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IFTLE 355 iPhone 8 Teardown; NHanced Semi; Morris Chang to Retire

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

iPhone 8 Teardown

TechInsights has begun their teardown of the iPhone 8. [link]

Pics of the main board are shown below.

TechInsights

 

techinsights 2-2 TechInsights 1-2

– The AP (application processor) is in a Package on Package (PoP) with Micron 3GB Mobile LPDDR4 SDRAM.

– The biggest new feature of the AP at announcement is a dedicated “Neural Engine” primarily for Face recognition.

– The video performance is claimed to be the highest quality video capture available in a smartphone. The AP features an Apple-designed video encoder enabling 4K video at 60 fps and Slo-mo 1080p video at 240 fps.

– For we packaging aficionados, the big news is the absence of TSV arrays in their CIS. Preliminary analysis of the die photo suggests to TechInsights that it’s a Sony back-illuminated Exmor RS stacked chip from which they infer that the stack is using hybrid bonding (what Sony licensed from Ziptronix) for the first time in an Apple camera. [see IFTLE “Updating CMOS Image Sensor Technology”]

The SEMI 3D Packaging and Integration Committee

The SEMI International Standards Committee, at their SEMICON West 2017 meeting, approved the transformation of the existing 3D Stacked IC Committee and Assembly & Packaging Committee into a single, unified 3D Packaging and Integration Committee [link] with a charter to:

To explore, evaluate, discuss, and create consensus-based specifications, guidelines, test methods, and practices that, through voluntary compliance, will:

  • include the materials, piece parts, and interconnection schemes, and unique packaging assemblies that provide for the communication link between the semiconductor chip and the next level of integration, either single- or multi-chip configurations. It relates to the technologies for heterogeneous and other multi-chip packaging such as Fan-out/Fan-in Wafer Level Packaging, Panel Level Packaging, Three-Dimensional Stacking IC, device embedded packaging, flexible electronics technology
  • promote mutual understanding and improved communication between users and suppliers, equipment, automation systems, devices, and services
  • enhance the manufacturing efficiency, capability and shorten time-to-market and reduce manufacturing cost

You can get involved with the SEMI International Standards Program at:  www.semi.org/standardsmembership.

Enhanced Semiconductor

NHanced Semiconductors Inc. was launched as a spin-off of Tezzaron Semiconductor in 2016. In the course of developing its advanced 3D memory devices Tezzaron developed technical expertise in ancillary semiconductor technologies.  While Tezzaron will continues to develop and manufacture memory devices with specific focus on its DiRAM4 products, Bob Patti, Bob Patti, past CTO of Tezzaron informed IFTLE that NHanced Semi exists to implement and expand that expertise for process development, prototyping, small volume manufacturing. “We will help determine the optimal packaging solution for customer needs.  If they need custom design work, we can do that; if their design is complete, we’ll assist with 3D or 2.5D enablement.  Sourcing, manufacture, assembly, test – we will handle the entire process from concept to completion”

NHanced Semi has recently completed the purchase of the former Morrisville NC Novati fab, the fab that used to be Ziptronix. Bob indicated that Nhanced will be doing customer R&D development projects and then passing them off to partner Novati to scale and commercialize. Nhanced has replaced tools that Novati had shipped from Morrisville to Austin and their full line in Morrisville should be operational shortly. The 24,000 square foot fabrication Morrisville, NC facility is equipped for rapid prototyping, with a focus on 2.5D and 3D integrated circuit assembly. Current equipment can perform surface prep, bonding, thinning, and pick-place on multiple wafer sizes (100mm to 200mm). NHanced is currently quoting and taking orders for 4Q activity

Speaking of Novati, a recent report from Austin indicates that they have been acquired by start-up Skorpios, a fabless semiconductor manufacturing company producing communications products. [link]

Morris Chang announces retirement

ChangWhen a wise man speaks it is best to listen. Certainly we must all agree that Morris Chang, the “father of Taiwans chip industry,” who has led TSMC, for 30 some years, is a wise man. Long time IFTLE readers will recall my encounter with Chang in the late 1990’s when I was visiting TSMC introducing materials for bumping. He personally attended this low level meeting telling me “I need to better understand this bumping technology…so teach me”

Well, Morris Chang, 86, has announced that he will retire in June, after having built the world’s biggest foundry chipmaker [link].

Earlier this summer, this wise man was quoted as saying “Packaging can extend physical limits of semiconductors…” [link]

Chang identified the impact of packaging on high-performance computing applications such as AI and deep learning, graphics processors, augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) applications which he feels will drive future IC market growth.

