This invention relates to electrical interconnection of integrated circuit chips and, particularly, to interconnection of assemblies including one or more integrated circuit chips.
Some die as provided have die pads along one or more of the die margins, and these may be referred to as peripheral pad die. Other die as provided have die pads arranged in one or two rows near the center of the die, and these may be referred to as center pad die. The die may be “rerouted” to provide a suitable arrangement of interconnect pads at or near one or more of the margins of the die.
Die may be interconnected by forming durable contact of interconnects with selected corresponding pads on the respective die. Or, the die pads may be provided with interconnect terminals, and the die may be interconnected by forming durable contact of interconnects with selected corresponding interconnect terminals on the respective die. An interconnect terminal may include, for example, a tab bond or ribbon bond, and may extend from the pad beyond the die edge (so-called “off-die” terminal). Or, an interconnect terminal may constitute a trace of electrically conductive material contacting the pad and running to the die edge, or around the die edge to the die sidewall.
Interconnection of die in a stack, and of stacked die with underlying circuitry, such as a substrate or printed circuit board, presents a number of challenges.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,215,018 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,245,021 describe vertical electrical interconnection of stacked die by applying electrically conductive polymer, or epoxy, filaments or lines to sides of the stack.
In various general aspects the invention features methods for electrical interconnection of die in a stack, and of stacked die with a substrate, and assemblies made by the methods. Generally according to the invention an electrical interconnect material is deposited in situ in a pulsed manner; that is, the material is deposited in a pulse or a series of pulses to form an electrically continuous interconnection.
In a general aspect the invention features a method for forming an electrical interconnect between electrical interconnect sites (deposition “targets”), by pulsed dispense of interconnect material, the interconnect material making electrical contact with at least one said electrical interconnect site. The electrical interconnect site may be one of a site on a die, or a site on a support such as a leadframe or a package substrate or a printed circuit board.
In some embodiments the invention features a method for forming an electrical interconnect between vertically adjacent die in a die stack, or between vertically spaced-apart die in a die stack, or between horizontally proximate die or die stacks, or between a die or a die stack and a support such as for example a substrate or a leadframe or a printed circuit board, by depositing a first droplet of an interconnect material at a first target, and depositing a second droplet of an interconnect material on a second target, and contacting the first and second droplets to provide electrical continuity between the first and second targets. In some embodiments the second droplet as deposited contacts the first droplet; in other embodiments the second droplet is allowed to contact the first droplet subsequent to depositing the droplets. In some embodiments a subsequent treatment contacts the second droplet with the first droplet. In some embodiments one of the first and second targets includes an electrical feature, such as an interconnect terminal or an interconnect pad, on a die; in some such embodiments each of the first and second targets includes an electrical feature, such as an interconnect terminal or an interconnect pad, on a die.
In some embodiments the first target includes an electrical feature such as a bond pad on underlying circuitry, such as on a substrate or printed circuit; in some such embodiments the first target includes both an electrical feature, such as an interconnect terminal or interconnect pad, on a die and an electrical feature such as a bond pad on underlying circuitry. In some embodiments one of the first and second targets includes a previously-deposited droplet. In some embodiments the first target includes a transfer surface, onto which the conductive material is deposited in a specified pattern for later transfer to a die stack.
The interconnect material may be a curable material and, depending upon the material and the technique, the interconnect material may be deposited in an uncured or partially cured state, and the material may be partially or additionally cured at an intermediate stage following dispense, and may be fully cured when dispense has been completed. Where the interconnect material is a curable material, it may be electrically conductive as deposited, or as partially or fully cured. A suitable interconnect material may be an electrically conductive polymer. Suitable electrically conductive polymers include polymers filled with conductive material in particle form such as, for example, metal-filled polymers, including, for example metal filled epoxy, metal filled thermosetting polymers, metal filled thermoplastic polymers, or an electrically conductive ink. The conductive particles may range widely in size and shape; they may be for example nanoparticles or larger particles. In some embodiments the conductive material can be a partially-curable polymer; a partial cure may be performed at an earlier stage in the process, and a final cure or post-cure may be performed at a later stage to increase the robustness of the interconnection. In some embodiments the interconnect material provides a mechanical strength (for example, helping to hold the die together in the stack) as well as a reliable electrical interconnection.
In another general aspect the invention features a method for electrically interconnecting a first die to a second die, by providing first and second die each having interconnect sites at or near a die edge, positioning the die in relation to the one another such that corresponding sites to be connected are aligned, and dispensing an interconnect material dropwise (that is, by pulsed dispense of one or more droplets of the interconnect material), such that the interconnect material provides electrical continuity between the corresponding sites. In some embodiments one or more additional die are mounted over the first two die, and interconnected by pulsed deposition to form an electrically interconnected stacked die assembly having any desired number of die. In some embodiments such an interconnected stacked die assembly having two or more die is mounted onto a support such as a substrate or leadframe or printed circuit board, and electrically connected to underlying circuitry in the support.
