This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 120 of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/565,686, filed Dec. 10, 2014, and entitled “Integrated Circuit Device with Plating on Lead Interconnection Point and Method of Forming the Device,” which application is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to the field of integrated circuit devices, and more particularly, to integrated circuit packages with leads extending from the sides of the package and to leadless packages.
Integrated circuit packages, such as a quad flat package (QFP), small outline integrated circuit (SOC) package and plastic single small outline (PSSO) package include a die pad and an integrated circuit (or die) that is supported on the surface of the die pad. An encapsulating material surrounds the integrated circuit. A plurality of pins, often called leads, such as “gull wing” leads, usually extend from the sides of the encapsulating material forming the package. The leads are connected by bond wires to the encapsulated integrated circuit. Often these types of integrated circuit devices are formed as surface mounted devices. The package form may be a flat rectangular body and often is a square body with leads extending along all four sides. There are numerous design variations, which differ usually in the number of leads, their pitch, the package dimensions, and the materials used to construct the package. Materials often are selected to improve or vary the thermal characteristics of the package.
The encapsulating material is formed from a molding compound, such as an epoxy or other plastic material, that may sometimes not adhere well to the leads, in which case the molding compound forming the encapsulating material will separate from one or more of the leads. This separation can be induced by temperature changes and is known as delamination. It occurs usually at the point of internal stress at the end of the lead near the die where the bond wire is attached. For many packages the bond wire is formed of gold and the lead tips have been coated with silver to promote the wire bonding. The molding compound used for the encapsulating material usually bonds well with copper but does not bond well with silver and the delamination occurs between the molding compound and any silver coating and causes a wire bond failure from the delamination. Some packages replace the gold wire with a copper wire for cost saving but this creates a greater chance of lead tip delamination and causes a more severe wire bond failure.
An integrated circuit (IC) device includes an IC die and a plurality of leads with each comprising an unplated proximal end comprising a first material, and an unplated distal end comprising the first material. A plated bond wire portion extends between the proximal and distal ends and includes the first material, and a plating of a second material thereon. A plurality of bond wires are included and extend between the IC die and the plated bond wire portions of the respective leads. An encapsulation material surrounds the IC die and the plurality of bond wires so that the unplated proximal end and plated bond wire portion of each lead are covered by the encapsulation material.
The IC device may include an unplated intermediate portion between the plated bond wire portion and the unplated distal end. In these embodiments, the encapsulation material may also cover the unplated intermediate portion of each lead.
The first material may comprise copper, and the second material may comprise silver, for example. Each of the plurality of bond wires may comprise the first material, for example. The bond wires can comprise copper. The unplated distal end may extend in a range of 100 to 300 microns, and the plated bond wire portion may extend in a range of 350 to 550 microns. Each lead may have a continuous shape devoid of openings, for example.
A method of making an integrated circuit (IC) device includes forming a plurality of leads with each lead including an unplated proximal end comprising a first material, and an unplated distal end comprising the first material. The plated bond wire portion is between the proximal and distal ends, and may include the first material and a plating of a second material thereon. The method may further include coupling a plurality of bond wires to an IC die and the plurality of leads so that each bond wire extends between the IC die and the plated bond wire portion of a respective lead. The encapsulation material may be formed to surround the IC die and bond wires so that the unplated proximal end and plated bond wire portion of each lead are covered by the encapsulation material.
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout, and prime notation is used to indicate similar elements in alternative embodiments.
Another prior art package is shown in
This IC package 100 includes an integrated circuit die 102 over a paddle 104, such as die-attach paddle. The IC die 102 extends over a portion of external interconnects 106, such as leads, and tie bars 108. The tie bars 108 connect to the corners of the paddle 104.
Each of the external interconnects 106 has a recess 110, such as intersecting recess segments. The recess 110 is located towards an edge of the IC package 100. The recess 110 has a first recess segment 112 and a second recess segment 114. The first recess segment 112 is along a length-wise dimension 116 of the external interconnects 106. The second recess segment 114 is perpendicular to the first recess segment 112. The recess 110 has the first recess segment 112 and three instances of the second recess segment 114.
An encapsulation 118, such as an epoxy mold compound, covers the IC die 102, the paddle 104, the tie bars 108, and the external interconnects 106. The encapsulation 118 fills the recess 110 in the external interconnects 106 forming mold locks. The tie bars 108 and the paddle 104 also provide mold locks. The mold locks form structural reinforcement holding the encapsulation 118 in place. The mold locks help resist delamination of the encapsulation especially with the area where some bond wires may be located.
Although the recesses no form a tight encapsulation bond and resist delamination it includes particular manufacturing sequences to form the recesses that can add cost.
Each lead 204 further includes an unplated intermediate portion 218 adjacent the plated bond wire portion 208 and the unplated distal end 212. The encapsulation material 216 covers the unplated intermediate portion 218 of each lead 204. The first material can be formed of copper and the second material forming the plating can be silver as noted before. Each of the bond wires 206 can be formed of the first material such as copper. Other materials may be used and with leadless packages.
During manufacturing a silver strip plating 266 is applied across the leads 262. The lead frame 260 is then cut and wire bonding occurs. A plated bond wire portion with the silver is thus formed.
Each lead 204 is formed of a continuous shape that is devoid of openings so that the leads can be formed with a smaller width as compared to the leads shown in
A method of making an integrated circuit (IC) device includes forming a plurality of leads with each lead including an unplated proximal end comprising a first material, and an unplated distal end comprising the first material. The plated bond wire portion is between the proximal and distal ends and includes the first material and a plating of a second material thereon. The method further includes coupling a plurality of bond wires to an IC die and the plurality of leads so that each bond wire extends between the IC die and the plated bond wire portion of a respective lead. The encapsulation material is formed to surround the IC die and plurality of bond wires so that the unplated proximal end and plated bond wire portion of each lead are covered by the encapsulation material.
Each lead may include an unplated intermediate portion between the plated bond wire portion and the unplated distal end. The encapsulation material may also cover the unplated intermediate portion of each lead. The first material may comprise copper while the second material may comprise silver.
Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 14565686 | Dec 2014 | US |
| Child | 16058045 | US |