Category Archives: Wafer Level Packaging

June 13, 2012 — StratEdge Corporation, high-performance semiconductor package maker for microwave, millimeter-wave, and high-speed digital devices, launched the LL family of high-power laminate packages. The LL leaded laminate copper-moly-copper (CMC) base packages dissipates heat from high-power compound semiconductor devices, such as gallium nitride (GaN), gallium arsenide (GaAs), and silicon carbide (SiC) chips.

These packages handle applications through 6GHz, suiting use in RF radios for communications, radar, and high-power millimeter-wave signals.

The series includes two laminate power packages, both with a ratio of 1:3:1 CMC, a good thermal match for alumina-based materials and a GaN chip. StratEdge offers both flange and flangeless styles to accommodate manufacturing processes to either bolt down or solder the package. The LL802302 is 20.32 x 9.91mm with 2 leads and a raised lid with an epoxy seal. This is a flange package with a bolt hole on each end so the package can be bolted to the printed circuit board (PCB). The LL362302 is a flangeless, fully hermetic version of the LL802302 package, with a flat ceramic lid. Hermeticity is especially critical in aerospace and defense applications.

"StratEdge’s new laminate power packages solve thermal problems encountered when using GaN devices," explained Tim Going, StratEdge president. "The excellent thermal conductivity of the CMC base enables use of GaN devices in high power applications, and the flange package facilitates manufacturing."

IMS2012 is taking place in The Palais de Congres, Montreal, Canada, June 19-21, 2012. StratEdge will debut the new package family at booth #1625.

StratEdge Corporation designs, manufactures, and provides test and assembly services for a complete line of high-performance semiconductor packages operating from DC to 50+ GHz for the high speed digital, mixed signal, broadband wireless, satellite, point-to-point/multipoint, VSAT, and test and measurement industries, as well as aerospace stripline filters. Website: www.stratedge.com.

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June 12, 2012 – PRNewswire — Terepac Corp. will produce high volumes of its proprietary micro circuits for Rockwell Automation, supporting the "Internet of Things" with radio frequency identification (RFID) tags. Rockwell Automation will support the infrastructure that Terepac uses, enabling it to miniaturize significantly more circuits than its current capability.

Terepac

June 7, 2012 — Day 3 of the 15th IITC (International Interconnect Technology Conference) opened Wednesday, June 6 at the Doubletree Hotel in San Jose, CA under clear sunny skies and a pleasant breeze. The herd thinned a bit, down to ~150 hearty souls from the original 230 the prior two days.

Read Fury’s reports from Day 1 and Day 2 of IITC.

Subramanian Iyer of IBM started the day with an invited talk on scaling in the 3rd dimension (not to be confused with The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension) and prospects for silicon interposers and 3D integration. His retrospective introduction harkened back to IBM

June 6, 2012 — The ConFab, taking place this week in Las Vegas, NV, is an invitation-only meeting of the semiconductor industry. As packaging has played a larger and larger role in chip performance, form factor, and capabilities, The ConFab has increased its focus on back-end processes. Cue

June 5, 2012 — Semiconductor supplier STMicroelectronics (ST, NYSE:STM) is now mass manufacturing its micro electro mechanical system (MEMS) microphones in plastic packages. Plastic packaging increases durability for consumer and professional end-use sectors, in mobile phones, tablets, headphones and more. The technology also saves space in the device compared to metal-lid MEMS packaging.

ST says that its microphone assembly process ensures good electrical and acoustic performance and mechanical robustness. The MEMS microphones integrate an internal shielding cage from electromagnetic immunity. Plastic packages proved better than metal-lid designs in compression and drop tests, withstanding a 40N force and 40 drops from 1.5m with a static force of 15N on the package.

The plastic package offers a slimmer form factor, advancing the microphone chip size reduction to 2mm2. This is a step on the path to MEMS microphones embedded in silicon cavities, said ST. Also read: MEMS microphones shrink to grow market share

ST’s MEMS microphones can be assembled on flat-cable printed circuit boards (PCBs) or rigid PCBs, with the sound hole designed in the package to either appear on the top or bottom for the shortest acoustic path from the environment to the microphone. Top-port microphones suit the size and sound-inlet position requirements of laptops and tablets; bottom-port microphones are common in mobile phones. The packages can be placed with standard surface mount assembly equipment.