We are all aware that TSMC has developed a new generation of packaging , its integrated fan-out (InFO) wafer-level packaging (WLP) technology and has recently expanded its chip-on-wafer-on-substrate 2.5D (CoWoS) technology to the fabrication of 16nm chips, and offered second-generation High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM2) and a GPU modules to support artificial intelligence (AI), deep learning and other high-performance computing applications.

When a wise man speaks, it is best to listen!

For all the latest in Advanced Packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 354 The Case for µLED Displays

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

AntmanIt is true, as Shakespeare one said, that “A Rose by any other name would smell as sweet” but … in our times, it is important to have an unambiguous name that clearly indicates what you are talking about. Unfortunately, this is not the case for micro LED displays (µLED Displays). There are those for which this term brings to mind a millennial trying to read the Wall Street Journal on his smart watch with a magnifying glass or possibly a display worn by the Astonishing Antman.

The problem obviously is the grammatical issue of what the µ modifies…i.e. a micro (LED display) or a (micro LED) display. While it may be fun to consider how to create a display for the Antman, we will be talking about the latter. IFTLE thought a primer on the subject was in order since this technology has become more and more dependent on interconnect and assembly technologies being supplied by the packaging community.

IFTLE certainly considers this a “futures” technology, meaning still a few years out, but always remember “…the leading edge is where the money is made!”

Comparing the Display Technologies

TFT LCD (thin film transistor liquid crystal displays) were being developed in the 1970s, but by the late 1980s it was publically thought to be way too difficult to yield (“.. you cannot have bad pixels on a TV set”) and certainly a much too expensive a technology to ever displace the cathode ray tubes used for TV and desktop computer displays. Well we all know what happened next and clearly without that technology transformation there would be no laptops or smartphones or smart watches today.

Next on the time line came OLED developed initially by Eastman Kodak in the late 1980s. An organic light-emitting diode (OLED) is a LED in which the emissive layer is a film of organic compound that emits light in response to an electric current. This layer is sandwiched between two electrodes (typically the upper electrode is transparent such as ITO). An OLED display works without a backlight, and is thinner and lighter than a LCD. OLEDs have traditionally been expensive to manufacture and only LG and Samsung made them. Samsung has been working in OLED devices for a decade and is currently using the technology in their smart phones and televisions. Today, the cost has come down dramatically, and now OLED TVs are very affordable. Apple began using OLED displays in its watches in 2015 and in its laptops in 2016.

The term “Micro-LED” was first used by Cree in its US patent “Micro- led arrays with enhanced light extraction” in 2001. The patent describes arrays of interconnected LEDs with individual sizes of less than 30μm.

While there currently are no µLED displays in production, the companies developing the technology believe that it has the potential to challenge OLED and LCDs in the future. Like OLED, it does not require a backlight, producing light in each individual pixel. µLED have the advantage of lower power consumption, higher brightness, ultra-high definition, high color saturation, faster response rate, longer lifetimes and higher efficiencies compared to LCDs and OLEDs.

The three technologies are compared in cross section in the figure below [link]

led 4

 

µLEDs were placed onto the industry technology roadmap 2 years ago following Apple’s acquisition of LuxVue, which claimed that its technology was 9x brighter than OLED and LCD. Then Oculus (Facebook) acquired InfiniLED another µLED company which claimed “… a 20 – 40X reduction in power consumption” [link].

In most cases, the µLED chips are manufactured separately then positioned and connected to the transistor matrix via a pick and place process show in the figure below.

LED 1

Singulation of μLED display chips is typically achieved by bonding the epi wafer to a carrier and plasma etching in the die streets. According to Yole Developpement LEDs as small as 5μm have been demonstrated, but applications requiring >1500 PPI (pixels per inch) might require even smaller sizes.

led 5

 

Traditional pick and place equipment cannot pick up such small dies. Such tools typically have throughput around 25,000 places per hour. If large displays are to incorporate millions of tiny LEDs they cannot be assembled by such a method. Thus a requirement for µLED displays is a massively parallel pick and place technology. Players who have developed such technology include Luxvue and X-Celeprint who we have discussed on IFTLE before [see IFTLE 203, “Apple Acquires LuxVue µ-assembly Technology”]

X-Celeprint has developed MEMS-like sacrificial release processes for LED chips. Luxvue uses an electrostatic technology for their massively parallel pick-up, while Xceleprint uses an elastomeric stamp.

