1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to methods and apparatus of preparing and forming interconnections on an interposer substrate for assembling one or more semiconductor dice thereto and, particularly, providing interconnections on the interposer substrate for a first level interconnect and a second level interconnect.
2 . State of the Art
Interconnection and packaging-related issues are among the factors that determine not only the number of circuits that can be integrated on a chip but also the performance of the chip. These issues have gained importance as advances in chip design have led to reduced sizes of transistors and enhanced chip complexity. The industry has come to realize that merely having a fast chip will not necessarily result in a fast system; the fast chip must also be supported by equally fast and reliable connections. Essentially, the connections, in conjunction with the packaging, supply the chip with signals and power and redistribute the tightly packed terminals of the chip to the terminals of a carrier substrate and then to a circuit board.
One example of such an integrated circuit device is known as a “flip-chip.” Flip-chip attachment generally includes electrically and mechanically attaching a semiconductor die by its active surface to an interposer substrate or other carrier substrate using an array of discrete conductive elements formed on the semiconductor die. The discrete conductive elements are formed and bonded to bond pads on the active surface of the semiconductor die, usually during fabrication of the semiconductor die along with a large number of others in wafer form, after which the wafer is singulated into the individual semiconductor die.
The discrete conductive elements usually are configured as minute conductive bumps or balls, but also may include studs, pillars or columns of various configurations. The conductive bumps or discrete conductive elements are typically, in the case of solder balls, attached to the bond pads by first forming an under bump metal (UBM) compatible with the material of the bond pads, as well as the solder balls. The UBM for solder balls to be placed on aluminum bond pads commonly includes metal layers, bottom to top, of Cr, Cu and Au. The UBM may be formed by sputtering thin films over the aluminum bond pad through a patterning and etching process. The UBM may also be formed by an electroplating process of Cu and/or Ni with a thin Au overlay. A preformed solder ball (of, for example, 60% Sn and 40% Pb) may then be provided on the UBM and heated to a predetermined reflow temperature so as to bond the solder balls to the UBM structures on the wafer. Alternatively, a solder paste may be disposed on the UBM and then heated to liquify and form a solder ball.
Each discrete conductive element is placed corresponding to mutually aligned locations of bond pads (or other I/O locations) on the semiconductor die and terminals on the carrier substrate when the two components are superimposed. The semiconductor die is thus electrically and mechanically connected to the carrier substrate by, for example, reflowing conductive bumps of solder or curing conductive or conductor-filled epoxy bumps. A dielectric underfill may then be disposed between the die and the carrier substrate for environmental protection and to enhance the mechanical attachment of the die to the carrier substrate. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,710,071 to Beddingfield et al. discloses a fairly typical flip-chip attachment of a bumped semiconductor die to a carrier substrate and a method of underfilling a gap between the semiconductor die and substrate.
Flip-chip type assemblies having a bumped semiconductor die employing a carrier substrate, such as the carrier substrate disclosed in the Beddingfield et al. reference, may be undesirably thick due to the combined height of the bumped semiconductor die and carrier substrate. Ongoing goals of the computer industry include higher performance, lower cost, increased miniaturization of components, and greater packaging density of integrated circuits in, for example, a flip-chip type assembly. In an effort to meet goals such as increased miniaturization by limiting the height of a flip-chip type assembly, thin flexible interposer substrates have been introduced in the industry.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,386,341 to Olson et al. discloses such a thin flexible substrate utilized as an interposer substrate between a bumped semiconductor die and a circuit board. However, thin flexible substrates, such as that disclosed in the Olson et al. reference, require that bumps formed on the semiconductor dice be formed precisely to predetermined specifications with very low dimensional tolerances. Any failure in forming the bumps and interconnections on the semiconductor dice precisely so that the semiconductor dice align with corresponding terminals on an interposer substrate typically results in unusable semiconductor dice. Such unusable semiconductor dice may be scrapped, which is extremely costly, as a result of bad interconnections. These reliability issues are only compounded with the increased miniaturization of the semiconductor components. Furthermore, the method of forming the UBM structures and conductive bumps or solder balls on each of the bond pads on the wafer is consumptive of time, process and materials and, thus, costly.
Therefore, it would be advantageous to limit the time required for wafer bumping including the respective formation and attachment of the UBM structure and solder balls on the wafer. It would also be advantageous to prevent the loss of semiconductor dice due to failed interconnections on the semiconductor dice.
