Category Archives: Wafer Level Packaging

(January 3, 2010) —  Trident Space & Defense LLC in Torrance, Calif., which specializes in semiconductor packaging, data storage solid state drives, high-reliability electronic components, and turnkey full-tracking ground stations, will become part of the TeleCommunication Systems Inc. (TCS) government segment in Annapolis, Md., as part of an acquisition announced in December 2010.

The acquisition of Trident will extend TCS expertise in end-to-end secure wireless communications and provide an AS/EN/JISQ9100/ISO 9001-certified engineering design and packaging center for TCS’s SwiftLink line of satellite-based communication systems.

TCS (NASDAQ:TSYS) signed an agreement to acquire Trident Space & Defense for cash and 3 million shares of TCS Class A common stock from the private equity firm Admiralty Partners Inc. in Los Angeles. Trident was originally established as TRW Components International in 1976, and is a source for satellite communications engineered solutions. The acquisition is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2011.

Trident Space & Defense has three business units: the Advanced Products Group, which provides advanced semiconductor packaging solutions for custom multichip modules, systems-in-a-package, memory modules as well as solid state drives (SSD) in ruggedized stand-alone and embedded component configurations; the Electronic Components business unit, which is a supplier of high-reliability electronic components and design support services to the space industry; and the Ground Systems business unit, which supplies custom turnkey full-tracking ground stations to the commercial space industry.

Trident executives expect 2011 revenue to be more than $40 million, which will be reported as part of the TCS government segment. As part of the acquisition, Jon Kutler, founder, chairman and chief executive officer of Admiralty Partners, will join the TCS board of directors.

“Trident’s position as a key vendor to foreign governments and commercial space customers substantially broadens our global footprint,” says Maurice B. Tosé, TCS chairman and chief executive officer. For more information contact Trident Space & Defense online at www.tridentsd.com, TCS at www.telecomsys.com, or Admiralty Partners at www.admiraltypartners.com.

(Originally posted by John Keller, Military & Aerospace Electronics)

Executive Overview

Each year, several billion CMOS image sensors are manufactured to meet the growing demand for cameras in electronics products, notably camera phones, laptops (web cams) and now TVs. Fabricating device packages at the wafer-level provides economic advantage over discrete approaches since the materials and process costs are shared among the good die on the wafer, which can number many thousands for small die. Wafer-level packages also have the technical advantages of smaller dimensions, shorter interconnects and more consistent part-to-part performance. This article discusses the use of wafer-level packages, which satisfy the requirements.

Giles Humpston, Tessera Inc., San Jose, California, USA

Wafer-level packages for image sensors are unique on three counts. First is that the package must have an optically transparent window to permit light from the scene being imaged to reach the sensor. Second, the package has to provide environmental protection to the die in the form of stopping dust and dirt falling on the optically sensitive area. Third, image sensors can be made in two orientations, namely front-side illuminated and back-side illuminated, yet the same package is required to be compatible with both. Meeting these requirements has lead to the development of highly specialized, yet extraordinarily low cost, wafer-level packages for image sensors. It is predicted that by 2012 more than 70% of the image sensors produced annually will be housed in wafer-level packages.

Semiconductor device packaging

The traditional functions of a semiconductor device package are to protect the die from degradation by the atmosphere and fan-out the electrical interconnects to the next level. Because of the benign environment in which most modern semiconductors are used coupled with short expected life through product obsolescence, the need for the package to provide environmental protection has virtually disappeared. It is by no means uncommon to see essentially package-less chips attached to circuit boards, with just a polymer covering over the exposed bond pads. However, most semiconductor die are destined to interface to a printed circuit board (PCB) on which the pad size and pitch are fixed by standard, and hence, the package still has to provide the functions of redistribution and fan-out. For die larger than about 5mm on a side, it is also considered prudent for the package to incorporate a laterally compliant layer as part of the interconnect structure to act as a strain buffer. Because silicon has very low thermal expansivity, compared with common (PCB) materials, this layer works to confer acceptable fatigue life on the solder joints of the ball grid array that joins the package to the PCB.