The µLED display concept was first validated by Sony in 2012 [link]. Their 55 inch “Crystal LED TV“ which utilized 6MM tiny LEDs (2 million each for red, green, blue subpixels) to reproduce a picture in Full HD resolution. Sony claimed that it had 3.5 times the contrast ratio, 1.4X the color range, and 10X faster response time compared to a traditional LCD.

HVM at costs acceptable to the proposed applications still faces significant engineering and manufacturing challenges. Most expect to see smart watches, being worked on now, as the first application to reach commercialization in the next few years with Apple in the lead. The drivers for this application include battery life and display brightness.

µLED performance and supply chain players are compared below [link].

led 2

While it will likely take considerable time, effort and investment to establish an HVM infrastructure, µLED could emerge as an alternative to OLED in the future as LCD fades away.

For all the latest in Advanced packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 353 Updating CMOS Image Sensor Technology

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

A few weeks ago, we covered the Sony announcement of the Xperia XZ1, which features a 19MP Exmor RS camera with 960fps video capture and reportedly is fabricated as a stacked 3 layer CIS with DRAM. [see IFTLE 346 “Sony Introduces Stacked Image Sensor with DRAM in Xperia XZ phones]

This technology was first disclosed at IEEE IEM in 2016 as their “Cu2Cu Hybrid Bonding” [link] and discussed in IFTLE coverage of last falls 3D ASIP Conference [see IFTLE 319 “ …3D ASIP Part 2: Image Sensing – Sony, Tessera, SMIC”]

Those of us that have been following 3DIC for the past decade recognize this as the Ziptronix “DBI process” which they licensed to Sony a few years ago. It is now quite clear that the literature is generically calling this technology “hybrid bonding” since the bonding occurs to a surface containing both copper and oxide. Hybrid bonding does not have TSVs since it simultaneously connects the two substrates physically and electrically.

They depict there process flow as follows

Sony 1

The trench and via are made at the BEOL top layer of each wafer. Then, barrier metal and Cu seed are formed by PVD. Cu is plated up and annealed at the appropriate temperature. Excess Cu is removed by CMP to reveal the Cu connection pads and oxide dielectric. After face-to-face bonding, the wafer stack is annealed. As illustrated in their figure 4, the upper Cu pad and lower Cu pad are connected by Cu diffusion and grain growth, and the upper dielectric and lower dielectric are connected by dehydration-condensation reaction. They report that it is important to remove any voids from the Cu pad bonding interface during the post-ECD annealing.

Samsung CIS now include Stacked DRAM too

According to new reports [link], Samsung has developed and will begin mass production in November 2017 of a similar mobile camera sensor capable of 1,000 frames per second (FPS). Reports are that the camera contains a stacked 3 layer image sensor, with the layers made up of the sensor itself, logic chip, plus a DRAM chip that can temporarily store data.

While we are at it, let’s take a look at the advances covered at the recent Int Image Sensor Wkshp held in Hiroshima this past May.

Omnivision

Venezia of Omnivision described their “1.0um pixel improvements with hybrid bond stacking technology” discussing their Gen2, 1.0um CMOS image-sensor technology featuring hybrid bonding stacking.

Their first generation, stacked chip technology used oxide-oxide bonding and TSV to bond and electrically connect the sensor and logic wafers, respectively. “With stacking technology, the logic circuitry is placed under the array, resulting in an overall smaller chip size than is possible with standard BSI-CIS; where the circuit is located on the same wafer. Stacking also allows for sensor-only processes that improve CIS performance which could have negative impacts on circuit performance in a BSI-only process.”

The gen 2 technology uses hybrid bonding “where wafers-to-wafer bonding occurs at both the oxide and metal interfaces, and water-to-wafer interconnection is made at the top metal bonding pad. This architecture offers a better interconnect pitch and more flexible interconnect placement than the previous Gen1 approach. For instance, bonding can occur closer to the array edge, or even within the array.” The resulting chip size is 10% smaller using HB technology for the Gen2 1.0um, 16MP product.

fig 2

 

TSMC

Hseih of TSMC gave a joint paper with Qualcomm on “A 3D Stacked Programmable Image Processing Engine in a 40nm Logic Process with a Detector Array in a 45nm CMOS Image Sensor Technologies”

They designed & fabricated a RICA (Reconfigurable Instruction Cell Array) ASIC wafer stacked with a pixel arrays wafer of 8MP, 1.1 um pitch BSI image sensor test vehicle. This device used “the 3D stacking technologies of a 45nm CIS process and a 40nm logic process at TSMC”.

