1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to a chip fanning out method and chip-on-film device, and more particularly, to a chip fanning out method and chip-on-film device with different arrangement orders for outer lead bonds and bumps.
2. Description of the Prior Art
With advances in circuit manufacturing technology, integrated circuit (IC) chips are not only mounted on printed circuit boards (PCBs) but films as well. Such packaging technology is named as chip-on-film (COF) packaging technology.
Please refer to
In order to fan out more bumps, area of the chip 100 is expanded, such as a chip 200 illustrated in
However, increasing the chip area and adjusting the bump positions both involve redesign for inner IC layout, which is disadvantageous to chip size and design cost.
Therefore, overcoming the limitations caused by the bending angles on the film to fanning out the chip in a more economic way has been a main focus of the industry.
Therefore, a chip fanning out method and related chip-on-film device are provided herein, which can significantly increase fanned out bumps of a chip and reduce a cost of the chip.
A chip fanning out method is disclosed, comprising mounting a chip on a film, forming a plurality of outer lead bonds (OLBs) on the film, wherein the plurality of OLBs are spatially arranged in a bump correspondence order, forming a plurality of bumps on the chip, wherein the plurality of bumps are spatially arranged in a bump arrangement order, and forming a plurality of wires to connect the plurality of OLBs with the plurality of bumps according to the bump correspondence order, wherein the bump correspondence order is different from the bump arrangement order, and the plurality of wires are not overlapped.
A chip-on-film (COF) device is further disclosed, comprising a film comprising a plurality of outer lead bonds (OLBs) spatially arranged in a bump correspondence order, a chip comprising a plurality of bumps spatially arranged in an bump arrangement order, and a plurality of wires for connecting the plurality of OLBs and the plurality of bumps according to the bump correspondence order, wherein the bump correspondence order is different from the bump arrangement order, and the plurality of wires are not overlapped.
A chip fanning out method is further disclosed, comprising mounting a chip on a film, forming a plurality of outer lead bonds (OLBs) on the film, forming a plurality of bumps on the chip, and forming a plurality of wires to respectively connect the plurality of OLBs with the plurality of bumps, wherein at least one of the plurality of wires is utilized for connecting at least one of the plurality of bumps and at least one of the plurality of OLBs not correspondent in space.
A chip-on-film (COF) device is further disclosed, comprising a film comprising a plurality of outer lead bonds (OLBs), a chip comprising a plurality of bumps, and a plurality of wires for respectively connecting the plurality of OLBs and the plurality of bumps, wherein at least one of the plurality of bumps is connected with at least one of the plurality of OLBs not correspondent in space.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
Different from the prior art in which outer lead bonds (OLBs) are connected with bumps according to a bump arrangement order, the OLBs in the following embodiments are connected with the bumps according to an order other than the bump arrangement order. That is, connection corresponding relationship between the OLBs and the bumps are different from spatial corresponding relationship therebetween. More specifically, the OLBs are spatially arranged in a bump correspondence order, and the bumps are spatially arranged in a bump arrangement order, which is different from the bump correspondence order.
In the following embodiments, the bump correspondence order and the bump arrangement order are no longer identical to overcome troublesome caused by the bending angle limitation in the prior art and increase design flexibility of chip fanning out. As a result, cost for fanning out the chip can be significantly reduced without expanding the chip area. Details are described in the following embodiments.
Please refer to
According to the embodiment shown in
As a result, arrangement orders of the OLBs 312 and the bumps 302 are no longer to be restricted to be identical in the COF device 30, and therefore the layout can be designed with more flexibility. Moreover, the bending angles θ of the wires L1-LM can be greater than a threshold angle specified in hardware limitations without modifying area or position of the chip 300. That is, the chip fanning out problem caused by the bending angles θ is solved in the circuit layout shown in
In
In short, through routing the wires LQ1-LQq under the chip 300, the bump arrangement order and the bump correspondence order can be different without affecting functions of the chip 300. Note that, even though the wires LQ1-LQq are exemplarily illustrated as routed around a central bottom area of the chip 300 in
The COF device 30 of
Other than connecting the bumps located on two opposite sides of the chip, the wires can further connect bumps located on two adjacent sides of a chip, as illustrated in
In addition, the novelty featuring the inconsistent bump correspondence order and bump arrangement order can further be applied to bumps located on the same side of a chip 600, as illustrated in
Furthermore, wire route methods illustrated from
Note that, all the wires shown from
The wire layout operations of the COF devices shown from
Step 800: Start.
Step 802: Mount a chip on a film.
Step 804: Form plural OLBs on the film, wherein the OLBs are spatially arranged in a bump correspondence order.
Step 806: Form plural bumps on the chip, wherein the bumps are spatially arranged in a bump arrangement order.
Step 808: Form plural wires not mutually overlapped to connect the OLBs with the bumps according to the bump correspondence order.
Step 810: End.
Similarly, the bump correspondence order is different from the bump arrangement order. Details of the chip fanning out process 80 can be referred in the above, and are not narrated herein.
In the prior art, since the bump correspondence order has to be identical to the bump arrangement order, wire fanning out layout is limited by the chip position, the chip size and the film size. If the bumps are numerous, the bending angles θ of the wires are compressed to be smaller than the threshold angle, thus not conforming to standards specified by chip manufacturers. Even if the chip area is increased or the bumps position are adjusted to increase the bending angles θ, layout of the integrated circuit has to be redesigned, which is disadvantageous to the chip size and the chip cost. In comparison, the corresponding relationship between the OLBs and the bumps are modified in above embodiments to overcome the bending angle and other hardware limitations. Through routing a part of the wires under, over or around the chip, the wires can be spatially arranged with more flexibility, and the chip can be fanned out in a more economic and convenient layout.
To sum up, through modification to the corresponding relationship between the OLBs and the bumps, the bending angle and other hardware limitations can be overcome, and the chip can be fanned out in a more economic, convenient and flexible layout accordingly.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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099142803 | Dec 2010 | TW | national |
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/362,678, filed on 2010, Jul. 08 and entitled “Fanning out methods for Chip on Film Packaging Process”, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61362678 | Jul 2010 | US |