Integrated circuits are typically mounted on printed-circuit boards using either pin grid, arrays or solder ball arrays. Pin grid arrays came earlier, providing, secure physical and electrical connections. However, since the pins extend through holes in a printed circuit, they consume area on every layer of a printed-circuit board. Solder ball arrays bond to bonding pads on a top layer, leaving lower layers intact, easing routing constraints for conductors on those lower layers.
Embodiments of the present invention provide for integrated-circuit (IC) packages with both solder halls and pins. The solder balls provide for most of the physical and electrical connections between the IC package and a printed-circuit board (PCB), while pin connections are used at the corners of the IC package. The combined use of solder balls and pins addresses a problem identified by the inventors: to the extent they fail (e.g., due to flexing of a PCB). solder ball connections fail first at the corners of a solder hall grid. Using pin connections at the package largely eliminates this problem.
Thus, an IC attachment structure AP1 includes an IC package assembly 101 and a circuit hoard 103, in this case a PCB, as shown in
Bottom face 111 supports what is essentially an array of two-dimensional square array 113 of solder balls 115, with straight pins 121-1124 replacing solder balls at bottom-face corners 125. Package 107 provides for electrical connections between each hall 115 and pm 121 to integrated circuit 105. No such electrical connection is provided for pins 122-124. In an alternative embodiment, a package provides electrical connections for all pins to the integrated circuit; in another embodiment, none of the pins are electrically connected to the integrated circuit.
Circuit board 103 is shown with a flexible substrate having layers L11-L14; alternative embodiments can have more or fewer layers. Circuit board. 103 bears bonding pads 127 and conductors 131-134. Each pin 121-124 of package 107 is inserted into a respective hole 135 through circuit board 103 and held there in place by solder 137, including fillets 139. Embodiments of the invention provide for using zero, some, or all pins as electrical connections. In the illustrated embodiment, pin 121 makes electrical contact with a conductor 131 of second layer L12 so that, during use, it can be used for transferring power or signals between IC 105 and circuit board 103. On the other hand, no such conductors contact pins 122-124, which are thus used only to reinforce physical connections between package 107 and circuit board 103 to provide strain relief for the bonds between solder balls 113 and bonding pads 127.
A method ME1 in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is flow charted in
In a variation of method ME1 method segment M2 involves bonding gull-wing type pins to bonding pads outside the perimeter of a package bottom face (whereas, in structure AP1, the pins are attached within the perimeter of bottom face 111). Such a method results in an IC attachment structure AP3 as shown in
Accordingly, as shown in
Circuit board 303 has layers L31-L34; layer L31 includes “inside perimeter” (of bottom face 311) bonding pads solder balls and “outside perimeter” bonding pads 329. Solder balls 315 are bonded to “inside perimeter” bonding pads 327. Gull-wing pins 321 and 322 are bonded to “outside perimeter” surface mount bonding pads 329 to provide strain relief for solder ball connections to bonding pads 327. Gull-wing pin 321 provides for transferring power or signals between integrated circuit 305 and circuit board 303, while gull-wing pin 322 does not. Variants of this embodiment can use zero to all (e.g., four) gull-wing pins for power or signal transfers between an integrated, circuit and a circuit board.
A further embodiment provides for an IC attachment structure in which pins are attached directly to a bracket rather than directly to a package. In this case, integrated circuit attachment structure AP4 includes an IC package assembly 401 and a circuit board 403, as shown in
Solder balls 415 bond to surface mount bonding pads 427 of circuit board 403. Straight pins 421 of bracket 41.0 extend through outside perimeter holes 435 of circuit board 403 and are soldered in place. In this case, pins are used for strain relief rather than for power or data transfer. Also, pins 421 are outside the perimeter of bottom face 411 of package 407.
Part of bracket 410 grips the top surface 409 of package 407, holding package 407 in place and effecting proper alignment of pins 421 with solder balls 415. Most of package top 409 is exposed through bracket 410 to allow for heat radiation or attachment of a heat sink.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US09/32757 | 1/30/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/28/2011 |