Sony

Kagawa of Sony discussed “Novel Stacked CMOS Image Sensor with Advanced Cu2Cu Hybrid Bonding” further detailing their Cu2Cu hybrid bonding technology.

They describe the positive attribute of not having to create TSVs in their devices as follows “Making TSVs needs special fabrication equipment, such as deep Si etcher and high coverage metal/dielectric deposition tool. In addition to the fabrication problems, there are device problems. In particular,

the keep-out-zone (KOZ) strongly affects device specifications and circuit design. On the other hand, hybrid bonding does not have such problems. It can basically be fabricated by the conventional back-end-of-line (BEOL) process, and special equipment is never needed….Moreover, the Cu connection pad is located on top of the BEOL layer, and it never interferes with the MOS-FET during the fabrication process. It enables enormous circuit design flexibility and further chip size reduction can easily be achieved.”

Reliability tests were carried out under voltage and temperature stressed conditions. Predicted lifetime was estimated from Black’s equation as over 10 years. Extremely low leakage current and good TDDB reportedly indicate that the Cu connections are well isolated by the dielectric. They fabricated a stacked back-illuminated CMOS image sensor with “22.5 megapixel 1/2.6 size CIS featuring a 1.0μm unit pixel size and an ISP…” using their Cu2Cu hybrid bonding process.

TechInsights

Ray Fontaine of TechInsights in his “Survey of Enabling Technologies in Successful Consumer Digital Imaging Products” detailed the technologies responsible for the remarkable advances in mobile phone camera performance over the last decade.

He notes that “Two-die stacks, comprising a back-illuminated CIS and mixed-signal image signal processor (ISP), have emerged as the dominant configuration for leading smartphone camera chips” and adds that “The recent manufacturing trend for back-illuminated CIS chips in a stacked configuration seems to have stabilized at the 90/65 nm process generation “ as shown in the fig below.

Techinsights 1

He notes that Sony’s current leadership position in the industry is due to the fact that they were the first to bring stacked CIS chips to market, by implementing homogenous wafer-to-wafer bonding (oxide bonding) with TSVs in 2013 and Cu-to-Cu hybrid bonding, (also known as Cu2Cu bonding or DBI), in 2016. OmniVision’s first observed stacked chips, fabricated with foundry partner XMC in 2015, used a ‘butted’ TSV structure in which a single, wide TSV contacted both a CIS and ISP pad structure. OmniVision later adopted a unified TSV structure for its 1.0 μm pixel generation PureCelPlus-S chips, fabricated by foundry partner TSMC. The observed Samsung stacked chips in production also feature a butted TSV structure, but instead use a W-based TSV window liner for vertical interconnect. These are shown below.

techinsights 2

For all the latest on advanced packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 351 ASE Tech Forum Part 3: Plasma Dicing, 2.5/3D Options

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

Several of you have asked how Hannah, Madeline and family have survived the floods down in Houston. Thanks for your concern. Luckily, the old time Texans built Rice University on high ground and my son bought in a neighborhood near there. However, that doesn’t mean they didn’t see water. The pic below shows Maddie standing on the sidewalk outside their house knee deep in water, but, as you can see to the right, it was nothing compared to other parts of the city!

madeline

 

PLASMA DICING

Finishing off our look at the ASE Tech Forum, Plasma-therm (working with ON Semi and DISCO) examined Plasma die singulation. One would look to plasma dicing to avoid the damage caused by mechanical blade dicing or the HAZ caused by Laser dicing which requires as larger than normal street to act as a keep out zone. Stress is also reduced by plasma dicing as is shown in the figure below. It is also clear that plasma dicing can result in more die per wafer due to the smaller required street/kerf.

plasmatherm 1

 

However, plasma dicing cannot etch through metal so any features in the streets (such as test structures) must be dealt with.

One solution is to isolate the test structures and process control monitors and etch around the die as shown in the fig below.

plasma-therm 2

In terms of market adoption of plasma dicing, they offered the following slide showing us what was qualified in production and what was in development.

plasmatherm 2

2.5 / 3D Technology Choices

ASE’s Chris Zinck in his examination of 3D packaging presented an interesting slide on 2.5/3D options plotting technology solutions vs substrate L/S capability. It is shown below. In their view what is evolving is a technology choice based on required density with std FC and PoP at > 10um; fan out using advanced laminate silicon-less RDL solutions between 10um and 1um and silicon interposers at less that 1 um. IFTLE is not so sure about the advanced substrate solutions in the 3-1um range , but in general this is a good way of looking at how the market is breaking out.

