The present invention relates generally to the field of semi-conductor technology, and in particular to a method of making a product, usable as a starting substrate for the manufacture of a large variety of semi-conductor devices. It also relates to the product as such.
In many applications in the semi-conductor industry (in a broad sense including both micro-electronics, micro-optics and micro-mechanics) it is often required to build components on both sides of a semiconductor wafer, such as a silicon wafer, for the manufacture of semi-conductor devices, such as sensors, micro-mirror arrays, just to mention a few.
In the prior art for packaging and interconnecting such devices wire-bonding has been the common technique. However, wire bonding is not cost-effective and for devices requiring many interconnection wires, such as array devices, it may not possible to attach wires at all. Therefore, over the last decade so called flip-chip mounting has been widely used for electronic components, to avoid the need of wire bonding, thereby allowing for simplification, improved quality and cost reduction in the back-end packaging/interconnection process. However, flip-chip bonding connects the device with “front-side” down. This is most often not possible for MEMS devices (MEMS=Micro-Electrical-Mechanical Systems), for example sensors and micro-mirrors, which need to have the front-side up.
Other techniques in this field have been based on the provision of metallized portions in holes extending through a wafer, for the purpose of establishing electrical contact between the two surfaces.
Such mixing of materials (i.e. metals and semiconductor material of the wafers) puts limitations on the subsequent processes that can be utilized for the manufacture of components, in terms of usable temperatures and chemical environments.
One method of the just mentioned kind is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,002,177.
A further method is disclosed in WIPO publication WO 01/65598 A1 (corresponding to published US patent application 2003/0022475 A1), by Vieux-Rochaz et al.
The method in the latter document comprises the provision of grooves on one side of a wafer, the grooves defining suitable closed patterns, e.g. rings, squares rectangles etc., filling the grooves with insulating material, building components matching the enclosed areas, making a plurality of second grooves from the bottom surface mating with the top grooves, filling said second grooves with insulating material, and building components on the bottom surface, using the thus formed electrical connections to connect the top and bottom components as desired.
This process is fairly complex, and the publication does not disclose the manufacture of a platform comprising electrical through connections (vias), and usable as a generally applicable starting substrate for semi-conductor applications.
Therefore, the object of the present invention is to provide a method of making a generally applicable starting substrate for semi-conductor manufacture applications, allowing full utilization of common process technology in this field, without any restrictions in process parameters.
This object is achieved with a method according to claim 1. Thereby, there is provided a method of making an electrical connection between a first (top) and a second (bottom) surface of a conducting or semi-conducting substrate, comprising creating a trench in the first surface; establishing an insulating enclosure entirely separating a portion of said substrate, defined by said trench, from surrounding material of said substrate, but exposing the top and bottom surfaces of said separated portion.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided a platform product for semi-conductor manufacture applications, comprising a wafer of a conducting or a semi-conducting material, and having well defined electrical through connections (vias).
Such a product is defined in claim 14.
The present invention with wafer through electrical interconnection vias allows “flip-chip packaging” without flipping the front-side downwards since the solder bumps for flip-chip mounting could be placed on the backside of the (MEMS) device.
The invention will be described below with reference to the drawings, in which
a is a schematic perspective view of a wafer having vias of the invention;
b is a schematic cross section of a wafer as in
a shows a cross section of a wafer before processing;
b illustrates a wafer with trenches in cross section;
c shows a wafer with trenches filled with oxide;
d shows an embodiment where trenches have been filled by oxidation and deposition;
e illustrates a trench exhibiting a narrowed opening;
a illustrates a further embodiment of the method according to the invention;
b is a cross section of a wafer having vias made according to the further embodiment of the invention:
a illustrates another embodiment of the method of making vias according to the invention;
b shows the result of the method according to
a shows a cross section where the anomaly is remedied;
b shows an array of trenches;
The invention in its broadest aspect is schematically illustrated in
The inventive feature is the provision of vias 12, or electrical through connections, extending from a top side 14 of the wafer 10 to a bottom side 16. By means of the method according to the invention the vias comprise the same material as the material of the wafer, i.e. they are made from the wafer itself. Thus, no auxiliary material is used for the actual electrical connection.
In order to separate the vias 12 from the bulk 13 of the wafer in an electrically insulating manner, there is according to the invention oxide material 15 introduced between the bulk 13 and the vias 12. The method will be described in further detail below.
By virtue of the fact that only “wafer native” material is used, i.e. the material of the wafer itself is used to manufacture the vias, the wafer having been provided with said vias in a desired structure, can be subjected to all the processing steps employed in the semi-conductor field, in terms of temperature, chemical environment, pressure etc, that a “native wafer” can be subjected to. Prior art devices (i.e. starting wafers for semiconductor electronics manufacture) comprising metallized portions, cannot be processed in the same versatile way, because the metallization will not withstand too high temperatures, or the chemical agents frequently used in etching and other procedures needed to make the desired electronic or micro-mechanic structures.
Another advantage is that the wafer according to the invention is flat exhibiting a very low surface roughness, down to mirror appearance.
By “native wafer” and “native wafer material” we mean the material in the original wafer itself. “Auxiliary material” would therefore be any other material that has been added to the structure, such as a metal pad for connection purposes.
A “wafer” shall be taken to mean a general substrate usable as a starting material for e.g. MEMS applications. It is not necessarily completely flat, but can be provided with predefined structures such as depressions or other elements or members created by some process performed on the material from which the wafer is made.
In a first embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
The starting material is a conducting or a semiconductor wafer 20 (
The first general step is the provision of a trench 21, i.e. a narrow recess encircling a portion of the wafer top surface. The trench is made for example by etching or by laser based machining, or by EDM (electro-discharge machining).
