This disclosure relates to conductive spring contacts and more particularly to stress engineered spring contacts.
Metal spring contacts are used for electrically connecting integrated circuit chips or dies to circuit boards or other devices and may also be used as probe needles on a probe card. Spring contacts allow for reduced pitch, and thus, for smaller devices.
Spring contacts may be formed by depositing a release layer of material and then depositing at least two layers of stress engineered spring metal. The spring metal may be a molybdenum-chrome alloy or a nickel-zirconium alloy, as examples. The spring metal is patterned to form spring contacts and the release layer is patterned to release a free end of the spring contact. In reaction to the stresses engineered into the spring metal, the free end of the spring contact curls up. To increase the conductive and spring qualities of the spring contact, the contact may then be cladded or overplated with another material.
Each layer of spring metal has a stress introduced into it. The stress introduction may be accomplished in variety of ways during a sputter depositing of the spring metal, including adding a reactive gas to the plasma, depositing the metal at an angle and changing the pressure of the plasma gas. A compressive or a tensile stress is introduced into each layer.
Spring metals are typically brittle, particularly those that retain large stresses such as those used to make spring contacts. According to Griffith crack theory, under compression, brittle materials are strong, but under tension, cracks readily develop and propagate. For spring contacts, during spring release, if the materials are too brittle, the springs will break off in solution, leaving behind micro-machined shrapnel in the release etch. This is particularly problematic when surface flaws are present. Film brittleness has been seen to a greater degree as the spring formation process is scaled up to mass production.
The engineered stress through the thickness of two layers of deposited spring metal is shown in
After release, the bottom surface of the spring is placed under tension while the top surface is placed under compression. The tensile loading of the bottom surface may promote crack propagation.
A brittle fracture resistant spring contact has a post-release upper surface in compression and a post-release lower surface in compression. The spring contact may be formed by depositing a compressive lower layer of spring metal that is one-third thinner or less than a deposited tensile upper layer of spring metal.
A crack resistant spring contact may also include low modulus of elasticity cladding applied to the outer surface of the spring with the bottom layer of cladding being applied with a compressive stress.
Solutions to the brittleness of spring contact material may lie in several areas including composition of the alloy, improved sputter process conditions and more robust spring design. Prevention of the creation and propagation of brittle cracking may be achieved by providing a compressive outer surface to the spring material after the spring is released.
The lower layer 22 is deposited with a compressive stress introduced and the upper layer 24 is deposited with a tensile stress introduced. The spring material may be a molybdenum-chrome alloy or a nickel-zirconium alloy, as examples. The compressive lower layer 22 is ⅓ the thickness of the tensile upper layer 24. After the spring is released, the bottom surface of the lower layer 22 remains compressive. The neutral axis 21 is shifted from the halfway point in the thickness closer to the bottom surface at the interface between the upper and lower layers 22, 24.
Because the bottom surface remains compressive, a Griffith surface flaw must be subjected to a significant tensile load before the crack can propagate. In this state, the breaking strength becomes the normal breaking strength plus the magnitude of the compressive surface residual stress. Thus, the chance of spring breakage is minimized.
The general expression for the bottom surface stress σs after release for a two layer spring is:
σs/Δσ=a(2−a)/(1+a)2;
a=h2/h1,
where h1 and h2 are the bottom and top layer thicknesses, respectively. A plot of this function is shown in
When the compressive lower layer is made thinner, the net stress of the spring as it is deposited on the substrate is no longer zero. Tensile stress is generally more problematic than compressive stress because it may lead to cracking in the unreleased state. To overcome any potential problems presented by the net tensile stress, the compressive stress in the lower layer may be made larger than the tensile stress in the upper layer.
Multiple layers of spring material may also be deposited to create a spring contact. In this case, a bottom layer of spring metal is deposited and a compressive stress is introduced into that layer. Intermediate layers of spring metal are then deposited with compressive and tensile stresses introduced into those layers culminating with the top layer of spring metal deposited and a tensile stress introduced into that layer.
There are additional ways to provide a compressive outer surface to a spring contact. One example is to produce a spring with a cladding having an appropriate modulus of elasticity and appropriately engineered stress.
The upper and lower spring metal layers 22 and 24 may be formed with equal thicknesses leaving the neutral axis at the halfway point of the thickness and resulting in zero net pre-release stress. The lower spring material layer is formed and a compressive stress is introduced to that layer. The upper spring material layer is then formed and a tensile stress is introduced to that layer. The spring is released and a compressive cladding layer is deposited on the spring resulting in a lower outer cladding layer 23 and an upper outer cladding layer 25.
A cladding layer of low modulus with compressive stress on the unreleased bottom of the spring will relax less that its adjacent higher modulus spring material. The effect is that the low modulus cladding material remains compressive post-release. Further, if the cladding material is ductile, it can suppress cracking by blunting the radius of any cracks that attempt to propagate.
It will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
This application is a divisional of and claims priority to application Ser. No. 11/347,740 filed Feb. 2, 2006.
This invention was made with Government support under 70NANB8H4008 awarded by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The Government has certain rights in this invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070296129 A1 | Dec 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11347740 | Feb 2006 | US |
Child | 11851479 | US |