvesting/scavenging. Second, they will involve specialized functions, for example, the ability to monitor pH or humidity. Third, to enable the transmission of data collected to the supporting infrastructure, good wireless communications capabilities will be important. Finally, sensors will need to be small, easily integrated into other structures – such as a pane of glass, and available in new form factors – like flexible substrates for clothing. Together, these new requirements will drive innovation in chip technology across the semiconductor industry’s ecosystem.

The infrastructure needed to support the IoT, in contrast, will require semiconductor performance to continue its historical advancement of doubling every 18-24 months. Here, the challenges are a result of the need for vast amounts of networking, storage in the Cloud, and big data analysis. Additionally, many uses for the IoT will involve risks far greater than those that exist in today’s internet. With potential medical and transportation applications, for example, the results of data analysis performed in real time can literally be a matter of life or death. Likewise, managing the security and privacy of the data being generated will be paramount. The real-world nature of things also adds an enormous level of complexity in terms of predictive analysis.

Implementing these capabilities and infrastructure on the scale imagined in the IoT will require far more powerful memory and logic devices than are currently available. This need will drive the continued extension of Moore’s Law and demand for advanced semiconductor manufacturing capability, such as atomic-scale wafer processing. Controlling manufacturing process variability will also become increasingly important to ensure that every device in the new, interconnected world operates as expected.

With development of the IoT, semiconductor equipment companies can look forward to opportunities beyond communications and computing, though the timing of its emergence is uncertain. For wafer processing equipment suppliers in particular, new markets for leading-edge systems used in the IoT infrastructure and productivity-focused upgrades for sensor manufacturing are expected to develop.

The most expensive defect


December 18, 2014

Defects that aren’t detected inline cost fabs the most. 

By DAVID W. PRICE and DOUGLAS G. SUTHERLAND, KLA-Tencor, Milpitas, CA

Defect inspection tools can be expensive. But regardless of the cost of the inspection tool needed to find a defect, the fab is almost always better off financially if it can find and fix that defect inline versus at the end of line (e.g., electrical test and failure analysis). Here, we are referring to the term defect in a general sense—the same concepts also apply to metrology measurements.

The third fundamental truth of process control for the semiconductor IC industry is:

The most expensive defect is the one that wasn’t detected inline.

FIGURE 1A (top) shows an imaginary SPC chart for a factory experiencing a baseline shift in defectivity (an excursion) beginning at Lot #300. FIGURE 1B (bottom) shows the same scenario except the fab has an effective inline monitor at the point of the excursion. In this case, the excursion is quickly identified and the offending process tool is taken offline for process tuning or maintenance. The excursion is contained and relatively few lots are impacted by the resulting yield loss.

Defects 1a

FIGURE 1. It is always better to find and fix problems inline versus at the end of line. 1a. Problem identification and correction does not occur until bad wafers reach end-of-line test. 1b. Problem identification and correction occurs immediately.

FIGURE 1. It is always better to find and fix problems inline versus at the end of line. 1a. Problem identification and correction does not occur until bad wafers reach end-of-line test. 1b. Problem identification and correction occurs immediately.

The difference between these two scenarios is that in the top chart, the fab is unable to detect the excursion inline so the baseline shift continues unabated until the first affected lots hit end of line test. For a foundry process with a 60-day cycle time, this delay could easily exceed 20 days.

In our experience working with IC manufacturers, the majority of financial impact does not come from large excursions that cause significant yield loss to every affected wafer—those problems are usually identified and rectified very early on. Rather, the largest losses usually come from small excursions that are difficult to detect. They cause relatively low levels of yield loss but persist for prolonged periods of time. It is not uncommon to see thousands or even tens of thousands of wafers exposed to these low level excursions.

The culprit is nearly always a process control capability issue that can be traced back to one or more possible problems. The following list is not meant to be exhaustive, but is instead, representative of the most common causes:

Defects 2

FIGURE 2. Cost vs. mean time to detection (MTTD) of finding a defect inline. The curves are drawn for 4 different wafer costs in a fab with 100k WSPM. It is assumed that the excursion takes place at a single step in the process and happens once per year to each of the process tools at that step. The yield loss is assumed to be 20% during the excursion.

  • Insufficient number of inspection points to allow effective isolation of the defect source.
  • Failing to use a sensitive enough inspection tool or recipe (pixel size is too large, wrong wavelength,
  • etc.)
  • Inspection area of wafer is too low.
  • Review sample size is too small.

Often, the original inspection strategy was carefully designed, but as time passed, changes were made to reduce costs. As new sources of noise are introduced in the SPC chart, the fab becomes less sensitive to small excursions.