Fabricating device packages at the wafer level provides economic advantage over discrete approaches since the materials and process costs are shared among the good die on the wafer. The benefit is most apparent when die are small and the wafers large so that many thousands or even tens of thousands can be processed simultaneously. Wafer-level packages also have the technical advantages of small footprint, the die and package having the same plan area; shorter interconnects, which permit faster operation/reduced power consumption; and more consistent part-to-part performance, reducing the need for test binning. Despite all of these benefits, development of wafer-level packages acceptable to industry has proved to be challenging and the majority of semiconductor devices are still housed in discrete packages.

Solid-state imagers

There are two principal types of solid-state image sensor, namely charge-coupled devices (CCD) and CMOS. CMOS imagers are able to function both optically and electronically, allowing for reduced size, lower power consumption and simplified assembly. Consequently, CMOS now dominates solid-state imager technology, except for niche applications where optical performance or imager resolution is paramount. Today, image sensor die are manufactured by many semiconductor companies. The smallest standardized area imager is the quarter common intermediate format (QCIF), with a resolution of 25,344 pixels, while the largest commercially available imager has 111 Mpixels.

Solid-state camera modules remained a relatively specialized product until 2001 when a common intermediate format (CIF) camera debuted on a mobile phone. Within eight years, the number of image sensors produced annually went from thousands to over 1 billion. It is estimated that in 2010, more than 80% of all mobile phones will have at least one camera, many having two. Other applications that use solid-state cameras include digital still cameras (DSC), camcorders, automotive driver aids, video security systems, web cams and increasingly, TVs. Together, these applications could consume an additional 1 billion camera modules per year by 2015.

The requirements of a package for a solid-state image sensor are not especially different from other semiconductor devices; the core needs remain a modicum of protection from the environment, redistribution and fan-out of the electrical interconnects, and absorption of thermal expansion mismatch. However, image sensors have one other requirement of the package, namely it must contain a transparent window to permit light to reach the optically active area of the die. The package must therefore contain a glass window − optically "transparent" polymers attenuate too much of the blue spectrum to be useful.

Early solid state imagers were housed in ceramic packages that were closed by a quartz cover slip. This solution, while perfectly functional, is wholly inadequate for high-volume manufacture and applications where the product cost and size are critical. Particular effort was therefore devoted to developing wafer-level packages for CMOS image sensors. This endeavor proved successful and it is predicted that by 2012, more than 70% of the image sensors produced annually will be housed in wafer-level packages.

Wafer-level image sensor package

A wafer-level package for an image sensor is relatively simple in concept (Fig. 1). A glass wafer is bonded to the front face of the die. Pathways are then formed to connect the die bond pads to a ball grid array interface on the underside of the package. Dicing frees individually packaged die. In reality, the structure and processes are considerably more complex.

Figure 1. Sequence of steps to manufacture a wafer level package for an image sensor. (Source: Tessera)

The first nuance is the glass wafer itself, which must be expansion-matched to silicon, extremely flat, thin, and free of even microscopic defects since it resides very close to the focal plane of the camera. It must also be available in conformance with SEMI standards. Few companies are able to make glass to the required specifications.

The second detail is that the glass wafer cannot be bonded to the surface of the silicon wafer. This is because the optically active area of the imager is covered with an array of microscopic lenses, one per pixel and typically 1-2µm high. These micro lenses are very fragile and cannot be cleaned. Any particle of dirt that lands on the micro lens array will stick, due to electrostatic attraction, blocking the incident light and causing a black spot in the image. The solution adopted is to form a picture frame around the micro lens array so that the glass wafer forms an optically transparent cover over the critical area. By attaching the glass wafer as the very first step in the packaging process, micro lenses are protected in their sealed cavity and any contamination that lands on the exterior surface of the glass can be easily removed.