The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for improving the yield and reducing the cost of fabricating a flip-chip type semiconductor assembly. The present invention is directed to forming an interposer substrate with interconnections formed on both a first surface and a second surface to provide a respective first level interconnect and a second level interconnect. The interposer substrate may include first and second sets of conductive bumps respectively formed on the first surface and second surface thereof. Both sets of conductive bumps may be formed simultaneously by an electrolytic or electroless process. The first set of conductive bumps may be configured to correspond with bond pad locations on at least one bumpless semiconductor die for the first level interconnect and the second set of conductive bumps may be configured to correspond with a pattern of interconnections on a circuit board or another semiconductor assembly for the second level interconnect. With this arrangement, the present invention provides structure for effecting interconnections on the interposer substrate for both a first level interconnection and second level interconnection, thereby eliminating the need for wafer bumping and the costs and reliability issues associated therewith. Furthermore, transferring such costs and reliability issues from fabrication of semiconductor dice on a wafer to fabrication of the far less expensive interposer substrate greatly reduces the cost of any defective parts that must be scrapped.
In one aspect of the present invention, the interposer substrate includes through holes extending between the first surface and the second surface thereof. Conductive lines may be formed over the first surface to extend from the through holes to remote locations on the first surface that correspond with locations of the bond pads of a bare semiconductor die. A plating process may then be conducted to form a first set of conductive bumps at such alternate locations. The plating process may also be used to simultaneously form a second set of conductive bumps in the through holes on the second surface of the interposer substrate for the second level interconnection to, for example, a circuit board. Alternatively, the second set of conductive bumps may also include a conductive paste disposed in the through holes, wherein conductive balls, such as solder balls, may be provided in the conductive paste on the second surface of the interposer substrate.
According to the present invention, the plating process for simultaneously forming the first and second sets of conductive bumps on the respective first surface and second surface may be accomplished chemically in an electroless process or electrochemically in an electrolytic process. The conductive materials that may be utilized in forming the conductive bumps may include at least one of copper, nickel, chromium, zinc, brass, cadmium, silver, tin and gold.
In another aspect of the present invention, a dielectric filler material may be disposed between the at least one bumpless semiconductor die and the interposer substrate. The filler material may be provided by dispensing a flowable dielectric filler material to fill a gap between the bumpless semiconductor die attached to the interposer substrate. Alternatively, the dielectric filler material may be a nonflowable filler material, in which case the nonflowable filler material may comprise a dielectric filler film. The dielectric filler film is adhesively attached to either the semiconductor die or interposer substrate prior to attaching the bumpless semiconductor die to the interposer substrate.
In another aspect of the present invention, the semiconductor device assembly of the present invention is mounted to a circuit board in an electronic system, such as a computer system. In the electronic system, the circuit board is electrically connected to a processor device, which communicates with an input device and an output device.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those of skill in the art through a consideration of the ensuing description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.
While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming that which is regarded as the present invention, the advantages of this invention may be ascertained from the following description of the invention when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Embodiments of the present invention will be hereinafter described with reference to the accompanying drawings. It would be understood that these illustrations are not to be taken as actual views of any specific apparatus or method of the present invention, but are merely exemplary, idealized representations employed to more clearly and fully depict the present invention than might otherwise be possible. Additionally, elements and features common between the drawing figures retain the same or similar numerical designation.
The interposer substrate 110 may include through holes 116 extending between the first surface 112 and second surface 114 thereof for electrically interconnecting a semiconductor chip to external components, as explained hereinafter. The through holes 116 may include tapered, frustoconical walls 118 extending between the first surface 112 and second surface 114, which, as shown, taper inward from the second surface 114 of the interposer substrate 110. The tapered through holes 116 may be formed using any suitable method known in the art, such as, for example, a wet chemical etch or laser ablation.
Through holes 116 formed using a wet etch may result in a tapered wall angle of approximately 45 degrees from the vertical, which angle may vary depending on the type of reactive chemical etchant utilized for removing the interposer substrate material. From a production standpoint, such wet etching may be preferred since many interposer substrates may be processed at a relatively minimal process time. On the other hand, while laser ablation techniques may be more time consuming, they provide greater versatility in forming a broad range of tapered angles, which may be advantageous depending on the requirements of the designer of the interposer substrate.