FIGURE 2 shows the economic impact to the fab for the two scenarios shown by the SPC chart in FIGURE 1. Imagine an excursion which results in a net 25 percent yield loss (e.g., one out of four wafers must be scrapped). Finding that excursion at end-of-line (+30 days) versus inline (greater than one day) would amount to a staggering $21 million loss per occurrence for an average size run rate of 25k wafer starts per month. Given that this value only repre- sents the cost of re-manufacturing the scrapped wafers it could actually be a conservative estimate. The true cost could easily be double that amount for a fab that is running at the limit of their capacity since it would directly impact revenue.

Even if the situation requires the use of a relatively expensive inspection tool to find, monitor and resolve the problem, it is nearly always in the factory’s best interest to do so. One of the implications of this truth is that if an important defect type can only be detected by a certain inspection tool, then that inspection tool is almost always the most cost-effective solution for that layer. Rather than modifying process control strategies to save costs, it is nearly always in the factory’s best interest to maintain capable, inline process control strategies that prevent the financial impact of ‘the most expensive defect.’

Author’s Note: This is the third in a series of 10 installments that explore fundamental truths about process control—defect inspection and metrology—for the semiconductor industry. Each article introduces one of the 10 fundamental truths and highlights their implications.

Read more Process Watch:

Process Watch: Fab managers don’t like surprises

Process Watch: The 10 fundamental truths of process control for the semiconductor IC industry

Process Watch: Exploring the dark side

The Dangerous Disappearing Defect,” “Skewing the Defect Pareto,” “Bigger and Better Wafers,” “Taming the Overlay Beast,” “A Clean, Well-Lighted Reticle,” “Breaking Parametric Correlation,” “Cycle Time’s Paradoxical Relationship to Yield,” and “The Gleam of Well-Polished Sapphire.”

 

Cross section sample preparation is demonstrated using a workflow that combines High Accuracy Cleaving I(HAC) and Broad Ion Beam (BIB) milling.

By TESHIMA, LatticeGear, Beaverton, OR and JAMIL J. CLARKE, Hitachi High Technologies America, Inc., Clarksburg, MD 

In order to develop and manufacture new materials and processes, the cross section is essential (FIGURE 1). Cross sections allow one to visualize, measure, and characterize the chemistry of the film stack or device structures. This allows engineers to verify the integrity of devices and to make critical decisions about the process. To be able to provide this data, manufacturers and equipment suppliers invest close to a billion dollars annually [1] to purchase equipment for off-line use and out- of-fab support labs.

FIGURE 1. Cross section of a fully processed microprocessor prepared by high accuracy cleaving and flat milling

FIGURE 1. Cross section of a fully processed microprocessor prepared by high accuracy cleaving and flat milling

Because such labs are not considered a “make wafer” function, lab managers are under constant pressure to reduce costs, both per sample and for lab operations. This paper demonstrates cross section sample preparation using a workflow that combines High Accuracy Cleaving (HAC) and Broad Ion Beam (BIB) milling. Coupling these techniques, which are relatively low in cost when compared to Focused Ion Beam (FIB) or automated polishing or cleaving [2], reduces sample preparation time, complexity, and cost without sacrificing cross-section quality. The LatticeAxTM HAC and the Hitachi IM4000 BIB milling tools were used to demonstrate this process and are also described.

Preparing cross sections for SEM analysis

Characterization of semiconductor structures and material properties commonly begins with sample preparation. Semiconductor samples are inspected either as a cross section or “top down.” Cross-section samples are needed to inspect layers of subsurface features. As shown in FIGURE 2, if a cross-section view is required and the original sample is a wafer or a die, cleaving is typically the first step in the sample preparation procedure.

FIGURE 2. Wafers and wafer pieces enter a cross- section workflow that starts with cleaving and then follows a single- or multi-tool sample preparation process.

FIGURE 2. Wafers and wafer pieces enter a cross- section workflow that starts with cleaving and then follows a single- or multi-tool sample preparation process.

In many cases, the sample can proceed directly to the Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) as shown in the Single-Tool workflow. For fully processed devices and those with large metal structures, improving surface quality with another method enhances the results (see Multi-Tool workflow).

Advanced techniques used in the multi-tool workflow, such as FIB and automated polishing, have benefits in terms of submicron—or in the case of FIB, nanometer—targeting accuracy, but the tradeoff is high cost, long cycle time, and the need for skilled operators.

Methods

The following sections describe the techniques used to perform multi-tool, cross-section sample prepa- ration workflow using HAC and BIB milling.

High Accuracy Cleaving An accurate and high quality cleave is critical to preparing a cross section for SEM imaging regardless of whether it follows the single- or multi-tool workflow. Manual cleaving, in which you scribe a line and then break the sample along the fracture over a raised edge or pin, has inherent problems with accuracy and repeatability. In addition, because the user handles the sample with fingers that are often gloved, great skill is required to achieve good results. FIGURE 3a shows traditional scribing hand tools used in manual cleaving. Cleaving results using these tools are obviously dependent on the hand-eye coordination of the operator.

