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 vertically integrated low-profile, fine-pitch package-on-package integrated circuit assemblies having oblong solder connections.
A package-on-package (PoP) device in semiconductor technology is created by aligning a top device package with a bottom device package, and connecting the output terminals of the top package with the input terminals of the bottom package. The connection of terminals is achieved by reflowing the solder body attached to each output terminal to wet the respective terminal of the bottom package. In today's semiconductor products, PoP devices enjoy increasing popularity, because they promise to use component devices already developed and thus quickly available. For instance, examples for mobile multimedia applications include the three-dimensional integration of baseband integrated circuits (ICs) or application-specific circuits (ASICs) with high-performance memory. PoP devices are supposed to accept packages wherein the chip is assembled by wire bonds, as well as packages wherein the chip is assembled by flip-chip technology. Further, PoP devices are expected to be robust in terms of reliability in use-tests under variable temperature and moisture conditions, this means they should not experience package warpage or decreased performance.
As an example of today's best PoP technology, the bottom device may have a square-shaped substrate of 12 by 12 mm. On the substrate bottom surface are output terminals with 0.5 mm pitch and attached solder balls of 0.3 mm diameter. In the center of the substrate top surface is a semiconductor chip assembled onto the substrate by wire bonding. The thickness of the chip is in the range from about 0.1 to 0.25 mm; it may be as low as 0.05 mm. The squashed sphere and the arch of the bonding wire consume about 0.1 mm height over the chip. The chip plus surrounding keep-out zone (for the stitch-end of the bonding wire) are encapsulated by molding compound, which has a total thickness of 0.27 mm. A peripheral area up to the 12 by 12 mm outline is left for placing the terminal pads (capture pads) to connect to the inputs/outputs (I/O's) of the top package. Dependent on the size of the peripheral area, two or three rows of capture pads can be configured around the perimeter, resulting in a maximum capability for about 200 I/O's for the exemplary PoP. The pads have a pitch of 0.65 mm center-to-center.
The top device has, in matching locations, respective two or three rows of terminals at 0.65 mm pitch. Solder balls of 0.4 mm diameter are attached to the terminals. These solder balls are pressed to 0.32 mm height, when they are reflowed to assemble the top device onto the bottom device. The resulting standoff of 0.32 mm is sufficient to accommodate the 0.27 mm height of the molded encapsulation.
In general, for given substrate area minus the molded area, the pitch of terminals pads is determined by the number of I/O's. The pitch, in turn determines the size of affordable solder balls. Further, the height of the assembled solder balls determines the allowed height of the molded encapsulation.
In order to find an approach for PoP's to increase the number of I/O's while maintaining the area of the device, the industry is recently using a method for the bottom device to attach first conductive bumps to the top substrate surface terminals, and then to encapsulate the bumps together with the mounted chip in a molding compound. The bump height can be adjusted within a 0.010 to 0.015 mm range. Thereafter, blind vias are opened through the molding compound over the conductive bumps to reach and expose the top of the conductive material. The apertures of the vias are wide enough to accommodate the connecting solder bodies of the top package. For the stacking operation of the top package onto the bottom package, an automated placement machine equipped with a flux or solder paste dipping module positions the solder bodies of the top package inside the via apertures of the bottom package to make contact with the bumps in the vias. After reflowing the solder (at about 260° C.), a conductive connection is created from the bottom to the top device terminals.
Applicant recognized that the market trends towards higher product performance as well as smaller product contours demand package-on-package (PoP) devices with higher numbers of I/O terminals, concurrent with stacked chips in the bottom devices. As a consequence, the market is driving towards pad pitches substantially finer than the present 0.65 mm, and simultaneously towards thicknesses of the bottom package greater than the present 0.27 mm.
Further, applicant discovered that, for the bottom packages, the method of opening windows into the molding compound to expose solder bumps creates rough, un-even via sidewalls at the bump interface so that in the subsequent solder reflow cycle thermomechanical stresses are created between sidewalls and solder, which may lead to disruptive microcracks in the metal fillings. In addition, the present assembly approach, based on compound molding as the first step and via opening as the second step, is time-consuming and thus incompatible with the market requirements of low fabrication cost and rapidly changing customer needs demanding short turn-around time.
Applicant solved the problem of creating conductive through-vias, which can address both the need for decreasing I/O pitches and for increasing package thicknesses with stacked chips, by reversing the present sequence of process steps: In the first step, the vias are created through the complete molded thickness, and in the second step, enough solder balls are filled into each via to insure contact with the solder body attached to the top package. For through-vias formed approximately as inverted truncated cones, the filler-solder balls may have a smaller diameter than the attached solder body. In the example, quoted above, of a PoP with a 12×12 mm substrate of the bottom device, the process of the invention allows to increase the number of I/O's from 200 to 288 with a terminal pitch of only 0.4 mm, while the bottom package may now contain two, three, or more stacked chips. The new process is specifically advantageous for filling through-vias with an aperture diameter less than 75% of the depth—a configuration especially suited for shrinking the I/O pitch while concurrently increasing the package thickness.