In some embodiments the die are stacked so that the die edges overlie one another, so that the stack face is generally planar and generally perpendicular to the die front side. In some embodiments successive die in the stack are offset so that the die edges adjacent the interconnect sites present a stairstep configuration. In some embodiments the die in the stack are offset so that the die in the stack present a staggered configuration.
In some embodiments successively interconnected die in the stack are separated by a spacer; in some such embodiments the spacer is a dielectric film such as a die attach film. In embodiments where the die in the stack present a staggered configuration, odd-numbered die in the stack constitute successively interconnected die, and they are separated by even-numbered die; similarly, even-numbered die in the stack also constitute successively interconnected die, and they are separated by odd-numbered die.
In another general aspect the invention features a method for electrically interconnecting a die to a substrate, by providing a substrate having bond pads on the die mount surface of the substrate, providing a die having interconnect sites at a die edge, positioning the die in relation to the substrate such that interconnect sites on the die are aligned with corresponding bond pads on the substrate, and dispensing an interconnect material dropwise (that is, by pulsed dispense of one or more droplets of the interconnect material), such that the interconnect material provides electrical continuity between the corresponding sites and bond pads. In some embodiments one or more additional die are mounted over the first die, and interconnected by dropwise deposition to form an electrically interconnected die stack electrically connected to the substrate.
In some embodiments a droplet of material is permitted, following a dispense pulse, to separate from the tool tip prior to movement of the tool. Various interconnect materials have various rheological properties in the uncured (or partially-cured) state, and rheological properties (such as viscosity, or thixotropy, for example) of particular materials may be exploited to provide droplets having controlled shapes. For example, a conductive polymer having higher viscosity and thixotropy in the uncured state can be shaped during deposition by moving the deposition tool immediately following a dispense pulse, to draw a “tail” of material in a selected direction to form an interconnect having a selected shape. Accordingly, in some embodiments, following a dispense pulse, the dispense tool is moved in a selected direction prior to separation of the droplet from the tool tip. A resulting interconnect may contact only the respective interconnect sites, and in some embodiments the resulting interconnect may take the form of an arc, for example.
In some embodiments each droplet is dispensed onto the target in a projectile manner; that is, the dispense tool is positioned such that the opening of the tip is at a distance from the target at the time the droplet is ejected from the tip of the tool. In a projectile dispense approach the dispense tool tip need not be held close to the target during deposition of the droplet and, advantageously therefore, the tip need not be manipulated in as carefully controlled a manner during formation of interconnects having more complicated geometries.
In some embodiments peripheral die pads constitute the interconnect sites on the die; in some embodiments interconnect terminals are attached to peripheral die pads and the interconnect terminals constitute the interconnect sites. In some embodiments the interconnect sites on the die include off-die interconnect terminals; in some embodiments the interconnect sites on the die include deposits of electrically conductive material (such as an electrically conductive polymer, for example); in some embodiments the interconnect sites on the die include electrically conductive traces connected to peripheral die pads and running to or near the die edge or around the die edge to the die sidewall.
In another general aspect the invention features a die assembly including a die mounted to a substrate or to another die, the substrate having bond pads, and the die having interconnect sites, in which corresponding interconnect sites are interconnected by pulsed dispense.
Pulsed dispense of electrically conductive material for electrical interconnection of die can be carried out more rapidly and at lower cost than continuous dispense.
The assemblies according to the invention can be used for building computers, telecommunications equipment, and consumer and industrial electronics devices.
The invention will now be described in further detail by reference to the drawings, which illustrate alternative embodiments of the invention. The drawings are diagrammatic, showing features of the invention and their relation to other features and structures, and are not made to scale. For improved clarity of presentation, in the FIGs. illustrating embodiments of the invention, elements corresponding to elements shown in other drawings are not all particularly renumbered, although they are all readily identifiable in all the FIGs. Also for clarity of presentation certain features are not shown in the FIGs., where not necessary for an understanding of the invention.
Turning now to
Referring particularly to
In the embodiment shown by way of example in
Other arrangements of bond pads are contemplated, according to the arrangements of pads on the particular die. In other embodiments the interconnect pads on the die may be situated along one die margin, or along three or all four margins; and the bond pads on the substrate in such embodiments are arranged correspondingly. Bond pads on the substrate may be arranged in two or more rows of pads along any one or more boundaries of the die footprint; and the bond pads may be interdigitated. In some embodiments, certain of the pads on a given die may not be connected to other die in the stack; for example, “chip select” or “chip enable” pads on a given die may be connected to underlying circuitry (on the substrate, for example), but not to other die. In such embodiments the terminals from such pads may connect to the bond pads in a second row along an edge of the die.