FIGURE 3a. Hand tools commonly used for cleaving semiconductor materials

FIGURE 3a. Hand tools commonly used for cleaving semiconductor materials

Figure 3b

Figure 3b

The LatticeAx process overcomes these disadvantages by controlling the indent location and depth, as well as the cleaving operation, with fine-positioning knobs on the LatticeAx high magnification digital microscope. This new machine-assisted Indent and Cleave[3] approach bridges both manual scribing and fully automated cleaving or polishing, and increases success rates while keeping costs down.

The accurate, repeatable indent and slow, controlled cleaving that results from this hybrid tool (FIGURE 3b) speeds preparation time and produces high accuracy, quality results—regardless of user experience—and with greater flexibility of sample size and dimensions.

Broad Ion Beam Milling The BIB milling system is a specimen preparation device (FIGURE 3c) for SEM and surface analysis (EDX[4], EBSP[5], etc.). The device uses a defocused beam of argon ions that sputter material from the target specimen at a rate up to 2-500μm/hour, depending on the mode used. The BIB milling system uses a simple, repeatable process to remove surface layers of a specimen and for final finish of specimens in cross section. It is advantageous compared to mechanical polishing methods, which require well-trained operators to polish the specimen to a flat and mirror-like surface and hit a specific target. In addition, complex material composites that contain materials varying in hardness pose challenges when mechanically prepared using polishing wheels and compounds. This mechanical approach can lead to cracks, stress, relief (pull-out effects), and smearing. These adverse effects are minimized when using the low voltage (0-6kV) argon beam to remove material.

FIGURE 3c. Hitachi IM4000Plus broad ion beam milling system

FIGURE 3c. Hitachi IM4000Plus broad ion beam milling system

Flat Milling Mode Using the BIB’s “Flat Milling” mode yields a high quality cross section in a short amount of time. It requires the initial high accuracy cleave to be through or within a few 100nms of the area of interest and the face of the cross section to be at 90 degrees to the sample surface. With a high quality cleave, the BIB’s Flat Milling mode quickly polishes the cross-section face. Material is removed at a rate of 2μm/hr. Using the flat milling holder, the milling process can uniformly sputter an area approximately ~5mm across around the center of rotation of the specimen (FIGURE 3d). Typical operating parameters for the Hitachi IM4000Plus are 3kV accelerating voltage and a tilt of 70 degrees, with sample stage oscillation set to ±90 degrees and 10rpm. The best quality surface is achieved with a minimum mill time, thus the importance of cleaving through, or very close to, the region of interest. Otherwise, variations in the milling rates of different materials produce artifacts, often called “curtaining.”

Figure 3d

Figure 3d

Cross-section Mode When more than a few microns of material need to be removed, the BIB system is operated in “Cross-section” mode. This is commonly used when exposing a sub-surface target structure. Mechanical grinding causes mechanical artifacts and deformation from stress, making it difficult to obtain a smooth surface for SEM analysis. When using the cross-section milling holder, the BIB IM4000Plus shields part of the argon ion beam with the mask arranged on the specimen, and produces a cross section along the trailing edge of the mask into the sample. For Cross-section mode, targeting accuracy is approximately +/- 15μm.

Backside Milling Backside (as opposed to topside) milling mode can be used in both flat milling and cross-section modes. Backside milling is effective and necessary to alleviate curtaining effects[6] that can occur when traditional top-down ion milling induces striations. These striations are caused by the milling differential from neigh- boring materials that are atomically denser than the surrounding area. FIGURE 4 shows the direction of the ion beam during backside milling and the trench milled by the ion beam.

FIGURE 4. Copper bump after backside milling shows both the milling direction and the trench created by the ion beam

FIGURE 4. Copper bump after backside milling shows both the milling direction and the trench created by the ion beam

Case Study 1. Quick 5-minute HAC and Flat Milling for Cross Section Final Polish

In this example, a cross section was prepared of an Intel microprocessor removed from its package. The size of the sample available after deprocessing was 8 x 8mm. To prepare the cross section, the sample was cleaved parallel to 15μm contacts visible on the sample surface. The Hitachi IM4000 was then used to prepare the final surface using flat milling mode. Approximately 100nm of material was removed in 10 minutes to achieve the polished surface of the final cross section.

