1. Technical Field
Embodiments of the disclosed invention are directed to a fan-out wafer level package for a semiconductor device, and in particular, to such a device that employs a redistribution layer manufactured on a sacrificial silicon wafer before attachment of semiconductor dice that are to be packaged.
2. Description of the Related Art
For manufacturers of semiconductor devices, there is a continuing desire to increase the density and reduce the size of the devices, so that more devices can be made on a single wafer of semiconductor material, and so that products that incorporate the devices can be made more compact. One response to this desire has been the development of chip scale packaging and wafer level packaging. These are packages that have a footprint that is very close to the actual area of the semiconductor die. They are generally direct surface mountable, using, e.g., ball grid arrays and flip chip configurations.
Another development is the reconfigured wafer, in which a semiconductor wafer is separated into individual dice, which are reformed into a reconfigured wafer, in which the dice are spaced some greater distance apart than on the original wafer, after which additional processing steps are performed on the devices. One benefit is that this provides increased area for each die for “back end” processes, such as the formation of contacts at a scale or pitch that is compatible with circuit board limitations, without sacrificing valuable real estate on the original wafer. Some packages of this type are sometimes referred to as a fan-out wafer level package, because the contact positions of the original die are “fanned out” to a larger foot print. A prior art method of manufacturing a fan-out package 100 is briefly outlined with reference to
As shown in
After curing, the laminate carrier strip 104 and tape 106 are removed, leaving the layer 110 with a top surface 112 in which the original dice 102 are embedded with the active faces 114 of the dice exposed for additional connections, as shown in
According to an embodiment, a flip-chip fan-out wafer level package is provided for package-on-package applications, and includes a semiconductor die with solder bumps on an active surface in a flip chip configuration. The die is inverted, with the active surface facing a redistribution layer, and the solder bumps are in electrical contact with respective chip contact pads of the redistribution layer. The redistribution layer includes conductive traces that place each of the solder bumps in electrical contact with one or more contact pads of a plurality of upper redistribution contact pads and a plurality of lower redistribution contact pads, each of the plurality of upper redistribution contact pads has an upper solder ball in electrical contact therewith. The die and the upper solder balls are at least partially encapsulated in an encapsulating layer positioned on the upper surface of the redistribution layer, and whose lateral dimensions are defined by the lateral dimensions of the redistribution layer. A portion of each of the upper solder balls is exposed at a surface of the encapsulating layer for electrical contact with an upper package. Each of the lower redistribution contact pads has a lower solder ball coupled thereto.
According to another embodiment, a method for manufacturing fan-out wafer level packages is provided. According to the method, a redistribution layer is formed on a sacrificial silicon wafer. Semiconductor dice in flip chip configuration are positioned with their active surfaces facing a surface of the redistribution layer, with solder bumps in contact with respective contact pads of the redistribution layer. Additional solder material can be deposited on contact pads on portions of the redistribution layer that extend beyond the edges of the dice. The bumps are reflowed to electrically couple the dice to the redistribution layer, and the solder material is reflowed to form solder balls. An encapsulating material is then deposited onto the wafer and cured, encapsulating the dice and the solder balls in a rigid layer of the material. After the encapsulating material is cured, the sacrificial wafer is removed. A side of the rigid layer opposite the redistribution layer is back-ground to expose a portion of each of the encapsulated solder balls, and additional solder balls are formed on an side of the redistribution layer opposite the dice.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the redistribution layer 222 is first formed on the surface of a sacrificial silicon wafer 220, separate from the die, which is later coupled to the redistribution layer.
As shown in
Turning to
According to an embodiment, an underfill material is placed between each of the dice 202 and the redistribution layer 222 before the molding compound is deposited.
As shown in
The redistribution layer 222 disclosed above is described as comprising first and second dielectric layers and first and second conductive layers. The redistribution layer can include additional layers in order to accommodate a more complex wiring circuit. Alternatively, where not required, the second conductive layer can be omitted. Furthermore, any of the layers can themselves comprise multiple layers. For example, the dielectric layers can include passivation layers, buffer layers, spacing layers, etc., and the conductive layers can include seed layers, plated metallic layers, vapor deposited layers, barrier layers, etc.