ASE 1

IMAPS 50th in Raleigh

Hope to see many of you at this years fall IMAPS meeting which just so happens to be the 50th anniversary of IMAPS and just so happens to be down the road from me in Raleigh NC. As I explained a few blogs ago [see IFTLE 336 “ISHM to IMAPS…” ] IMAPS has been there since the beginning of our industry and it will be fun to see all of those who have contributed to packaging through the years.

IMAPS

 

For all the latest in advanced packaging, see you at IMAPS 2017 and, of course, keep reading IFTLE…

IFTLE 350 DARPA Electronics Resurgence Initiative: Going Beyond Moore’s Law

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

IFTLE has discussed in detail the coming end of Moore’s Law and the implications that holds for our electronics industry. For instance see IFTLE 300 “ITRS 2.0 – It’s the End of the World As We Know It”,

Well DoDs DARPA has stepped up and is attempting to lead the industry out of the quagmire that is the myriad of options that have presented themselves.

On June 1, DARPA’s Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) announced a new Electronics Resurgence Initiative (ERI) “to open pathways for far-reaching improvements in electronics performance well beyond the limits of traditional scaling”. Key to the ERI will hopefully be new collaborations among the commercial electronics community, defense industrial base, university researchers, and the DoD. The DoD proposed FY 2018 budget reportedly includes a $75 million allocation for DARPA in support of this, initiative. It is reported that in total we are looking at a $200,000MM program.

For details on the ERI see DARPA-SN-17-60 [link]

chappellThe program will focus on the development of new materials for devices, new architectures for integrating those devices into circuits, and software and hardware designs for using these circuits. The program seeks to achieve continued improvements in electronics performance without the benefit of traditional scaling. Bill Chappell, director of DARPA’s Microsystems Technology Office (MTO), which will lead the program, announced “For nearly seventy years, the United States has enjoyed the economic and security advantages that have come from national leadership in electronics innovation…..If we want to remain out front, we need to foment an electronics revolution that does not depend on traditional methods of achieving progress. That’s the point of this new initiative – to embrace progress through circuit specialization and to wrangle the complexity of the next phase of advances, which will have broad implications on both commercial and national defense interests. ”He continued “We need to break away from tradition and embrace the kinds of innovations that the new initiative is all about…”

The chip research effort will complement the recently created Joint University Microelectronics Program (JUMP), an electronics research effort co-funded by DARPA and SRC (Semiconductor Research Corporation). Among the chip makers contributing to JUMP are IBM, Intel Corp., Micron Technology and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. SRC members and DARPA are expected to kick in more than $150 million for the five-year project. Focus areas include high-frequency sensor networks, distributed and cognitive computing along with intelligent memory and storage.

The materials portion of the ERI initiative will explore the use of unconventional materials to increase circuit performance without requiring smaller transistors. Although silicon is used for most of the circuits manufactured today, other materials like GaAs, GaN and SiC have made significant inroads into high performance circuits. It is hoped that the initiative will uncover other elements from the Periodic Table that can provide candidate materials for next-generation logic and memory components. One research focus will be to integrate different semiconductor materials on individual chips, and vertical (3D) rather than planar integration of microsystem components.

The architecture portion of the initiative will examine circuit structures such as Graphics processing units (GPUs), which underlie much of the ongoing progress in machine learning, have already demonstrated the performance improvement derived from specialized hardware architectures. The initiative will explore other opportunities, such as “reconfigurable physical structures that adjust to the needs of the software they support”.

The design portion of the initiative will focus on developing tools for rapidly designing specialized circuits. Although DARPA has consistently invested in these application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) for military use, ASICs can be costly and time-consuming to develop. New design tools and an open-source design paradigm could be transformative, enabling innovators to rapidly and cheaply create specialized circuits for a range of commercial applications.

DARPA CHIPS

As part of this overall Electronics Resurgence Initiative, DARPA, last week, had their kick of meeting for the CHIPS program (Common Heterogeneous Integration and Intellectual Property (IP) Reuse). We have previously discussed CHIPS here [see IFTLE 323 “The New DARPA Program “CHIPS”…”

The CHIPS vision is an ecosystem of discrete modular, IP blocks, which can be assembled into a system using existing and emerging integration technologies. Modularity and reusability of such IP blocks will require electrical and physical interface standards to be widely adopted by the community supporting the CHIPS ecosystem. The CHIPS program hopes to develop the design tools and integration standards required for modular integrated circuit (IC) designs.

Program contractors include Intel, Micron, Cadence, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, Synopsys, Intrinsix Corp., and Jariet Technologies, U. Michigan, Georgia Tech, and North Carolina State University.