The cross-section process included:

1. Indenting the 15μm area of interest (AOI) with the LatticeAx (FIGURE 5a) (3 min)
2. Cleaving through the AOI using the small sample cleaving accessory[7] (2 min) (FIG 5b-c)
3. Mounting the sample for the IM4000Plus and backside milling using flat milling mode (15 min)

FIGURE 5a. Case Study 1 –HAC and flat milling processes for cross section final polish

FIGURE 5a. Case Study 1 –HAC and flat milling processes for cross section final polish

FIGURE 5b. View of sample after cleaving with the small sample cleaver

FIGURE 5b. View of sample after cleaving with the small sample cleaver

 

FIGURE 5c. Optical view of the cross section after cleaving

FIGURE 5c. Optical view of the cross section after cleaving

Results

This demonstrates a rapid (15-minute) method to obtain a damage-free cross section from a fully processed microprocessor over a very large area (5mm in diameter). A comparison of the results before and after milling shows the clear improvement in surface quality and SEM imaging results (FIGURE 5d and e). Using other methods such as mechanical polishing or FIB can take several hours to achieve a comparable size produced by the large flat-milled region. The best results were obtained when removing a minimum of material (nms), demonstrating the importance of an accurate, high quality cleave prior to BIB milling. FIGURE 5f shows a high-magnification view of the resulting cross section after flat milling that is high quality and without curtaining.

FIGURE 5d. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 5d. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 5e. SEM image of the microprocessor after 10 minutes of BIB milling using flat milling mode

FIGURE 5e. SEM image of the microprocessor after 10 minutes of BIB milling using flat milling mode

 

FIGURE 5f. SEM image showing planar cross section after flat milling

FIGURE 5f. SEM image showing planar cross section after flat milling

Case Study 2. Using HAC and BIB Milling in Cross-section Mode to Prepare Cross Sections of Solder Bumps

Cross sections are required to inspect solder bump reliability for interconnect problems during development and production, or for electromigration failure after aging. Creating these cross sections in a targeted location is critical for effective fault isolation and SEM analysis. With the advent of large Through Silicon-Via (TSV) and solder bump structures—often 100μm in depth or width—high throughput methods are necessary to make cross sections efficiently and effectively.[8]

In this case study, the solder bumps were prepared for SEM in a two-step process. In step 1, the LatticeAx cleaver was used to cleanly cross-section close to, and parallel to, a specific row of copper bumps. The copper bumps had a diameter of 85μm and were cleaved 30 μm from the center of a bump. Time to cleave was 5 minutes and yielded the results shown in FIGURE 6a and FIGURE 6b.

FIGURE 6a. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 6a. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 6b. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 6b. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

In step 2, a broad argon ion beam instrument, the Hitachi IM4000, was used to prepare the final imaging surface within the copper bump. The backside milling method was used; no further preparation was performed.

Results

FIGURES 6c and 6d, taken after ion milling, plainly show the improved surface quality and copper grain structures, as well as fine details at the interface between the bump and adjacent structures. By cleaving close to the center of the copper bumps, the milling time on the BIB was reduced to less than 2 hours versus tens of hours for large cross-section areas (multiple bumps).

This two-step sample preparation process described has been implemented in production by a large semiconductor manufacturer. The technique described reduces turn-around time and repeatedly results in artifact-free cross sections of copper solder bumps.

FIGURE 6c. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 6c. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 6d. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

FIGURE 6d. SEM image of the microprocessor after cleaving

Conclusion

For “off-line” laboratories, using HAC and BIB together for creating high quality cross sections is a compelling, low-cost alternative to investments in FIBs or automated polishing or cleaving equipment. High accuracy cleaving reduces sample preparation time, complexity, and cost without sacrificing cross- section quality. Combining this with a broad argon ion beam instrument for quick removal of minimal amounts of material or for milling of large flat areas, HAC presents effective, accurate results critical to product or failure analysis, while keeping both equipment and per-sample costs low.

Whether for final polish or in sample preparation of solder bumps, the results from the machine-assisted high accuracy Indent and Cleave approach combined with broad ion beam milling rival those of fully automated cleaving or polishing systems

References

1. Per industry sources
2. Approximate costs: FIB/SEM at $1-2 million; Automated HAC at $300,000; HAC+BIB milling tool at $160,000.
3. Cleaving Breakthrough: A New Method Removes Old Limitations, E. Moyal, E. Brandstädt, EDFAAO (2014) 3:26-31
4. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy
5. Electron backscatter pattern
6. CAVolkert and AM Minor, MRS Bull 32(5) (2007) 389–99.
7. The small sample cleaving accessory is used to clamp samples as small as 4mm wide for indenting with the LatticeAx and cleaving using a separate cleaving base. 8. Sample Preparation of Semiconductor Materials with a New Site-specific Cleaving Technology, Microscopy Today, September 2013, Teshima et al., 56-59.

J. TESHIMA is with LatticeGear, LLC., 1500 NW Bethany Blvd., Suite 200, Beaverton, OR 97006, USA. JAMIL J. CLARKE is with Hitachi High Technologies America, Inc., Nanotechnology Systems Division, 22610 Gateway Center, Dr. Clarksburg, MD 20871, USA