While the glass cover provides protection to the micro lenses, it prohibits access to the die bond pads, which are rendered inaccessible beneath it. To contact the bond pads, some form of through-silicon via (TSV) must be employed. Despite being technically possible for over 30 years, TSVs have never been adopted in high-volume manufacturing. There are many contributory reasons for this, but they all adversely impact either cost, or reliability.

Figure 2. 300mm wafer and inset, single imager die housed in a wafer-scale package that uses a via-through-pad interconnect to join the die bond pads to the package lands and from there to the ball grid array interface. The interconnect is based on polymer technology with a single redistribution layer for the wiring trace. (Source: Tessera)

In contrast to most semiconductor die, image sensors have very low I/O counts for the die area. The die bond pads therefore tend to be large and widely spaced to aid process yield. By compromising on the complexity of the I/O redistribution carried by the package, it is possible to fabricate through-silicon vias based on polymer technology with a single metal layer for the wiring trace. This approach helps keep cost low and published reliability data show the package is suitable not just for portable electronics products, but able to surpass the far more exacting automotive reliability standard. A modern wafer-scale package for image sensors is shown in Fig. 2.

Sighting the TSVs over the bond pads means there are few restrictions on the bond pad size, pitch, or location. The dicing lanes can be as narrow as the silicon design rules allow, which helps to maximize the number of die per wafer and decrease unit cost. The total imager package imager thickness is approximately 500µm, making it imminently suitable for electronics products where the current fashion is for extreme thinness.

Back-illuminated image sensors

The vast majority of image sensors are front-side illuminated. That is, the light from the scene to be imaged falls on the processed face of the semiconductor, which is also the face on which the die bond pads are sited. Image sensors also come in another flavor, namely back-side illuminated, where the die is mounted inverted and the light falls on the unprocessed face of the semiconductor. This configuration yields superior performance in terms of quantum efficiency and reduced optical cross-talk, together with a reduction in the size of the corresponding camera module (Figs. 3a,b). The principal drawback of back-illuminated image sensors is higher manufacturing cost because additional and more complex processing is required. Hitherto, back-side illuminated image sensors tended to be reserved for scientific and aerospace applications.

Figure 3a. Schematic cross-section through a front-illuminated CMOS image sensor. For reasons based on physics the photo-detectors are buried 10-20µm deep in the silicon. The wiring trace that connects to each pixel is built on the surface of the wafer and is routed to minimize pixel obscuration. Nevertheless, the resulting aperture influences the maximum angle of captured incident light and also gives rise to a potential cross-talk mechanism. (Source: Tessera)

Recently, several companies have achieved breakthroughs in semiconductor processing that make back-illuminated image sensors possible for higher resolution imagers on mobile platforms where the attributes of high pixel count, good light sensitivity, and low camera module height are prized. However, the OEMs that integrate image sensors into their products do not want the problem and cost of a different style of package for each imager orientation. Back-illuminated imagers must therefore somehow be fit in wafer-level packages that have the same external structure as packages for front-illuminated imagers.

Figure 3b. Schematic cross-section through a back-illuminated CMOS image sensor. The die is fabricated in the conventional orientation, but the back silicon is then removed, exposing the photo detectors. Making the photo-detectors easily accessible to light trades manufacturing cost against performance and/or die size. (Source: Tessera)

Visible light is only able to penetrate a short distance into silicon. Therefore, in a back-illuminated imager, for photons to reach the photodiodes, the majority of the original wafer thickness must be removed. Clearly, there are basic handling and yield issues with 200mm or 300mm diameter silicon wafers that have been thinned to under 20µm. Mechanical support is provided by bonding a mechanical-grade silicon wafer to the original front face of the imager wafer. Back-illuminated imagers also use micro lens arrays, so a glass wafer, with closed cavities, is bonded to the light-sensitive side (the back side) of the device wafer. Thus, the bond pads are once again rendered inaccessible for wire bonding, being buried in the center of the glass-silicon-silicon sandwich.

The solution is to use TSV technology to access the bond pads. In this instance, the silicon through which the vias pass is the mechanical support wafer. Some subtle process changes are required to fabricate reliable interconnects to the bond pads on a back-illuminated die because of their inverted orientation. The net result is that the imager package can be made externally identical and the camera module manufacturer does not need to know whether it contains a front- or back-illuminated imager.