Referring now to
In other embodiments an electrically insulative conformal coating may be applied to the entire stack of die, rather than on each die before stacking; openings are made following the formation of the coating and prior to formation of the interconnects. And in other embodiments an off-die terminal may be omitted (see, for example, constructs shown in
Adjacent die in the stack may optionally be mounted one upon the other using an adhesive. (The term “adjacent” with reference to die in a stack means the die are vertically adjacent; die may also be horizontally adjacent, for example in a wafer or in a die array or, in some configurations, on a common support.). In the example shown here, a film adhesive piece (such as a die attach film) is employed (e.g., 33 between adjacent die 14 and 16), and in this example the die attach film provides both adhesion and spacing between the die, to accommodate the off-die terminals.
In other embodiments the die attach film may be omitted, and spacing provided by other means. For instance, discrete spacers of a dielectric material may be arranged over a lower die, and the upper die may be set upon the spacers. Where the conformal dielectric coating is formed following stacking, and is formed by condensation of a polymer such as, for example, a parylene, the coating material condenses on all available surfaces, including on the die surfaces in the space provided by the spacers between the die, as described for example in U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/971,203, the pertinent portions of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference. The spacers have nominally the same height, to provide a standoff between overlying adjacent components in a range, for example, about 1 um to about 5 um. The spacers may be particles (such as, for example, small spheres of a dielectric material such as a glass or an organic polymer, for example) placed on the surface of the lower die; or, the spacers can be formed in situ, by printing or depositing discrete nubbins of a dielectric material such as an organic polymer on the lower die surface. The spacers can be formed of an adhesive, providing some affixation of the die in the stack, sufficient to hold the die in position during processing.
Bond pads 228 are arranged at the die mount surface 224 of the substrate 20. In the example shown, the die are arranged one over another with the respective interconnect terminals 129, 149, 169, 189 aligned vertically (that is, generally perpendicular to the front or back side of the die). And, in the example shown, the die stack 10 is mounted on the substrate with the respective interconnect terminals aligned at least partly over the respective bond pad 228.
The die stack may optionally be mounted on the substrate using an adhesive. In the example shown here, the die 18 adjacent the substrate 20 is affixed to the die mount side 224 of the substrate 20 using a film adhesive 37. As may be appreciated, a configuration as shown in
As noted above,
The die assemblies shown in these Figures have off-die interconnects, as noted above (having tab bond or ribbon bond interconnect terminals). Interconnection by dropwise deposit of interconnect material may in other embodiments be made directly on die pads, such as on die having peripheral die pads without interconnect terminals; or on interconnect terminals formed as bumps or globs or knobs of electrically conductive material formed upon the peripheral pads and extending upward from the pads, and either extending or not extending toward the die edge (an example of the latter is illustrated for example in
The interconnect material is selected or formulated to have suitable physical characteristics (thixotropy, rheological characteristics, viscosity, etc.) for deposition. Particularly, the material must be sufficiently flowable to be expelled or ejected from the tool tip in suitably sized droplets. Preferably the material as deposited is sufficiently deformable in the uncured (or partly cured) state to permit it to conform at least to some extent to the target upon which it is deposited, to facilitate good electrical contact where required, including contact with previously deposited droplets that form a part of an interconnect. Also preferably the material as deposited is sufficiently stiff so as not to flow away from the intended site.
The droplets of interconnect material are shown in the FIGs. as having the shape of spheres or lozenges, but in practice the material will not have such a shape, either as deposited (as shown for example in
The interconnect material may include, for example, a matrix containing an electrically conductive filler; the matrix may be a curable or settable material, and the electrically conductive fill may be in particulate form, for example, such that when the matrix sets or is cured, the material is itself electrically conductive. In some embodiments the material is a conductive epoxy such as a silver filled epoxy; for example, a filled epoxy having 60-90% (more usually 80-85%) silver may be suitable. The epoxy is cured following dispensing, resulting in some embodiments in a fusion of the series of dots into a continuous interconnect strand.
The pulsed dispense may alternatively or additionally be employed to deposit electrically nonconductive materials having similar physical properties (rheology, thixotropy, viscosity, and the like). For example, an electrically nonconductive line may be formed over a conductive trace, for example to provide electrical insulation for subsequent deposition of an overlying conductive trace.
The interconnects may be formed in any of a variety of shapes, and no particular shape is required, so long as the desired electrical continuity is established by each interconnect.