Alternatively, as illustrated in
The conductive lines 120 may be formed by any known method in the art, such as deposition and etching processes, screen printing or a tape carrying preformed conductive traces, etc. By way of example, the conductive lines 120 may be formed by depositing a layer of conductive material over the first surface 112 of the interposer substrate 110. Such depositing of conductive material may be accomplished by physical vapor deposition, chemical vapor deposition, sputtering, screen printing, vacuum deposition, or other any known method of depositing a thin conductive material. The layer of conductive material may then be selectively masked and patterned using a positive or negative photoresist as known in the art followed by etching using a wet or dry etch to form the conductive lines 120.
The conductive lines 120 may extend over the first surface 112 so that a first portion 122 extends over a through hole 116 and a second portion 124 extends to a predetermined position remote from the associated through hole 116 on the first surface 112 of the interposer substrate 110. Such a predetermined remote position is selected to proximately correspond with a first level interconnect pattern, such as a bond pad pattern of a semiconductor die. In this manner, multiple conductive lines 120 may be formed so that each conductive line 120 may extend from and/or over a through hole 116 to a predetermined remote position on the first surface 112 of the interposer substrate 110.
The conductive bumps 130 may be formed on the exposed second portion 124 of the conductive lines 120 by an electrolytic plating process or an electroless plating process. Such conductive bumps 130 may be sized and configured in the predetermined locations of the second portion 124 of the conductive lines 120 to correspond with bond pads of a semiconductor die (not shown). Alternatively, the conductive bumps 130 may be formed in recesses 13650 that the conductive bumps 130 abut with an end 126 of the second portion 124 while also being disposed in the recesses 136 (see
Conductive bumps 132 are formed in the through holes 116 and are sized and configured to protrude slightly from the second surface 114 of the interposer substrate 110. The conductive bumps 132 may be configured to electrically and mechanically interconnect with the first portions 122 of the conductive lines 120 that extend to and/or over the through holes 116 on the first surface 112 of the interposer substrate 110. The conductive elements 132 are configured in an array as a second level interconnect and configured to correspond to and interconnect with a terminal pad pattern of a circuit board, other higher-level packaging or even another semiconductor substrate. It should also be noted that conductive lines 120, as shown in broken lines in
According to the present invention, both the conductive bumps 130 and the conductive bumps 132 maybe formed simultaneously by the above-referenced electrolytic plating or electroless plating processes. As is well known in the art, an electrolytic plating process is a metal deposition process in which an electrolyte, or a solution containing dissolved salts of the metal to be plated, transfers cations from an anode into the electrolyte and onto the exposed first portions 122 and second portions 124 of conductive lines 120 serving as a cathode by means of a direct electrical current applied to the electrolyte from the anode to the cathodes. The metal may be caused to deposit and build up to a predetermined size to form the conductive bumps 130 and conductive bumps 132 on the exposed second portions 124 of the conductive lines 120 and the exposed first portions 122 of the conductive lines 120 extending over the through hole 116, respectively, in the interposer substrate 110.
Likewise, the conductive bumps 130 and conductive bumps 132 may be formed simultaneously on the interposer substrate 110 in an electroless plating process. As is well known in the art, an electroless plating process comprises the deposition of metallic particles from a chemical solution, usually at elevated temperatures, without an electrical current flowing as is used in the electrolytic plating process. The electroless plating process is highly controlled in producing a uniform thickness of up to several mils; however, such electroless plating process is more time-consuming than the electrolytic process. For purposes of the present invention, either the electrolytic plating or the electroless plating process may be utilized in forming the conductive bumps 130 and conductive bumps 132.
Thus, the electrolytic plating process employs an electrochemical plating process for depositing a conductive material. Likewise, the electroless plating process employs a chemical plating process. The conductive materials utilized in the electrolytic plating and electroless plating processes may include a base layer of tin or nickel followed by a gold layer, or plated layers of tin/silver/copper and alloys thereof. Other conductive materials may be utilized in the plating process in various combinations of plated layers as known in the art such as, for example, copper, nickel, chromium, zinc, brass, cadmium, silver, lead, tin and gold and alloys thereof.
It is noted that conductive bumps 130 may be formed or coated with a surface finish or coating comprising a compliant, deformable or compressible material to help relax coplanarity requirements for conductive bumps 130 and 132. If such a surface finish is employed, slight compression of a semiconductor die 140 (see
In an alternative embodiment also depicted in
Turning to
In the unassembled position, the conductive bumps 130 on the interposer substrate 110 are positioned and aligned with the bond pads 146 on the semiconductor die 140 in preparation for a first level interconnect. Such positioning and aligning of the semiconductor die 140 to the conductive bumps 130 of the interposer substrate 110 may be accomplished with mechanically or optically referenced pick and place equipment, as is well known in the art.