Processes for performing the manufacturing steps discussed above are very well known in the art, and are within the abilities of a person having ordinary skill in the art.
Embodiments of the invention provide a number of advantages over the prior art devices described with reference to
Second, potential warping of the package material is avoided. Many of the processes associated with depositing, masking, and etching the layers of the redistribution layer require elevated temperatures. The molding compound material that is typically used to encapsulate the dice has a coefficient of thermal expansion that is greater than that of silicon. Additionally, the reconfigured strip of devices must be removed from the supporting laminate base before the redistribution layer can be formed. The thermal cycles that occur during the formation of the redistribution layer on the prior art devices can cause the material to warp, which interferes with succeeding process steps. In contrast, with respect to the disclosed embodiments, the redistribution layer is made before the dice are emplaced and the mold compound deposited, so the dice are not present during the formation of the redistribution layer, eliminating the possibility of thermal mismatch, and the redistribution layer is fully supported by the sacrificial silicon wafer during formation, so warping is substantially eliminated.
Third, the disclosed device provides a significant reduction in height as compared to prior art devices. In many prior art devices configured for use in package-on-package configurations, a laminate carrier is employed, to which the lower substrate is attached. No such carrier is required by the devices disclosed herein.
Fourth, with reference to some prior art device, there is a danger of “inter-knocking,” in which, when subjected to sharp acceleration, the middle of an upper package can flex slightly and strike against the lower package, which can result is damage to one or both of the devices.
Ordinal numbers, e.g., first, second, third, etc., are used according to conventional claim practice, i.e., for the purpose of clearly distinguishing between claimed elements or features thereof. The use of such numbers does not suggest any other relationship, e.g., order of operation or relative position of such elements. Furthermore, ordinal numbers used in the claims have no specific correspondence to those used in the specification to refer to elements of disclosed embodiments on which those claims read.
The term redistribution layer is sometimes used in the art to refer to a single conductive layer, while at other times it is used so broadly as to refer to any related structure, including support substrates, laminate strips and bases, etc. For the purposes of the present disclosure and claims, redistribution layer is a layer that includes one or more layers of dielectrics and conductors that are formed or deposited on an underlying substrate or layer to create and isolate redistributing signal paths of a semiconductor die, including a die of a reconfigured wafer. Specifically excluded from the definition is any support substrate of the redistribution layer, whatever its composition, including laminate material, glass, silicon, etc.
The abstract of the present disclosure is provided as a brief outline of some of the principles of the invention according to one embodiment, and is not intended as a complete or definitive description of any embodiment thereof, nor should it be relied upon to define terms used in the specification or claims. The abstract does not limit the scope of the claims.
The following U.S. patent applications, filed concurrently herewith, are directed to subject matter that is related to or has some technical overlap with the subject matter of the present disclosure: MULTI-STACKED SEMICONDUCTOR DICE SCALE PACKAGE STRUCTURE AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURING SAME, by Kim-Yong Goh, attorney docket No. 851663.488; FAN-OUT WAFER LEVEL PACKAGE FOR AN OPTICAL SENSOR AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURE THEREOF, by Kim-Yong Goh and Jing-En Luan, attorney docket No. 851663.493; RELIABLE LARGE FAN-OUT WAFER LEVEL PACKAGE AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURE, by Kim-Yong Goh and Jing-En Luan, attorney docket No. 851663.495; and FAN-OUT WAFER LEVEL PACKAGE WITH POLYMERIC LAYER FOR HIGH RELIABILITY, by Kim-Yong Goh, attorney docket No. 851663.501; each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments. All of the U.S. patents, U.S. patent application publications, U.S. patent applications, foreign patents, foreign patent applications and non-patent publications referred to in this specification and/or listed in the Application Data Sheet are incorporated herein by reference, in their entirety. Aspects of the embodiments can be modified, if necessary to employ concepts of the various patents, applications and publications to provide yet further embodiments.
These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.
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