The better light sensitivity of back-illuminated image sensors can be put to a number of uses. One of these is to make the pixels, and thus the die smaller, since light-gathering ability is a function of the pixel area. Boosting the quantum efficiency from 25% to 70% permits the pixel size to be reduced from 2.6−1.5µm per side. For a VGA imager, this permits a wafer to accommodate around three times as many die−a reduction in unit cost that goes a long way toward offsetting the higher manufacturing and packaging cost of back-illuminated imagers.

Wafer-level package cost

Information on wafer-level package cost is difficult to obtain. However, one of the leading camera phone OEMs has published a target procurement cost for camera modules of $1 per megapixel. For a VGA camera, this means that only a few tens of cents are available to purchase a silicon die, two lenses, an infra-red filter, a light baffle and a housing for the optics, then assemble, test and ship the camera. The wafer-level package is also part of the bill of materials of the camera module, which implies that, to be in contention, the package cost per die must be extraordinarily low.

Biography

Giles Humpston received his PhD and BSc from Brunel U. (UK) and is Director, Applications (Europe) at Tessera, Inc., 3025 Orchard Parkway, San Jose, California, 95134, USA; ph.: 408-321-6000; email [email protected]

More Solid State Technology Current Issue Articles
More Solid State Technology Archives Issue Articles

(December 29, 2010) — Cohu Inc. (NASDAQ:COHU) appointed Luis A. Müller president of its newly formed Semiconductor Equipment Group, which encompasses Cohu subsidiaries Delta Design Inc. and Rasco GmbH.

Müller has fourteen years experience in the semiconductor equipment industry, including from July 2005 as VP of the high speed handling group for Delta Design Inc. and additionally since January 2009 as managing director of Rasco GmbH in Kolbermoor, Germany. Previously, Müller spent nine years at Teradyne, where he held executive positions in engineering and business development. Müller has a PhD in mechanical engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

James A. Donahue, Cohu chairman, president, and CEO said, "The establishment of the Semiconductor Equipment Group is a logical next step in the integration of our two IC test handler companies, Delta Design and Rasco. Under Luis’ leadership Rasco has established new records for sales, orders and net income."

Donahue concluded, "Luis is exceptionally well-prepared for this assignment and I look forward to working with him to extend our market-leading position in IC test handlers and deliver increased profitability to our shareholders."

Cohu is a supplier of test handling, burn-in and thermal solutions used by the global semiconductor industry as well as a supplier of microwave communications and video equipment. For more information, visit Cohu’s website at www.cohu.com.

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group

(December 29, 2010) — RoodMicrotec N.V. has successfully secured mezzanine capital of € 1.994 million without repayment obligation, providing a long-term strengthening of the company’s equity position.

As part of the transaction, the company has placed pension commitments of an equivalent amount with a German pension fund. Thus, this fund has taken over the annual pension payments to pensioners of approximately € 205,000. RoodMicrotec will pay 11.7% annual interest on this mezzanine capital (equity component), or € 233,000.

"This amount of € 2.0 million is a significant improvement of our equity position, while at the same time improving our credit rating, which in turn will positively impact future debt interest rates," Philip Nijenhuis, RoodMicrotec CEO stated.

The Luxembourg-based PLENTUM-Gruppe, which supervised the placement, has been successful in financing and outsourcing pension commitments since 2008. "We are a specialized financing partner for medium-sized companies. With our financial resources, RoodMicrotec will be able in the next few years to focus on expanding its worldwide operations, and has at the same time secured consistent and long-term financing of the obligations arising from existing pension commitments," Jörg Flohr, chairman of the board of PLENTUM-Gruppe, added.

RoodMicrotec aims to grow further over the next few years, both in terms of sales and result, while ensuring healthy balance sheet ratios.