Applicant further selected the method of fabricating the through-vias so that smooth via sidewalls are created. In one technique, the through-vias are formed during the molding process by using a mold cover with truncated cone-shaped protrusions in the locations matching the via locations. Due to the smooth mold steel, the via-hole sidewalls are inherently smooth. Alternatively, the through-vias may be created by lasers, which create inverted truncated cone-shaped openings with smooth sidewalls.
Next, the bottom of each through-via is prefluxed. Then, a dispensing equipment places at least 2 solder balls of a diameter not more than the truncation diameter into each through-via. During the PoP assembly, the incoming solder body attached to the top PoP package fills the remainder of each through-via with solder. Due to the smooth via sidewalls, no stress is created by the solder reflow temperature excursion.
It is a technical advantage of the invention that the fabrication method of the PoP bottom device, including the step of encapsulating the top side in molding compound, proceeds in wafer form; the singulation into discrete devices by sawing is the last process step. As a result, the molding step provides each discrete device with a maximum amount of the robust molding material, contributing significantly to minimize any device warpage during the temperature excursion for assembling the PoP.
It is another technical advantage of the invention that the process step of opening the vias for exposing the device terminals proceeds through the whole thickness of the molded material and further creates smooth via sidewalls. As a result, the formation of any sidewall protrusions, un-evenness, or rough-spots, is avoided, which otherwise may act as concentration points for thermomechanical stress during the temperature excursion for assembling the PoP.
Yet another technical advantage of the invention is the high production throughput, when all through-vias are formed concurrently in a mold, which uses a cover provided with an insert of steel protrusions in the locations of the vias.
In yet another technical advantage of the invention, the overmolded bottom device may include one or more wire-bonded chips, giving the PoP the advantage of using existing chips for increased performance.
Yet another advantage of the invention is a minimized warpage of the PoP due to method of molding whole wafers and singulating discrete devices after molding.
First device 101 includes a first substrate 110, which is made of an insulating material yet integral with conductive lines and vias. First substrate 110 has a first side 110a and a second side 110b. On first side 110a are first contact pads 111, and on second side 110b are second contact pads 112. Second device 102 includes a second substrate 120, which is made of an insulating material yet integral with conductive lines and vias. Second substrate 120 has a third side 120a, which is oriented to face first device 101. On third side 120a are third contact pads 121.
In the area of substrate 110 is divided into a region, preferably in the approximate center of the of the substrate area, which is reserved for assembling semiconductor chips. In the example of
As
As stated above, the exemplary PoP device of
Another embodiment of the invention is a method for fabricating a PoP while satisfying two concurrent trends: Allow the pitch of the contact pads and thus the top diameter of the via to decrease, and allow the height of the assembled chip stack and thus the encapsulating compound and the height of the via to increase.
In actual manufacturing, the via holes will have a shape resembling an inverted truncated cone; an optimum borderline case would be a via hole resembling a cylinder. Let the height of the cylinder be h and its diameter be d. The volume Vc of the via cylinder is thus Vc=¼d2 h π. In order to fill this via volume with solder, the second device contributes at most the volume of a solder ball, which fits into the via opening of diameter d at the top surface; this solder ball has the volume Vs of a sphere with diameter d; Vs=⅙ d3 π. Since the cylinder has the same diameter on the bottom as on the top, the balance of the via volume is filled by a second sphere of diameter d. The height of a cylinder-shaped via having a volume equal to 2 times ⅙ d3 π is given by h=4/3 d. Considering the diameter of the cylinder-shaped via as a function of the via height, d=¾ h=0.75 h. The via diameter 132 in
When vias are shaped more realistically as inverted truncated cones rather than cylinders, the second solder sphere has to have a smaller diameter than d. Consequently, when height h is fixed, the large-diameter solder sphere of the second device cannot touch the small-diameter solder sphere at the bottom of the via; the spheres thus cannot be unified after melting. The dilemma is aggravated, when h concurrently has to increase because of the stacking and wire bonding of chips, while d has to decrease because of shrinking pad pitch. Consequently, the PoP product trend requires a capability to fill solder into vias with d<0.75 h or even d<<0.75 h. This requirement is best fulfilled by loading more than one solder ball into each cone-shaped via hole of the first device before the second device is joined with the first device to create the PoP. For cone-shaped vias with narrow end at the contact pad of the first device, the diameter of the pre-loaded solder balls is preferably the diameter of the narrow end of the cone; these solder balls are thus smaller than the solder ball attached to the contact pad of the second device. A sequence of a number of process steps is depicted in
As an example,
In the next process step, the first substrate side 110a is encapsulated in an insulating compound. Preferably, a molding technique is used and the compound is an epoxy-based molding compound with inorganic fillers for mechanical strength and reducing the compound coefficient of thermal expansion. The goals of the encapsulation step are to protect the assembled chips and confer mechanical strength to substrate 110, while allowing access to the contact pads 111. The preferred encapsulation methods include a molding process using a cavity mold with one part designed to have protrusions for keeping pads 111 open, and a molding process creating a general overmold followed by a step of removing compound portions for opening the access to the pads. In either method, the resulting openings to the pads are via holes through the complete molded thickness with straight sidewalls.
