This application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2014-166328, filed Aug. 19, 2014, and all the benefits accruing therefrom under 35 U.S.C. ยง119, the contents of which in its entirety are herein incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a method of forming a circuit board and, more specifically, to a method of forming a circuit board including wiring with conductive vias.
Interposers with fine wiring are required in three-dimensional chip stacking and so-called 2.5-dimensional packages. An interposer establishes an electrical connection (relay) between mounted IC chips and between an IC chip and a wiring board. An interposer requires a wiring thickness that is not much thinner than the current thickness from the perspective of electrical characteristics. In other words, wiring with a high aspect ratio is required.
In one aspect, a method of forming a circuit board includes forming a conductive pattern on a substrate; forming a first negative resist on the substrate after formation of the conductive pattern; partially exposing the first negative resist on the surface of the conductive pattern to form a first via exposure portion; forming a second negative resist on the substrate after formation of the first via exposure portion; partially exposing the second negative resist on the first via exposure portion to form a second via exposure portion larger than the first via exposure portion; developing the first negative resist and the second negative resist after formation of the second via exposure portion to form a via opening reaching the conductive pattern; and filling the via opening with a conductive material.
In another aspect, a circuit board includes a conductive pattern formed on a substrate; a first negative resist formed on the substrate and the conductive pattern; the first negative resist having a first via exposure portion formed on the surface of the conductive pattern; a second negative resist formed on the first negative resist having a first via exposure portion; the second negative resist having a second via exposure portion formed on the first via exposure portion, the second via exposure portion larger than the first via exposure portion; a via opening formed corresponding to the location of the first and second via exposure portions defined by concurrent development of the first and second negative resists, the via opening reaching the conductive pattern; and the via opening filled with a conductive material.
a)-2(i) are a series of cross-sectional diagrams illustrating the individual operations described in
a) illustrates a conductive pattern formed on a substrate;
b) illustrates a first negative resist formed so as to cover the substrate and the surface of the conductive pattern;
c) illustrates a photomask and the first negative resist exposed to light;
d) illustrates a second negative resist formed to cover the surface of the exposed first negative resist over the entire substrate;
e) illustrates light-shielding areas of the photomask provided to form unexposed areas in the second negative resist to form wiring;
f) illustrates the development of formed via openings in the unexposed areas, and wiring openings in the unexposed areas;
g) illustrates a seed layer formed on the surface of the first negative resist and the second negative resist including the surfaces of the via openings and the wiring openings;
h) illustrates a conductive material formed on the seed layer using electroplating;
i) illustrates the surfaces plated with the conductive material polished to remove the conductive material except for the conductive vias in the via openings and the wiring layer in the wiring openings;
a)-3(d) are series of cross-sectional views illustrating a conventional circuit board formation process, in which:
a) illustrates first via exposure portions formed in the first negative resist;
b) illustrates an opening formed by the developed first via exposure portion filled with a conductive layer to form a conductive via, and the second negative resist formed after the conductive via;
c) illustrates the wiring portion of the second negative resist exposed using a misaligned photomask;
d) illustrates development of the second negative resist which exposes the surface of the conductive via and comes into contact with an adjacent wiring opening, result in a short circuit;
a)-4(d) are series of additional cross-sectional views of the method in
a) illustrates first via exposure portions formed in the first negative resist;
b) illustrates the second negative resist formed before development of the exposed first negative resist;
c) illustrates exposure of the wiring portion of the second negative resist using a misaligned photomask during simultaneous development of the first negative resist and the second negative resist; and
d) illustrates the resulting narrow via opening such that there is no contact with the adjacent wiring opening, resulting in a short circuit less likely to occur.
Interposers are currently made primarily using a silicon substrate; however, they are expensive and this limits their use. If interposers could be created using an organic substrate made of an organic material, these costs could be reduced and their application could promote the spread of three-dimensional stacking.
Unfortunately, interposers created with an organic substrate using the methods of the prior art experience certain problems. For example, the dimensions of each type of pattern tend to be unstable due to the properties of organic materials. In addition, exposure and development processes are repeated multiple times, which makes the manufacturing process more complicated. Accordingly, there is a need to solve this problem associated with the creation of organic substrates by providing a method of creating a circuit board with more applications (including wiring board and interposer) even when an organic substrate is used.