The microphones can be used with ST’s Smart Voice processors for multi-microphone applications and Sound Terminal audio processing chips. ST supplies semiconductors and MEMS to customers in sense and power technologies and multimedia convergence applications. Further information on ST can be found at www.st.com.

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The 15th IITC (International Interconnect Technology Conference) opened Monday, June 4 at the Doubletree Hotel in San Jose, CA with about 230 engineers, scientists and technologists in attendance under a light drizzle. Recurring themes this year were variations on 3D and TSV, novel systems and packaging, and back end memory.

Mike Mayberry, VP Components Research at Intel, delivered the opening keynote address with prognostication for what lies ahead for devices and interconnects. The traditional trio of smaller, faster, cheaper is joined by longer battery life. An asymmetric device, tunneling FET (TFET), is one option that may be able to deliver 8x performance over CMOS while operating at very low voltages. Interconnect shrinkage brings us to the physical limitations of barrier vs. copper volume for reliability vs. conductivity, as illustrated in this 10nm copper trench.

 

But while there are physical limits, Mayberry proffered that the correct answer to “where will it end” is “when we run out of ideas.” One new idea is the notion of stacking devices themselves, rather than remaining constrained to a single layer of silicon. This can provide a device density gain of 30%-50%. New architectures like associative memory will be fostered by new ways of using consumer devices, such as context-sensitive device response. For example, minimizing distractions while you are driving, or silencing your hilarious ring tone during business meetings, might be desirable capabilities to have built in. “If you only look for better versions of what you have today, you are going to miss opportunities,” he said. On-chip optical interconnects are likely to be limited in scope due to density and power considerations.

Soo-Hyun Kim of Yeungnam U (Korea) gave an invited talk on ALD Ru with organometallic precursors for copper seed layer and capacitor electrodes. Rapid nucleation was achieved using three different zero-valent Ru compounds reacting with molecular O2. Nucleation begins within the first 2-3 cycles, with thin film coalescence coming in the 50-60 cycle range. In addition, nucleus density is 1.5-2 orders of magnitude higher with these precursors compared to a more traditional Ru(EtCp)2. Good conformality was shown up to AR 32 at 225°C deposition temperature.

Theo Frot of IBM Almaden Research described some approaches to protecting porous low-κ dielectrics from plasma and CMP damage. The post-porosity plasma protection strategy yields the best results on a variety of dielectrics ranging from κ 2.4 to κ 1.8 in DHF wet etch and O2 plasma-induced damage (PID) tests.

 

One of the observed fringe benefits of this process strategy is a lower rate of post-CMP delamination. The original κ 2.0 value was confirmed following integration in a single damascene layer test structure.

Christopher Wilson of IMEC integrated a κ 2.3 spin-on dielectric for sub-28nm technology using EUV lithography. Structures were fabricated at a 40nm half pitch and post-etch dielectric constant was restored with a He/H2 plasma treatment that resulted in a 13% improvement in RC characteristics. Single damascene and dual damascene dielectric stacks are shown in the figure.

 

TDDB did not degrade as the spaces between the 40nm trenches were scaled from 90nm to 40nm.

YH Wu of TSMC described the use of an uncured ELK material as a CMP stop layer. Following CMP, the ELK porogen is activated to form the low-κ dielectric, resulting in a net smaller shift in κ. Integration schemes with and without the uncured ELK layer had comparable leakage, but the uncured ELK layer increases line-to-line capacitance by 7% before curing. After curing, the capacitance penalty was eliminated. Benefits of the stop layer include an improvement of copper thickness control across the wafer from 11% to 4%.

Chih-Chao Yang of IBM Albany Research showed the use of Co films as Cu capping layers. Better TDDB results with no dependence on Co thickness were observed with an in-situ process, in which the Cu oxide removal prior to Co deposition is conducted in a single reaction chamber with no air exposure between steps.

 

Jürgen Wolf of Fraunhofer IZM-ASSID described the outlook for silicon interposers with integrated TSVs for 3D SiP integration. Process schemes are designed with an eye toward leveraging WLP designs and manufacturing methods. Several temporary wafer bonding technologies are included in the mix to accommodate the in-process handling of extremely thin wafers for WLP. SnAg and SnAgCu alloys for Pb-free reflow soldering to Au bumps have been found to be adequate up to this point in the development process.