In the embodiments shown in the Figures, the droplets as deposited are large enough to make contact with underlying circuitry or with a preceding droplet as well as with an interconnect terminal. Alternatively, the droplets may be smaller, for example, so that more than one droplet is required to establish electrical continuity between adjacent features in the stack. Or, alternatively, the droplets may be larger, for example, so that, depending upon the size (e.g., height) of the interconnection, a single droplet may suffice; or, where more than one droplet may be required to effect a complete interconnect, a given droplet may be employed to connect features on adjacent die in the stack. A droplet may have a mass in the range about 4 mg to about 12 mg, for example, and a droplet may have a nominal diameter as small as about 20-30 um, usually about 75 um, and as large as about 600 um. As may be appreciated, where larger droplets are dispensed, fewer droplets need be deposited to complete a particular interconnect; on the other hand, smaller droplets may be required to form narrower interconnects.
The size of the droplet is determined by the mass of material dispensed in each pulse; that is, the tool dispenses a desired mass of the material toward the target in each pulse, and the dispense pulse in the tool is substantially or entirely completed prior to moving the tool toward a subsequent target. In embodiments where droplets are deposited discretely, whatever their size and shape, and however many droplets may be deposited to form a particular interconnect, deposition of each droplet is substantially completed and the droplet mass separates from the tool tip before the tool is moved for deposition of a subsequent droplet in the same or on a different interconnect. In other embodiments a portion of the droplet mass may remain in contact with tool for a time following completion of the pulse, and the tool may be moved before separation is complete; in such embodiments the shape of the deposited mass may be determined to some degree by the direction and rate of movement of the tool as well as the rheologic properties of the material. An example is described below with reference to
Preferably, apparatus for forming the interconnections is at least partially automated. Referring to
Rather than a cylinder-and-piston or cylinder-and-plunger approach as described above with reference to
In the examples shown in
In an alternative approach, the tool tip opening is positioned at some distance from the target, and the droplet is ejected from the tip so that it separates from the mass of material in the tool tip and passes as a projectile to the target. A suitable jet dispense tool tip is illustrated by way of example in
Projectile dropwise dispense is illustrated in
In the Figures referred to above, the die are provided with off-die interconnect terminals, and the die are stacked so that the die edge adjacent the die pads in each overlying die is directly aligned with the edge of the underlying die. In such embodiments the die sidewalls in the stack are oriented in a substantially coplanar manner, and the stack presents a generally planar stack face, generally perpendicular to the die front sides. In other embodiments successive die in the stack may be offset, as shown for example in
As shown in
In other embodiments, the interconnect terminals may be configured so that they are directly accessible at the stack face, as shown for example in U.S. Application Atty Docket No. 1041-2, referenced above and incorporated by reference herein.
As noted above, Theological properties (such as viscosity, or thixotropy, for example) of particular materials may be exploited to provide droplets having controlled shapes. Particularly, for some materials a portion of the droplet mass may remain in contact with tool for a time following completion of the pulse, and the tool may be moved before separation is complete. A conductive polymer material having higher viscosity and thixotropy in the uncured state can be shaped during deposition by moving the deposition tool immediately following a dispense pulse, to draw a “tail” of material in a selected direction to form an interconnect having a selected shape. As a result, the shape of the deposited mass may be determined to some degree by the direction and rate of movement of the tool as well as the rheologic properties of the material.
Referring to
A series of such roughly conical free standing droplets can be formed one over another adjacent a die stack face, providing a column of material contacting the interconnect terminals. Such a columnar configuration may be particularly useful where there is a significant space between vertically adjacent die, so that the interconnect trace must vertically traverse the space without lateral support. This may be presented in die stacks having a staggered arrangement of die (that is, where the space between the die to be connected approximate (or somewhat exceed) the thickness of an interposed offset die; or in die stacks having elongated stacked die each oriented 90° to the die below. Such arrangements are described in U.S. Application Atty Docket No. VCIX 1041-2, referenced above and incorporated by reference herein.
The tool can be moved in other directions than vertically away from the target, and various useful droplet shapes can result. Referring for example to
Other embodiments are within the scope of the invention.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/981,457, titled “Electrical interconnect formed by dot dispense,” which was filed Oct. 19, 2007; and in part from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/970,903, titled “Electrically interconnected stacked die assemblies,” which was filed Sep. 7, 2007. This application is related to U.S. Application Atty Docket No. VCIX 1041-2, titled “Electrically interconnected stacked die assemblies”, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/970,903 (cited above), and which is being filed on the same date as this application. The above-referenced applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60981457 | Oct 2007 | US | |
60970903 | Sep 2007 | US |