The present invention is related in general to the field of semiconductor devices and processes and more specifically to the structure and fabrication method of low cost, flip-chip solder joints, which are resistant against electromigration and void-causing intermetallic formation.
In the continuing trend to miniaturize integrated circuits, the RC time constant of the metal layer interconnection between the active circuit elements increasingly dominates the achievable IC speed-power product. Consequently, the relatively high resistivity of the traditional interconnecting aluminum layer has in recent years been replaced by the lower resistivity of copper layer.
In order to conserve silicon real estate, reduce device thickness and electrical resistance, semiconductor chips are increasingly assembled by flip-chip technology rather than wire bonding. In the flip-chip technology, it is common practice to interconnect the semiconductor chips with the help of solder bumps to external bodies such as substrates. Based on environmental concerns, the presently preferred tin-based solder does no longer contain lead.
It has recently been observed in large-scale tests of temperature cycling, solder re-melting, drop tests, and mechanical stress that the solder joints, especially in chips with copper interconnection layers, exhibit increasing failure rates due to solder joint cracks, as the power consumption of the devices is going up and at the same time the bump dimensions are going down. The data show that the number of failures increase with the number of solder reflows and with the amount of electrical current. The failures include cracks at the copper/solder interface, electrical opens, and the separation of the solder from the joint.
Applicants conducted a metallurgical, statistical, and electrical analysis of the contact structures, coupled with computer modeling. The analysis of the contacts revealed that copper, which diffuses into the solder, reacts with the tin of the solder to form the intermetallic compounds Cu3Sn at the interface copper/solder, followed by Cu6Sn5 towards the solder. Due to the different diffusion rates of copper and tin within the intermetallics, Kirkendall voids are formed at the intermetallic/solder interface.
The analysis of the solder contacts further revealed that an electrical current, which arrives at the contact from the high sheet resistance of the copper layer and has no chance to distribute to a lower resistance, remains crowded and causes large electromigration voids at the copper/solder joints. The electromigration driving force, in turn, enhances the Kirkendall void formation dramatically, further degrading the reliability of the joints.
The device structure according to the invention practically eliminates the copper diffusion into the solder as well as the current crowding at the contact with the subsequent electromigration in the solder. One embodiment of the invention has a semiconductor chip with copper layer interconnection and contact pads. A column-like electroplated copper stud is on each contact pad. The stud is sized to provide low, uniform electrical resistance in order to spread the current from the contact to an approximately uniform, low density. Preferably, the stud height is at least ten times the thickness of the copper interconnect layer.
The stud is capped by an electroplated nickel layer thick enough (preferably about 2 μm) to suppress copper diffusion. The nickel is in contact with a tin/silver solder bump, wherein the nickel layer blocks copper diffusion into the solder so that intermetallic compound formation and Kirkendall voiding are practically inhibited.
Another embodiment of the invention is a method for fabricating a semiconductor contact structure. The method starts with a semiconductor wafer, which has an interconnect layer of a thickness (preferably about 0.5 μm) near its surface; windows in the insulating overcoat over the wafer expose portions of the interconnect layer. A seed layer of a refractory metal followed by a seed layer of copper are deposited over the wafer, including the windows in the overcoat. Next, a photoresist layer is deposited over the copper seed layer, masked, developed, and etched to expose the copper seed layer portions in each window. Column-shaped studs of copper, between about 5 and 50μ high (preferably between 16 and 20 μm), are electroplated on the exposed copper seed layer portions. While the stud surfaces are still wet, a layer of nickel (preferably between 1.5 to 3.0 μm thick) is electroplated on the surface of each stud. For some devices, while the nickel surface is still wet, a body of solder (preferably 96.5 weight percent tin and 3.5 weight percent silver) is electroplated on the nickel layer. The photoresist and the exposed layers of refractory metal and copper seed are removed. For the devices with the plated solder, the solder body is reflowed to form an approximate solder ball.