Jinho An of Samsung spoke about controlling extrusion defects in Cu TSV through annealing process conditions and structural design factors. TSV diameter has the largest effect on the tendency to extrude. Carbon and sulfur impurities affect the copper grain size, which in turn is inversely related to percent extrusion.

 

Ashish Dembla of Georgia Tech described a scheme for fine pitch (35µm) high AR (18:1) TSV integration in silicon micropin-fin heat sinks. The microfluidic prototype structure shown could handle a power density of 100 W/cm2 with a resulting junction temperature <50°C and a pressure drop of 83kPa. The silicon pins were fabricated with a cluster of copper TSVs inside each pin to enhance thermal transport as well as to provide the TSV functionality.

 

Michael Van Buskirk of Adesto Technologies gave an invited talk on a scalable, low power, high performance resistive memory technology platform called conductive bridging RAM (CBRAM). The device shown consists of a W cathode, Ag anode and GeS2 solid electrolyte switching layer. The operating principle is based on the formation of a conductive silver dendrite between the electrodes, with conductivity increasing the longer the ON switching current is left on. This makes is conceivable to have multiple ON states in a single device. A 1Mb serial EEPROM/Flash combination product has been integrated into a 130nm Cu BEOL design and is commercially available. Cross-contamination concerns about the introduction of Ag into the fab were handled with minor modification of the same protocols required for Cu. The device has demonstrated an endurance of 100k write cycles with 10 year data retention at 70°C.

 

Jonggi Kim of Yonsei U (Korea) described the switching mechanism of another resistive switching device, this one based on the redox migration of oxygen ions in HfO2 between Ni/Ti and Pt electrodes.

Honggun Kim of Samsung R&D presented a novel flowable CVD process technology for sub-20nm interlayer dielectrics. Process conditions made it possible to eliminate the Si3N4 oxidation diffusion barrier, reducing the bit-line loading capacitance by 15%. Gap fill for AR 40:1 has been demonstrated with peak process temperature <500°C.

 

S. Maîtrejean of CEA Leti talked about the challenges in phase change memories from a materials and process perspective. The addition of carbon to PVD GeTe correlated well with MOCVD GeTe with residual carbon. A confined device structure performed better in terms of switching time and ΔR than the earlier plug designs with an unconstrained PCM layer.

 

June 4, 2012 — Displaybank published a 2009-2014 analysis of light-emitting diode (LED) packages, the finished LED components used in various applications. While LED package units will grow steadily through the forecast period, revenues will remain mostly flat from 2010 to 2013.

Figure. LED package sector growth by units shipped and by revenue through 2014. SOURCE: LED Industry Outlook – Package (2009~2014), Displaybank.

LEDs are achieving near 100% penetration in mobile device displays, emerging as a major segment of lighting, and replacing CCFLs in television backlights. Market penetration is increasing for internal and external automotive lights, as well as signage applications.

LED light sources can offer higher performance and lower power consumption than traditional technologies. The technology is also considered more environmentally friendly, and can reduce costs for some applications.

The report,

June 1, 2012 — OSRAM AG will build a new light emitting diode (LED) assembly plant in Wuxi, Jiangsu, China. LED chips fabbed at its Regensburg, Germany and Penang, Malaysia wafer processing facilities will be packaged at the new back-end facility in Wuxi starting in late 2013. The plant will accommodate up to 1600 employees.

An OSRAM LED package diagram showing the chip and package.
An actual OSRAM LED package.

This will free up the Regensburg and Penang wafer fabs to exclusive manufacture LED chips. Wuxi will also augment the Penang plant by manufacturing general, automotive and industrial lighting products for key segments of the Chinese market. The new facility gives Osram more access to China, which it calls “the lighting industry’s largest single market worldwide.” Wuxi is near Shanghai.

In fiscal 2011, about one-fifth of Osram’s revenue came from the Asia-Pacific region. Osram employs about 16,000 people there, its largest regional workforce. Roughly half of these workers are in China. Osram has marketed products in the region for about 80 years.

OSRAM Opto Semiconductors manufactures optoelectronic semiconductors for the lighting, sensor and visualization sectors. Learn more at http://www.osram-os.com/osram_os/EN/

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