In the method of using a mold with a specially designed part, a mold made of steel or another suitable material is provided, which allows the encapsulation of a substrate strip with an assembled array of devices. The mold has a top portion and a bottom portion; the top portion is manufactured to leave open the cavities for accessing the contact pads 111 on the first substrate surface 110a. The top portion includes protrusions and recesses; the bottom portion is without corresponding protrusions. The protrusions of the top portion are at locations matching the pad locations 111. The protrusions are preferably shaped as truncated cones of a height, with the cone surface angled within a preferred range from about 5 to 20 degrees from vertical. The diameter of the base of the cone, where it is protruding form the steel of the top mold portion, is less than 75% of the cone height. Furthermore, the protrusions preferably may have a ridge, which may extend along the whole angled side of the cone. The ridge is operable to create a groove or channel in the molded part, which may provide release of gas in the solder ball attachment process, or help in the solder paste reflow process.
The height of the protrusion is selected to be suitable to approach the substrate pad metal 111 in the closed mold. Preferably, the protrusion should approach the pad metal surface in the closed mold to a distance between 0 and about 50 μm. More preferably, the height of the protrusion is sufficient to touch the surface of the pad metal 111 in the closed mold.
The substrate 110 with the assembled chips 202 is loaded onto the featureless bottom mold portion. The second substrate surface 110b is rested on the bottom mold portion, and the first substrate surface 110a with the contact pads 111 is positioned away from the bottom mold portion. The protrusions of the top mold portion are aligned with the respective contact pads 111.
After closing the mold by clamping the top portion onto the bottom portion, the cavities of the mold for holding the semiconductor chips are formed. The protrusions are aligned with the contact pads 111, approaching or touching the pad surface; material or alignment tolerances may cause a residual distance between 0 and about 20 μm between the protrusion and the respective pad. In
Next, encapsulation material such as epoxy-based and filler-loaded molding compound is pressured into the cavities to fill the cavities. By this transfer molding step, encapsulations 131 for the devices of the array are created, as well as the separations 230 and 231. After partially polymerizing the compound, the mold is opened and the substrate together with the encapsulated array of chips is removed from the mold. Subsequently, the compound is fully polymerized. As the cross section of
Alternatively, the cavity direct injection molding technique or the liquid compression molding technique may be employed. These techniques use a plastic film held to the top mold portion by vacuum suction, resulting in straight smooth sidewalls of the vias.
In an alternate method for opening the via holes, the first substrate surface 110s with the assembled chip stacks 202 is overmolded uniformly in a compound thickness suitable for the height of the stacks and the bonding wire arches. Thereafter, laser beams are used to open via holes 130 through the compound thickness to expose contact pads 111, creating vias with an approximate inverted truncated cone shape and straight smooth sidewalls, as shown in
In the next process step displayed in
As discussed above, for most devices a second solder ball 510 of the same size as ball 501 is needed to fill the volume of via 130 high enough with solder so that during the PoP assembly contact can be established between the solder in the vias and the respective solder body of the second device.
In the next process step, the temperature is raised to reflow the solder balls 501 and 510 while wetting the respective first pads 111. The resulting solder filling of vias 130 is designated 601 in
Referring now to
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; it further applies to combinations of active and passive components, and to any material of the semiconductor chips including silicon, silicon germanium, gallium arsenide, or any other semiconductor or compound material used in semiconductor manufacturing.
As another example, the via holes may be shaped as cylinders or as inverted truncated cones. There may be none, one, or two, or more drops of flux before the pre-filling of the via holes with solder balls. The via holes may have to be pre-filled with two, three or more solder balls. There may be an additional clean-up step after the reflow step for combining the solder in the via holes.
It is therefore intended that the appended claims encompass any such modifications or embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61099024 | Sep 2008 | US |