The technical advances represented by certain embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments of the invention, when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the novel features set forth in the appended claims.
In
Trace 104 and the remainder of layer 103 are overlaid by an insulating protective overcoat 105, which preferably includes silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, or a stack of silicon nitride and silicon dioxide in a thickness range between about 0.5 and 1.0 μm; overcoat 105 is practically impenetrable to moisture.
As
As a result, height 108a provides the copper stud 108 with a low electrical resistance. Due to the low resistance of the stud, an electrical current can spread readily and pass through the stud in an approximately uniform density, entering the solder body 120 while practically avoiding the crowding of current. As an example for the contact pads of many device types, a copper stud with a height between 5 and 50 μm provides an electrical resistance low enough to spread a 1 A current to an approximately uniform current density of less than 3·10E8 pA/μm2. (The processes of electroplating the copper and subsequent metals are described below).
Without copper stud 108 and nickel layer 109 at contact window 110, the electrical current, arriving in the chip metallization, enters the contact window with pronounced current crowing around the window perimeter and causes high current densities in the solder, resulting in electromigration in the joint-near regions of the solder. This current crowding 201 in conventional technology is illustrated in
In contrast, the computer modeling in
Electrical modeling can further be applied to determine the width 110 of the contact window and the height 108a of stud 108 required to provide an approximately uniform current flow and density for avoiding current crowding.
As depicted in
As stated, nickel layer 109 suppresses the diffusion of copper from stud 108 into solder 120. Consequently, the subsequent formation of tin-copper intermetallic compounds and the appearance of Kirkendall voids in the solder body are also suppressed.
The low electrical resistance of copper stud 108 and thus the approximately uniform current density provide the preconditions for a current flow through the solder body 120 so that electromigration in the solder can be minimized. As a result, the formation of the large voids in the solder region close to the joint, which are usually a consequence of electromigration, is practically eliminated. Together with the elimination of Kirkendall voids by preventing the copper diffusion into the solder, the reliability of the solder joint is at least an order of magnitude improved.
Referring to
After the assembly of chip 150 onto external part 170 in a solder reflow process, it may be advisable to fill the gap 180 between chip 150 and part 170 with a polymer underfill material or a molding compound in order to reduce thermo-mechanical stress in the solder joint.
Another embodiment of the invention is a method for fabricating a semiconductor contact structure resistant against electromigration voids and Kirkendall voids.
In the next process step, a seed layer 406 of refractory metal such as titanium, tungsten, or both, followed by a seed layer 407 of copper are deposited over the wafer overcoat, with the copper layer being the outermost layer. A preferred thickness for the refractory layer is about 300 nm, and for the copper layer between about 200 and 800 nm. The preferred method is a sputtering technique, wherein the depositions are performed in one pump-down. The seed layers provide a uniform bias potential across the wafer for the following electroplating steps.
Next, a layer 450 of photoresist is deposited over the copper seed layer. The photoresist is masked, developed and etched to create openings 451 for exposing the copper seed layer portions in each opening, whereby the photoresist openings 451 are aligned with the overcoat windows 410.
In the next process step, illustrated in
Then, while the surface of copper stud 508 is still wet, a layer 609 of nickel is electroplated on the surface of each stud 508. This deposition is illustrated in
In the preferred process flow, the next step, illustrated in
An alternative to the electroplating step of solder is the application of solder paste, as discussed in
While this invention has been described in reference to illustrative embodiments, this description is not intended to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications and combinations of the illustrative embodiments, as well as other embodiments of the invention, will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to the description. As an example, the invention applies to products using any type and any number of semiconductor chips, discrete or integrated circuits, and the material of the semiconductor chip may comprise silicon, silicon germanium, gallium arsenide, or any other semiconductor or compound material used in integrated circuit manufacturing. It is therefore intended that the appended claims encompass any such modifications or embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60923403 | Apr 2007 | US |