The CHIPS program will tackle digital interfaces and systems and their supporting technologies with the goal of:

– developing common interface standards                                                                                                                                                    – enabling the assembly of systems from modular IP blocks                                                                                                               – demonstrating the reusability of the modular IP blocks via rapid design iteration

CHIPS 1 CHIPS 2

For all the latest in advanced packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 349 ASE Tech Forum part II: FC, WLP & FOWLP

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

Before we continue our look at the recent ASE Tech forum, a word about the solar eclipse. Much of the media portrayed this as a “once in a lifetime” event. I clearly recall one in the spring of 1970. I was in my last semester at NC State, living off campus and it was mid afternoon. It stared to get dark, the winds stirred up and the animals (birds and dogs) became silent. The temperature dropped what felt like 25 degrees and then it began to reverse.

The event was memorable enough for Carly Simon to insert lyrics about the “elite cool people traveling to be seen at a solar eclipse” into her generational song “You’re so Vain” (1972). Actually, she was watching it a few miles from me with boyfriend/future husband James Taylor who lived in Chapel Hill NC where his father was a University Dean. Anyway, it was certainly an unusual natural occurrence and the 8/21/2017 total eclipsed was my second and probably last chance to see one.

For those of you that were in its path…hope you enjoyed it this time around!

eclipse

ASE Tech Forum continued

Back at the ASE tech forum in Nijmegen, Bradford Factor gave an update presentation on FC, WLP and FOWLP. On one of his early slides, Factor states that ASE began their bumping / FC work in 2000. I will add to that, noting that this all began for them after they licensed the FCT (Flip Chip Technologies) technology package ~ 2000. This was the dawn of wafer level technology, I was running the BCB business for Dow Chemical at the time and we were working with FCT to “bring up” licensees ASE, Amkor and SPIL during this time period. Taiwan had become the center of bumping and WLP. This new “wafer level” technology was destined to become the backbone of the advanced packaging for the next few decades.

ASE 1

Product families for fan in WLP (known as WLCSP at the time) are shown below.

ASE 2

The technology evolved from the FCT printed bump to the Unitive plated bump to today’s copper pillar bumps.

ASE 3

The latest ASE bump and WLP roadmaps are show below:

ASE 4

The following “industry node status” is an interesting slide in that it shows us ASE’s assessment of where the foundries are on the scaling roadmap.

ASE 5

ASE motivations for Fan out WLP:

  • Package Size

– Fine line redistribution (RDL) layers                                                                                                                            – Low profile by encapsulated chip and component                                                                                                       -Flexible integration by multi-chip and stacking chip

  • Cost Effective

– No substrate                                                                                                                                                                       – Panel (next generation)                                                                                                                                                 – High production yields (including with RDL substrate / chip last)

  • Performance

– Signal integrity & electrical performance, lower power consumption and better thermal ASE FO-WLP technology Roadmap and Package types follow.

ASE 6 ASE 7

For all the latest in advanced packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 348: ASE Tech Forum at Nijmegen part 1 – “Advanced Packaging 2017”

At the recent ASE Tech Forum in Nijmegen chaired by John Marc Yannou, Ivanovik of Yole gave a nice overview of the industry presentation entitled “Advanced Packaging Industry 2017”

In general they report:

  • Growth decline in the main semiconductor driver (smartphones)
  • Stagnating mature markets (PC, tablets)
  • Cost benefits of CMOS scaling have ceased (see figure below). Long time readers of IFTLE have been aware of this trend sine 2011 when we reported Handle Jones of IBS observed the trend at the annual Semi ISS conference [see IFTLE 40 “Samsung 3D IC Wide I/O DRAM and Semiconductor Predictions for 2011”]

yole 1

In the future they predict no single leading driver, but rather a fragmented growing market including autonomous vehicles, vehicle “electrification”, robotics, AI and that general term that IFTLE hates, IoT.

yole 2

In general packaging has gone from:

  • Bridging the gap between semiconductor and PCB level, serving as IC protection and providing a form factor for testability

to

  • Shifting system integration from the die to the package level!

to

  • Packaging serving as the “IC shell” to becoming the performance and functionality enhancer!