As another alternative to a flowable filler material or an NCF, an anisotropic conductive film (ACF) wherein conductivity is restricted to the Z-axis perpendicular to the plane of the film may be employed. In such an instance, the conductive bumps 130 need not pierce the ACF, as the bond pads 146 and conductive bumps 130 will be placed in electrical contact through mutually laterally insulated conductive elements carried by the dielectric portion of the ACF and extending therethrough transverse to the plane of the film. A suitable ACF includes an FC 212K or FC 262B film from Hitachi Chemical, Semiconductor Material Division, Japan.
As another approach, an NCF may be provided over the active surface 142 of the semiconductor die 140 and other unsingulated dice at the wafer level. The wafer having the NCF disposed thereon may then be singulated into individual semiconductor dice, which then may be mounted face down on the interposer substrate 110 so that the conductive bumps 130 pierce the nonconductive film 154 and mechanically and electrically contact the bond pads 146 on the singlulated semiconductor dice 140, in a manner similar to that previously described. In a similar manner, an ACF may be applied at the wafer level.
Turning to
Thus, according to the present invention, interposer substrate 110 provides conductive bumps 130 formed on the first surface 112 thereof to provide a first level interconnect to bond pads 146 of a semiconductor die 140. Additionally, interposer substrate 110 provides conductive bumps 132 on the second surface 114 thereof to provide a second level interconnect to a carrier substrate or another semiconductor assembly. With this arrangement, the conventional step of wafer bumping is eliminated by providing the conductive bumps 130 on the interposer substrate 110. Therefore, it can be well appreciated by a person of ordinary skill in the art that if the conductive bumps 130 on an interposer substrate 110 are faulty, the cost of replacing the interposer substrate 110 is substantially less than the replacement of semiconductor dice having faulty bumps. In other words, semiconductor dice are more costly to replace than the interposer substrate 110. Furthermore, simultaneously forming the conductive bumps 132 and conductive bumps 130 on the interposer substrate 110 is cost effective and simplifies the assembly and fabrication process. Further, the present invention may be used to eliminate the use of solder balls, thereby providing a lead-free assembly.
In the second embodiment, it can be well appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art that the multiple levels of conductive lines 220 in the interposer substrate 210 may facilitate the assembly of multiple semiconductor dice 240 in a single package to form, for example, a multi-chip memory module or a multi-chip module including different types of semiconductor dice. Further, in a manner similar to the first embodiment, interposer substrate 210 includes the conductive bumps 230 and the conductive bumps 232 on the respective first surface 212 and second surface 214 to provide a respective first level interconnect and second level interconnect. It is also contemplated that fabrication of a multi-chip module using a single level interposer substrate 110 lies within the scope of the present invention and that the use of conductive lines 220 on both first and second surfaces 112,114 of an interposer substrate 110 may be particularly suitable for fabrication of such a multi-chip module.
As illustrated in block diagram form in drawing
Thus, it will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention provides a simple, robust and economical interposer substrate and resulting packaged semiconductor die or dice. The bumping of an interposer substrate enables discarding of defective interposer substrates before attachment of a semiconductor die thereto and thus eliminates scrapping of assemblies due to defective interconnects. Further, the capability of forming bumps on both sides of an interposer substrate by simultaneous plating thereof speeds the interposer fabrication process and results in exact bump placement and precise bump dimensioning. The elimination of wafer bumping with solder balls by use of the present invention also speeds up the die fabrication process and eliminates defective bumping concerns with respect to the wafer. Furthermore, the present invention enables reduction in package thickness in comparison to solder-bumped assemblies and a further reduction in thickness through the use of bumps disposed in through holes or vias. Even if solder balls are employed for the second level interconnect, placement thereof is facilitated by the presence of the through holes or vias in which the solder balls may be disposed, as is a reduction in package thickness by recessing of a portion of the solder balls.
While the present invention has been disclosed in terms of certain currently preferred embodiments and alternatives thereof, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize and appreciate that the invention is not so limited. Additions, deletions and modifications to the disclosed embodiments may be effected without departing from the scope of the invention as claimed herein. Similarly, features from one embodiment may be combined with those of another while remaining within the scope of the invention.
This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 10/225,085, filed Aug. 20, 2002, pending.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10225085 | Aug 2002 | US |
Child | 10829778 | US |