A method of creating a circuit board is provided in one aspect of the present invention. This method includes forming a conductive pattern on a substrate; forming a first negative resist on the substrate after formation of the conductive pattern; partially exposing the first negative resist on the surface of the conductive pattern to form a first via exposure portion; forming a second negative resist on the substrate after formation of the first via exposure portion; partially exposing the second negative resist on the first via exposure portion to form a second via exposure portion larger than the first via exposure portion; developing the first negative resist and the second negative resist after formation of the second via exposure portion to form a via opening reaching the conductive pattern; and filling the via opening with a conductive material.
In one aspect of the present invention, simultaneous development of the two negative resists (the first negative resist and the second negative resist) does not remove the two negative resists but rather forms a permanent resist (interlayer insulating layer) which significantly reduces the number of production steps for circuit boards containing conductive vias.
In one aspect of the present invention, forming the second via exposure portion includes simultaneously partially exposing the second negative resist outside of the first via exposure portion to form a conductive wiring exposure portion; forming a via opening reaching the conductive pattern includes simultaneously forming a wiring opening in the second negative resist; and the step of filling the opening with a conductive material includes simultaneously filling the wiring opening with the conductive material.
In one aspect of the present invention, simultaneous formation of the conductive vias and wiring further reduces the number of production steps for circuit boards containing conductive vias, and short circuiting caused by misalignment of conductive vias and wiring can be avoided.
The following is an explanation of an embodiment of the present invention with reference to the drawings.
In operation S11 of
In operation S12, a first negative resist is formed on the substrate 10 with the formed conductive pattern 12. As shown in
In operation S13, a first via exposure portion is formed in the first negative resist 14. As shown in
The areas 22 of the first negative resist 14 beneath the light-shielding areas 18 of the photomask 16 are not exposed, and these are removed in a subsequent development step (S 16) to form first via areas. One characteristic of the method of the present invention is that the first negative resist 14 is not developed immediately after exposure. Direct exposure using a laser beam (laser direct imaging) may be used instead of using a photomask 16.
In operation S14, a second negative resist is formed on top of the first negative resist 14 after exposure. As shown in
In operation S15, second via exposure portions are formed in the second negative resist 24. As shown in
The areas 30 of the second negative resist 24 beneath the light-shielding areas 28 of the photomask 26 are not exposed, and these are removed in a subsequent development operation (S16) to form second via (pad) areas on top of the first via areas. A dual damascene structure made of first via exposure areas and second via (pad) exposure areas can be obtained by making the size (inner diameter) of the light-shielding areas 28 of photomask 26 larger than that of the light-shielding areas 18 of photomask 16.
In operation S15, an area to become wiring (conductive pattern) can be exposed at the same time that the second via (pad) exposure portions are formed (exposed). In
In operation S16, the exposed first negative resist 14 and second negative resist 24 are developed using a developer. As shown in
One characteristic of the exemplary method in the present invention is that the first negative resist 14 and the second negative resist 24 are not removed but remain to form a permanent resist that functions as an interlayer insulating layer. This reduces the number of development steps and also eliminates the resist removal step.
In operation S17, the via openings 32 and wiring openings 34 formed after development are filled with a conductive material (conductors). An example using a plating method is shown in
In
A circuit board structure in which a plurality of the structures shown in
The following is an explanation of the advantages of the present invention with reference to
In
In
However, in the present process, as shown in
Here, the conductive via formed in the opening 32 has a so-called landless via structure. In order to take into account the narrowing of the width (diameter) of the via opening 32 and avoid an increase in electrical resistance in the conductive via, the width (diameter) of the first via exposure portion 22 may be increased to ensure that the conductive via has the desired width (diameter).
Embodiments of the present invention were explained above with reference to the drawings. However, the present invention is not limited to these embodiments. In addition, the present invention can be embodied in many different ways, including improvements and modifications as well as changes, based on knowledge common in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014-166328 | Aug 2014 | JP | national |