They offered the following as their assessment of 2016 advanced packaging wafer split by manufacturer.

yole 3

Total 2016 OSAT revenue is $27.9B vs IDM revenue of $26.8B

They offer the following as 2016 top 25 OSAT revenue. Taiwan now has 55% of production and China is in second place with 18% followed by the US with 17%.

yole 4

Advantage will go to packaging houses which are able to either:

  • Maintain a large portfolio of package architectures and technologies for customers
  • Lead in specialty processes and packaging (i.e. MEMS, LED, image sensor packaging)

Revenue will continue to be driven by FC over the next 5 years while units will be drive by QFN and fan in WLP.

yole 5

For all the latest in advanced packaging stay linked to IFTLE…

 

IFTLE 347: ASE Embedded Packaging Solutions

At the recent IMAPS Carolina Chapter meeting Rich Rice of ASE gave an update presentation on “Embedded Packaging Solutions”. Specifically:

  • SESUB- Semiconductor Embedded In Substrate
  • aEASI –Advanced Embedded Active System Integration
  • FOWLP- Fan Out Wafer Level Package

SESUB

– ASE offers SESUB through the JV with TDK

– embedding IC releases surface space for other components or allows reduction in overall substrate size

– short copper connections improves parasitics

– ~ 2 dozen SESUB programs underway

IFTLE 347ASE 1

aEASI

– combining leadframe and laminate technologies

– embedding for power devices                        

– good current capability, i.e. ~ 60A; 1.9W/mm2

– 300um Cu heat spreader on back of die      

 – 32um thick Cu lines for low resistance

– low resistivity Ag nano die attach materials keep processing temp and electrical resistance down

IFTLE 347ase 2

IFTLE 347ASE 3

FOWLP

– die are embedded in a reconstituted plastic wafer that is then processed like a silicon wafer

– FOWLP can provide size/electrical benefits for a wide variety of products including PMIC, AP, RF devices in mobile applications demanding miniaturization and performance.

IFTLE 347ASE 4

For all the latest in Advanced Packaging stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 346 Sony Introduces Stacked Image Sensor with DRAM in Xperia XZ phones

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

It has been nearly a decade since Toshiba announced the use of backside TSV’s to miniaturize CMOS image sensors [ see PFTLE “Imaging Chips with TSV Announced for Commercialization” Semiconductor Int., Oct 27th 2007 ; recall Perspectives from the Leading Edge, PFTLE, was the predecessor to IFTLE and ran from 2007 to 2010 in Semiconductor Int magazine before its demise]

More recently, In Feb 2017 at the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) Sony announced the Industry’s First 3-Layer Stacked CMOS Image Sensor (90 nm generation back-illuminated CIS top chip, 30 nm generation DRAM middle chip, and a 40 nm generation image signal processor (ISP) bottom chip for Smartphones [link]. Sony further revealed that that the CIS is made in a 90 nm, 1 Al, 5 Cu technology, the DRAM is a 1 Gb, 30 nm (3 Al, 1 W) part, and the ISP is a 40 nm, 1 Al, 6 Cu device.

Readers of IFTLE were given this info even earlier [ see IFTLE 272 “2016 3D ASIP Part 1: Pioneer Awards; Sony 3D stacked CIS…” ]

This newly developed sensor with stacked DRAM delivers fast data readout speeds, making it possible to capture still images of fast-moving subjects with minimal focal plane distortion as well as super slow motion movies at up to 1,000 frames per second (approximately 8x faster than conventional products) in full HD (1920×1080 pixels).[link]

At the recent Mobile World Congress, Sony announced adoption of this technology their Xperia XZ Premium and XZs phones, with the Motion Eye camera system capable of 960 fps.

Dick James, writing in EE Times, reports on cross-sections of the rear-facing camera chip which contains the 3 layered stack. The CMOS image sensor (CIS) is mounted face-to-back on the DRAM, which is face-to-face with the image signal processor (ISP). [Link] The cross section below is direct for Sony. Since the DRAM is sandwiched between the CIS and the ISP, the high-speed data has to go through the memory chip to the ISP, and then back-and-forth until it is output through the I/F (interface) block of the ISP, at a conventional speed suitable for the applications processor” reports James who then adds that since the DRAM die also has the CIS row drivers on it, it must be “designed as a custom part, and is not one of the TSV-enabled (TSV = through-silicon via) commodity DRAMs”.

sony 1

James has also shown the TSV layer connections between the two chips (see below). The cross section below shows two layers of TSVs connecting a 6-metal stack in the CIS to the M1 of the DRAM die. They did not have a cross-section of extended TSVs joining the CIS directly to the ISP, though there are TSVs through the DRAM to the top metal of the ISP.

sony 2

In an interesting article by Ray Fontaine of TechInsights [link] he notes that “the development of low-temperature wafer bonding and various wafer-to-wafer interconnect techniques have been key enablers for stacked image sensors. Two-die stacks, comprising a back-illuminated CIS and mixed-signal image signal processor (ISP), have emerged as the dominant configuration for leading smartphone camera chips. The CIS portion can be considered a ‘dumb’ chip carrying only an active pixel array. Most of the signal chain and digital processing is partitioned onto the ISP and systems application processor.”