RoodMicrotec is an independent value-added microelectronics and optoelectronics service provider for failure & technology analysis, qualification & monitoring burn-in, test- & product engineering, production test (including device programming and end-of-line service), ESD/ESDFOS assessment & training, quality & reliability consulting, supply chain management and total manufacturing solutions with partners. Learn more at www.roodmicrotec.com

Read more about burn-in and wafer test here.

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group

(December 28, 2010) — The University of Michigan College of Engineering will present Packaging for MEMS March 31 to April 1, 2011, in Boston, MA. MEMS packaging is a significant part of product cost. This program highlights what to consider in developing application-specific packaging that will meet your goals for product performance, durability, and total cost.

Using the right MEMS packaging is critical for product sucess, point out the conference organizers. MEMS packaging is a significant part of product cost. This program highlights what to consider in developing application-specific packaging that will meet goals for product performance, durability, and total cost. Learn about extension of existing technology, exciting new technologies coming up, how to make MEMS packaging more specific to applications, and what’s going on in research. Examples of strengths and shortcomings of various packaging schemes are included.

The conference invites product design engineers and engineering managers of MEMS device manufacturers to attend, as well as engineers, managers, and system designers who use MEMS devices in their products.

This program is a joint presentation by U-M Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, The Center for Wireless Integrated MicroSystems (WIMS), and The Center for Professional Development.

Register online at www.InterPro.engin.umich.edu

The Center for Wireless Integrated Micro Systems (WIMS) is a world leader in developing packaging technology for a variety of MEMS systems. For more information about WIMS including education, research highlights, patents, and publications, see www.wimserc.org

Follow Small Times on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/smalltimes. Or join our Facebook group

(December 28, 2010 – BUSINESS WIRE) — O2 Investment Partners, LLC, announced it has acquired all outstanding shares of Silbond Corporation, a specialty chemical manufacturing business based in Weston in southeastern Michigan.

Jay Hansen, president of O2, announced the deal and added that the transaction included partnering with Silbond’s strong management team.

Founded in 1994, Silbond employs 50 people and supplies tetra ethyl ortho silicate (TEOS), a specialty chemical used in industries such as semiconductors and electronics, protective coatings, investment casting, and chemical processing. Silbond is the only producer of TEOS for commercial sale in North America.

"We are not a traditional private equity firm," Hansen explained. "We invest equity on behalf of our principals and a core network of co-investors and strategic partners. We have a geographic focus in the Great Lakes states and Ontario, Canada and look for lower- and middle-market companies that have the earnings growth potential and a clear path to the creation of long-term shareholder value. We like to partner with management to pursue that common vision and structure the capital investment to fit that business and facilitate the implementation of the strategic plan. Silbond’s history, track record and potential meet those criteria."

"Led by its President, Larry Brown, and a very strong management team, we believe that Silbond has the right combination of a talented and experienced workforce, efficient manufacturing processes, diversified customer base, and diversified markets served, to be competitive on a global scale. We look forward to supporting them in achieving their vision of growth and success."

Added Hansen, "With this management team and the support of our financial partners such as Centerfield Capital Partners, we are very optimistic about being able to realize these growth opportunities."

The principals of O2 Investment have more than 60 years of collective experience in mergers and acquisitions and building businesses, having completed more than 40 acquisitions and investments in the manufacturing, distribution, service, financial service, and technology industries. In addition to Silbond, other portfolio companies owned by O2 Investment principals include: Rhe-Tech, Inc., a Michigan based plastics compounding and coloring business and New Horizons Northeast, a New York based computer and software training and education provider to consumers and businesses. Additional information is available at www.silbond.com and www.o2investment.com

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group

(December 27, 2010) — Terepac Corporation has been accepted into the Plug and Play Tech Center in Sunnyvale, California, an incubator in the heart of Silicon Valley. Terepac’s footprint in Silicon Valley is the company’s first presence in the United States.