Trench definition is achieved by providing a lithographic mask 22 (
Preferably trenches are made by any etching method yielding a high aspect ratio, e.g. DRIE (Dry Reactive Ion Etching), electrochemical HF etch.
The trench should be less than 20 μm, preferably 4-15, most suitably about 6-12 wide. Thus, the layers of insulating material are 1-20 μm, typically 6-12 μm thick.
If the wafer is 500 μm thick, the trench is suitably about 200-490 μm, preferably 300-400 μm deep. Suitably the depth of the trench is about 50% up to 100% of the wafer thickness. In the case of 100% penetration, it is necessary that a thin oxide layer be present on the surface, to keep the formed “plug” in place.
With the method according to the invention, the pitch (center-to-center) distance between the electrical connections can be as small as 10 μm, typically 50-100 μm. If there is a thin oxide layer provided on the bottom surface, the etch can be all the way through the wafer until the etch reaches the oxide, which acts as an etch stop. Thereby the via, i.e. the cylindrical plug (in the case of circular etch trench), will be supported by the oxide and prevented from falling out.
The shape of the portion encircled by the trench can be circular, but is of course not limited thereto. Any geometric shape that can be achieved is possible, such as squares, rectangles, triangles, romboids, traptezoids etc. or combinations of shapes (
Once the trench is made, the mask is removed, and the wafer is subjected to an oxidizing process in order to grow insulating oxide 24 in the trench (and on the surfaces of the wafer unless it is protected),
Frequently, when etching trenches having the high aspect ratio as in the present invention, the opening of the trench at the surface will be slightly narrower than the width about 5-10 μm below the surface (See
In order to remedy this problem, suitably the wafer is subjected to a further etch after the trench defining mask work on the top surface of the wafer has been removed. This etch will thin down the surface slightly and remove the narrowing edges, leaving only a strictly “funnel” shaped trench cross section. The cross section after the etch is indicate with broken lines in
When the trench/trenches have been suitably filled with insulating oxide, to the rate of filling desired, the wafer, in a second step, is subjected to a thinning process. Thereby, the back side of the wafer is thinned down, by grinding or etching or other suitable method, such that the insulating oxide present in the trench/trenches becomes exposed on the back side of the wafer (indicated with a broken line in
For certain applications it is necessary to provide cavities in a wafer, wherein the bottom of the cavity is provided with electrical connections. For such an application it will be sufficient to etch the surface selectively on those areas where said cavities are to be formed. Thus, the overall nominal thickness of the wafer can be maintained, and the etching to expose the insulating material, thereby creating the vias can be achieved only in said depressions.
An example is the provision of deflectable micro-mirrors, where the deflection is carried out electrostatically by applying a voltage to an electrode in a cavity below the deflectable mirror.
An embodiment of the invention for the above purpose will be described with reference to
In a second embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
This embodiment is primarily used when it is desirable to have a thicker platform (wafer substrate) 40 for the further manufacture. Since a trench can be made to exhibit a depth of about 400 μm, it will be possible to make substrates comprising vias, and having a thickness of up to about 800 μm. However, if still thicker wafers, say up to 1000 μm or more are required, the second etch from the bottom side, will generate wider trenches, since a deep trench will inevitably be wider at the opening than a shallow trench. Thus, in this embodiment, the thicker wafers will not be strictly symmetric in the sense that the vias will not exhibit the same appearance on both the top and bottom sides.
In the second step of the second embodiment, patterns 43 are defined by lithographic methods on the bottom surface, see
Trenches are etched in the same way as the trenches on the top side (indicated with a broken line in
In this embodiment a thinning of the wafer is avoided, but at the cost of further processing steps.
In a third embodiment (
In principle the final shape can be achieved in several steps, which is still within the inventive concept, but for practical reasons a two-step procedure is the most appropriate.
A further feature of the invention is to provide selectively doped vias, i.e. the vias exhibit higher conductivity than the bulk of the wafer. This can be achieved by exposing the wafer 60, after trenches have been made, but before the mask work 61 is removed, to a doping process (see
The vias resulting from the doping process is schematically illustrated in
This feature will have utility in RF applications.
The invention will now be further illustrated by way of non-limiting examples.
In
A standard trench etch was performed on a silicon wafer. The wafer was 100 mm in diameter and 500 μm thick.
In order to provide the trenches, a patterned mask was provided on one surface (top surface) of the wafer, by standard lithographic technique. The trenches in this example were simple “line” shaped trenches.
The etching process was a so called DRIE (Deep Reactive Ion Etch)
A series of trenches exhibiting varying depth and width was made the depths varying between 200 and 400 μm and the width between 5 and 12 μm. In
Therefore, in order to remedy this problem, an additional, shallow etch as described in connection with
This process step yields a strictly monotonic trench shape, as can be seen in
Filling this trench structure with oxide, will result in a completely filled trench with no voids.
In
In
The starting substrate is an ordinary silicon wafer 70,
In
Thereby the starting material is a SOI wafer (Silicon On Insulator) 80, wherein an oxide layer 82is buried inside a silicon wafer,
On the contrary, in the embodiment of
Thus, by the disclosure and examples given above, it has been shown that with the present invention, there is provided a product in the form of a starting substrate, in the form of a conducting or semi-conducting wafer, that can be used for the purposes of manufacturing a large variety of semi-conductor devices. By virtue of the wafer already from the start comprising electrical connections extending through the wafer (vias), it will become possible to design and make structures on both sides of the wafer in a very versatile way. The fact that the vias are made form the original wafer itself, makes the wafer capable of withstanding all process conditions usable with plain silicon wafers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0300784.6 | Mar 2003 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE04/00439 | 3/22/2004 | WO | 7/11/2006 |