He then offers the following table comparing technologies that have been implemented since 2013.

TechInsights

 

With Sony’s inclusion of DRAM into the CIS stack, IFTLE can safely predict that Omnivision and Samsung will not be far behind.

For all the latest in advanced packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…

IFTLE 345 Toshiba 1Tb Flash with TSV; TSMC CoWoS expansion & 2nd Gen InFO; Samsung Foundry takes aim at TSMC

By Dr. Phil Garrou, Contributing Editor

Time to catch up on some very important industry activities…

Toshiba – 3D flash memory with TSV

Toshiba has announced development of its BiCS flash three-dimensional (3D) flash memory utilizing through-silicon via (TSV) technology [link]. Shipments of prototypes will begin in June 2017, and product samples will be shipped in the second half of 2017. Prototypes were shown at the 2015 Flash Memory Summit.[link 2]

Toshiba reports that by combining a 48-layer 3D flash process and TSV technology has allowed Toshiba to successfully increase product programming bandwidth while achieving low power consumption. The power efficiency of a single package is approximately twice that of the same-generation BiCS flash memory fabricated with wire-bonding technology. TSV BiCS flash also enables a 1-terabyte (TB) device with a 16-die stacked architecture in a single package. The 1 Tb 16 chip stack measures 14 x 18 x 1.85mm.

Toshiba expects to commercialize BiCS flash with TSV technology to provide an ideal solution in respect for storage applications requiring low latency, high bandwidth and high IOPS/Watt, including high-end enterprise SSDs.

Toshiba

TSMC – Expanding CoWoS Capacity?

Digitimes reports rumors in Taiwan that TSMC will expand its CoWoS (Chip on Wafer on Substrate) packaging and testing capacity to fill increasing orders from Nvidia and Google. The capacity expansion will reportedly be at the IC packaging and testing plant in Longtan Science Park (purchased from Qualcomm in 2014) where InFO packaging is currently manufactured. TSMC has not confirmed this expansion.

Reportedly, increasing orders from Nvidia and Google for high-end packaging and testing of their AI Chips has fully occupied TSMC’s existing CoWoS process capacity, driving the company to expand.

Nvidia has moved from 16nm to 12nm for fabricating its Volta-architecture GPU chips. Google has contracted TSMC to carry out wafer foundry services for it’s second-generation Tensor Processing Units (TPU2) using 16nm process technology, as well as backend packaging and testing.

TSMC – 2nd Generation InFO packaging for 7nm node

Digitimes also reports that TSMC’s integrated fan-out (InFO) wafer-level packaging technology will enter its 2nd generation, and be used for their 7nm FinFET process technology. Digitimes notes that this makes it unlikely that Samsung will be able to regain AP orders for Apple’s iPhone, since InFO makes TSMC’s 7nm FinFET technology more competitive than Samsung’s. [link]

Samsung – plans to triple foundry market share

Reuters reports that Samsung plans to triple the market share of its contract chip manufacturing business within the next five years. [link] E.S. Jung, executive VP of the foundry division, told Reuters that they want a 25 percent market share (would be #2 in market share) within five years and will seek to attract smaller customers in addition to big-name clients to fuel the growth.

Samsung first announced that they were considering separating their contract chip manufacturing organization (foundry business) last fall [link]

They finally announced the spin off its foundry operation from the System LSI division to create an independent business unit this past May. This will change Samsung’s current organization consisting of memory and system LSI into three entities including the foundry business.[link] The current foundry business is estimated to be ~ a $4.75B operation.

Research firm HIS reports that in 2016 TSMC held a 50.6% market share, GlobalFoundries 9.6%, UMC 8..1% and Samsung Foundry 7.9%

Samsung says it will start manufacturing 7nm chips using EUV litho tech in the second half of 2018.

samsung

IFTLE has discussed for years that Samsung, if they ever chose to, could become the number 2 foundry supplier in the world…well, now they choose to. This is probably bad news for GlobalFoundries and UMC. The question now becomes will Intel do the same. Intel, in the past few years, has put their “toe in the water” but has never really committed to a foundry business. Will this move by Samsung force their hand?

For all the latest on advanced packaging, stay linked to IFTLE…