Founded in 2004 to commercialize innovations in printable miniaturized electronics, the company is now transitioning from R&D into pilot line production. The company’s investors include John Thompson, (former vice chairman of IBM Worldwide) and John Pollock (former Chairman and CEO Electrohome Limited) while its technical advisors include Dr. Joel Birnbaum (former Chief Scientist of Hewlett-Packard, and former Director of HP Laboratories), and Dr. Yoshio Nishi (former SVP and Director of R&D of Texas Instruments’ Semiconductor Group). Terepac collaborated with research consortium IMEC in 2009.

Whereas conventional methods of semiconductor packaging cannot effectively handle objects smaller than one-half millimeter, Terepac’s proprietary process liberates Moore’s law enabling sophisticated microelectronics to be printed on flexible substrates at a fraction of the size — down to submicron scale — with nanometer precision and at a cost far lower than that of creating conventional rigid circuits. Entire devices with microprocessors, memory, and sensors can be reduced to less than a millimeter square, thinner than paper, and flexible enough to bend around a pencil with no sacrifice in performance.

Because the size, weight and rigidity of the underlying electronics often determines the form of an end product, Terepac’s breakthroughs enables existing electronic devices to be delivered in order of magnitude smaller (and flexible) form factors when compared to today’s offerings. In addition, Terepac enables electronics to be cost-effectively embedded into a range of objects and devices, transforming them into smart objects. Given the rise in smart phones, mobile phones, geolocation, and the Internet of Things, the ability to enable objects to report on their location or condition, as well as to communicate, interact, and transact with users, will become increasingly valuable, says the company.

Terepac is headquartered in Canada’s Technology Triangle in Waterloo, Ontario, and in 2010 established a European subsidiary, Terepac GmbH, in Dresden, Germany (Silicon Saxony). Learn more at http://terepac.com/

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group

(December 21, 2010 – Business Wire) — Micross Components, Inc. and SemiSouth Laboratories, Inc. announced a collaborative effort to expand SemiSouth’s line of Silicon Carbide (SiC) Power JFETs and Schottky Diodes. SemiSouth will provide select JFET and diode die to Micross for packaging and test in metal hermetic packages. Micross will then offer these value-added hermetically packaged versions to military, aerospace, and down-hole drilling markets.

Micross plans to offer screening of the JFETs and Schottky Diodes to military and space specifications such as MIL-PRF-19500 equivalent initially and eventually offering standard certified MIL-PRF-19500 products in the future. The initial Micross SiC product offering will include four 1200V and one 1700V JFETs with 125C continuous max drain current capability of 4 to 50 amps and low RDSon, and four 1200 volt Schottky diodes capable of 5 to 30 amps continuous forward current. Operating junction temperature range is -55°C to +200°C (TJ), with special screening up to 260°C upon request.

"This is a significant product addition to our Military & Aerospace products family that will better serve the Satellite customer with state-of-the-art SiC technology for high-power FETs & diodes. With our hermetic packaging offering, this also expands the product use for extreme temperatures seen in deep down hole drilling of up to 260°C," says Jeff Kendziorski, director of marketing and new product development, Micross Components.

"We are continuing to search for ways to sell our SiC power electronics products in to hi-rel and mil-aero customers, and are pleased to be working with a well-known high-reliability products vendor such as Micross," says SemiSouth Laboratories CTO and VP of business development, Jeff Casady.

Micross Components is a global provider of specialized products & services and distributed components for the electronics community. For more information, please visit www.microssaustin.com/siliconcarbide .

SemiSouth is a privately held semiconductor company with more than 20 U.S. patents in the emerging field of high-efficiency silicon-carbide power devices. More information can be obtained from its website, www.semisouth.com

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group

For more information on military & aerospace electronics, visit Military & Aerospace Electronics at http://www.militaryaerospace.com/index.html

For more information on oil drilling, visit Oil & Gas Journal at http://www.ogj.com/index.html

(December 17, 2010 – BUSINESS WIRE) — Nanometrics Incorporated (Nasdaq: NANO), advanced process control metrology systems provider to semiconductor, high-brightness LED, data storage, and solar photovoltaics fabricators, announced that a leading semiconductor foundry has ordered a UniFire 7900 metrology system for advanced 3D wafer-scale packaging process control. This initial system will be delivered in the fourth quarter of 2010 to enable the foundry’s transition from development to high-volume manufacturing in 2011.

