The present invention relates, generally, to the packaging of semiconductor devices and, more specifically, to the sealing of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) devices under controlled vacuum or pressure.
The successful application of MEMS technology depends largely on cost-effective means for integrating MEMS devices into chip-scale packages. MEMS packaging often involves integrating MEMS devices into hermetically sealed cavities. The hermetic cavity serves to protect fragile mechanic structures from damage, and to provide a controlled environment, in particular, for MEMS sensors. Methods that yield hermetic seals in chip scale packages include glass-frit sealing, laminated-epoxy sealing, metal sealing, and polymer laser sealing.
Glass-frit sealing is often used in conventional hermetic ceramic packages. The glass frit seals the cavity walls between a cap and the device walls. The cap, walls, or both can be made of metal or ceramic. Either the cap or walls are stenciled with a mixture of glass and binder. Firing the cap sinters the stenciled glass onto the cap. The cap is aligned with and placed on the cavity, and then thermo-compression-bonded to the cavity, thereby creating the hermetic seal. A reliable glass frit thermo-compression seal needs a large bonding for the glass frit seal, and requires the substrate or walls to be of sufficient mass to withstand the thermo-compression bond. This approach can achieve a hermetic seal meeting the requirements of MIL STD 883, but bears the disadvantages of a large foot print and a high thickness of the cap.
For laminated-epoxy sealing, an epoxy seal ring is either dispensed on, or preformed and then applied to, the lid, the walls of the cavity, or both. The epoxy cap or walls can be made of glass, ceramic or metal. The epoxy is cured by heat and/or pressure. The resulting cured epoxy ring limits the hermetic seal to that of quasi-hermetic or near-hermetic performance. The hermetic seal properties are dependent on the ratio of the exposed cross-sectional area of the seal to the cross-section area of the cavity, on the pressure of the enclosed gas in the cavity, as well as on the composition of the epoxy. Permeability and adhesive out-gassing set the limits on the achievable hermeticity and vacuum levels.
Metal sealing employs a cap and wafer cap joined with a gold cold-welded hermetic seal. The seal gasket encloses the perimeter of the cap and walls. The gasket height is determined by plating and assembly pressure. The cap is aligned with the walls, and sealed by compression and exposure to high temperature. If the cap is soldered or sealed at low temperature, later soldering to mount the device on the end-customer's board could cause the cap to melt, and change the ambient pressure inside the package (e.g., from high pressure to low pressure, or from vacuum to air), which will result in damage to the device and, consequently, in impaired sensitivity and functionality.
To obtain a molded polymeric laser seal, the cap and walls are formed by Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP), a thermoplastic with barrier properties that are an order of magnitude better than those of epoxy materials. The cap and wall are aligned, and an infrared laser is applied. The laser light penetrates through the cap and heats the non-transparent metal, which, in turn, melts the seal.
In various embodiments, the present invention provides low-cost methods for the integration of MEMS devices in hermetically sealed cavities into chip-scale organic packages. The packages may be based on high glass transition temperature multi-layer organic laminated substrates. To integrate a MEMS device, generally, a hole is formed in the substrate, the MEMS device is placed over one side of the hole, a cap is placed over the other side of the hole, and the cavity thereby formed is sealed.
More particularly, in a first aspect, the invention provides a method for integrating a MEMS device into an organic chip scale package by providing a high glass transition temperature multi-layer organic laminated substrate; forming a cavity hole through the substrate; soldering a cap to a first side of the substrate over the cavity hole; then placing the MEMS device on a second side of the substrate under the cavity hole, thereby forming a cavity; and, finally, sealing the cavity. The hole may be formed by routing, laser cutting, and/or punching through a patterned metal ring. Soldering may be accomplished by reflow-soldering at a temperature in the range from about 260° C. to about 340° C. Before the MEMS device is placed, solder paste may be applied to the second side of the substrate.
In some embodiments, the method further includes edge-plating a metal layer onto an edge surface of the cavity hole and, optionally, plating a second metal layer onto the edge surface at a second side of the substrate. Sealing the cavity may include dispensing a liquid crystal polymer or a low-outgassing epoxy around an edge of the MEMS device. Alternatively, before the cavity is sealed, a preformed crystal polymer ring or low-outgassing epoxy ring may be placed around the hole on the second side of the substrate. Similarly, a preformed crystal polymer ring or low-outgassing epoxy ring may be placed on the first side of the substrate. In certain embodiments, the cavity is evacuated. In alternative embodiments, the cavity is pressurized with a selected pressurized gas.