"The UniFire is an enabling metrology system in the rapidly growing wafer-scale packaging segment and has been adopted by multiple customers for through-silicon-via (TSV) process control, with measurements including critical dimensions (CD), depth and topography. The deployment of advanced packaging technologies such as TSV and micro-bump formation will enable cost and performance advantages for next-generation devices. These emerging applications provide growth opportunities for Nanometrics, with new manufacturing process steps requiring additional optical metrology solutions," commented Dr. Michael Darwin, vice president of the UniFire and Materials Characterization groups at Nanometrics.

"This win is indicative of our strategy to grow the company through acquisitions of leading-edge products and technologies that expand our business into emerging and high-growth market segments," commented Tim Stultz, president and chief executive officer of Nanometrics. "The UniFire enables us to offer new and enabling technology to our established logic and memory customers while increasing our penetration of leading foundry customers. As we look forward, the incremental market opportunity for advanced wafer-scale packaging process meaningfully expands our served markets and business growth outlook."

The UniFire has been put into production for both front-end-of-line (FEOL) and back-end-of-line (BEOL) semiconductor and magnetic device manufacturing processes, and for applications including advanced packaging, lithography, etch, chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) and thin film deposition. The UniFire is capable of high precision measurement of two-dimensional and three-dimensional structures for depth, CD, profile, and film thickness control for advanced device manufacturing processes.

Nanometrics is a provider of advanced, high-performance process control metrology systems used primarily in the fabrication of semiconductors, high-brightness LEDs, data storage devices and solar photovoltaics. Nanometrics’ website is http://www.nanometrics.com.

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group

(December 17, 2010 – BUSINESS WIRE) — Nanometrics Incorporated (Nasdaq: NANO), advanced process control metrology systems provider to semiconductor, high-brightness LED, data storage, and solar photovoltaics fabricators, announced that a leading semiconductor foundry has ordered a UniFire 7900 metrology system for advanced 3D wafer-scale packaging process control. This initial system will be delivered in the fourth quarter of 2010 to enable the foundry’s transition from development to high-volume manufacturing in 2011.

"The UniFire is an enabling metrology system in the rapidly growing wafer-scale packaging segment and has been adopted by multiple customers for through-silicon-via (TSV) process control, with measurements including critical dimensions (CD), depth and topography. The deployment of advanced packaging technologies such as TSV and micro-bump formation will enable cost and performance advantages for next-generation devices. These emerging applications provide growth opportunities for Nanometrics, with new manufacturing process steps requiring additional optical metrology solutions," commented Dr. Michael Darwin, vice president of the UniFire and Materials Characterization groups at Nanometrics.

"This win is indicative of our strategy to grow the company through acquisitions of leading-edge products and technologies that expand our business into emerging and high-growth market segments," commented Tim Stultz, president and chief executive officer of Nanometrics. "The UniFire enables us to offer new and enabling technology to our established logic and memory customers while increasing our penetration of leading foundry customers. As we look forward, the incremental market opportunity for advanced wafer-scale packaging process meaningfully expands our served markets and business growth outlook."

The UniFire has been put into production for both front-end-of-line (FEOL) and back-end-of-line (BEOL) semiconductor and magnetic device manufacturing processes, and for applications including advanced packaging, lithography, etch, chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) and thin film deposition. The UniFire is capable of high precision measurement of two-dimensional and three-dimensional structures for depth, CD, profile, and film thickness control for advanced device manufacturing processes.

Nanometrics is a provider of advanced, high-performance process control metrology systems used primarily in the fabrication of semiconductors, high-brightness LEDs, data storage devices and solar photovoltaics. Nanometrics’ website is http://www.nanometrics.com.

Subscribe to Solid State Technology/Advanced Packaging.

Follow Advanced Packaging on Twitter.com by clicking www.twitter.com/advpackaging. Or join our Facebook group