In a second aspect, the invention provides, in various embodiments, a method for integrating a micro-electromechanical sensor (MEMS) device into an organic chip scale package by providing a high glass transition temperature multi-layer organic laminated substrate; forming a cavity hole through the substrate; soldering the MEMS device to a one side of the substrate under the cavity hole; then placing a cap on the other side of the substrate over the cavity hole, thereby forming a cavity; and, finally, sealing the cavity. The MEMS device, after being soldered to the substrate, may be underfilled with a low-outgassing epoxy or a liquid crystal polymer. Further, before the cap is placed on the other side, the substrate and MEMS device may be cleaned using oxygen plasma ashing. The cavity may be evacuated or, alternatively, pressurized with a selected cavity gas.
The foregoing discussion will be understood more readily from the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Methods in accordance with various embodiments of the invention may be utilized to fabricate chips with integrated MEMS devices.
Various modifications of the structure 100 shown in
The manufacture of structures such as the ones shown in
Once the substrate is prepared, the cap is soldered to the top surface (side A) of the substrate over the cavity hole (step 608). This step involves applying solder paste to side A, placing and aligning the cap, reflow-soldering the cap to the substrate, and curing. The solder paste may be dispensed or screen-printed onto the substrate. The cap may be aligned with a pick. Solder is typically selected based on the substrate. For gold-plated substrates, conventional solder may be used. In embodiments, where the presence of nickel (which normally provides a barrier between the gold and copper layers) impacts sensor performance, i.e., where a gold-free substrate is required, SnSbCu solder, or an equivalent solder, may be used instead. Reflow-soldering may be conducted at temperatures between about 260° C. and about 340° C. Since SnSbCu solder, or an equivalent solder, has a melting point of around 260° C., this allows an end-customer of the package structure to later reflow by a secondary green solder process (typically, a SnAgCu process).
In the next step 612, the MEMS device is soldered to the bottom surface of the substrate (side B) opposite the cap. Further, the lead frame is soldered to the bottom surface. This process is carried out inside a chamber that includes a dispensing device and heater. The chamber may be atmospherically regulated to provide either vacuum or pressure with a gas of choice, depending on the requirements of the MEMS sensor. Similarly to step 608, soldering involves applying solder paste to side B, placing the MEMS die and etched lead frame on the substrate and aligning them, and reflowing at temperatures between about 260° C. and about 340° C. The MEMS device is separated from the substrate by stud bumps or plated bumps 108 (e.g., from copper or gold), as illustrated in
In step 616, the chamber is evacuated. Thereafter, in step 620, the cavity is sealed. To create a hermetic seal, a low-outgassing epoxy or, alternatively, a liquid crystal polymer may be dispensed around the edge of the MEMS device on side B to form an underfill 116. The dispense process may be adjusted with heat and pressure to ensure that capillary action wicks the underfill around the bond pads between the substrate surface and the MEMS die surface. In particular, by controlling the heat of the substrate, it is possible to ensure that the underfill wicks to the edge of the substrate opening, but not beyond onto the surface of the MEMS device. The device may then be cured in the chamber in batch process. Side B may be finished by dispensing fill material around the etched lead frame. Finally, the substrate may be cut using, e.g., a wafer dicing saw, to singularize the encapsulated MEMS devices.
The method described above may be varied in several ways. For example, in some embodiments, the bottom metal seal ring may receive a secondary plating that forms a raised ridge and acts as an underfill edge stop. The plating may be approximately 25 μm high. Further, in certain embodiments, the cavity is sealed by placing a pre-formed low-outgassing epoxy ring or liquid crystal polymer ring on side B of the substrate after screen printing and before die placement. During the reflow process, both this ring and the solder will seal. This modification allows for a secondary underfill on the die with separate controlled parameters. Similarly, the cap may be attached by placing a pre-formed low-outgassing epoxy ring or liquid crystal polymer on side A of the substrate after screen printing and before cap placement.
Referring now to
Next, in step 712, the entire assembly, as shown in
Having described certain embodiments of the invention, it will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that other embodiments incorporating the concepts disclosed herein may be used without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the described embodiments are to be considered in all respects as only illustrative and not restrictive.
This application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/074,045, filed on Jun. 19, 2008, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61074045 | Jun 2008 | US |