The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for producing integrated circuit devices and to integrated circuit devices produced thereby and more particularly to an optronic integrally packaged die.
An essential step in the manufacture of all integrated circuit devices is known as “packaging” and involves mechanical and environmental protection of a silicon chip which is at the heart of the integrated circuit as well as electrical interconnection between predetermined locations on the silicon chip and external electrical terminals.
At present three principal technologies are employed for packaging semiconductors: wire bonding, tape automatic bonding (TAB) and flip chip.
Wire bonding employs heat and ultrasonic energy to weld gold bonding wires between bond pads on the chip and contacts on the package.
Tape automatic bonding (TAB) employs a copper foil tape instead of bonding wire. The copper foil tape is configured for each specific die and package combination and includes a pattern of copper traces suited thereto. The individual leads may be connected individually or as a group to the various bond pads on the chip.
Flip chips are integrated circuit dies which have solder bumps formed on top of the bonding pads, thus allowing the die to be “flipped” circuit side down and directly soldered to a substrate. Wire bonds are not required and considerable savings in package spacing may be realized.
The above-described technologies each have certain limitations. Both wire bonding and TAB bonding are prone to bad bond formation and subject the die to relatively high temperatures and mechanical pressures. Both wire bond and TAB technologies are problematic from a package size viewpoint, producing integrated circuit devices having a die-to-package area ratio ranging from about 10% to 60%.
The flip-chip does not provide packaging but rather only interconnection. The interconnection encounters problems of uniformity in the solder bumps as well as in thermal expansion mismatching, which limits the use of available substrates to silicon or materials which have thermal expansion characteristics similar to those of silicon.
Optronic packages for semiconductors are known. Conventional optronic packages used for imaging employ a ceramic housing onto which is sealingly mounted a transparent window. Optronic packages used for low level imaging, light emission and radiation detection, including light detection, employ a clear plastic enclosure.
Described in applicant's published PCT Application WO 95/19645 are methods and apparatus for producing integrated circuit devices, including, inter alia, integrally packaged dies having a radiation transparent protective layer.
The present invention seeks to provide optronic integrated circuit devices which are extremely compact as well as apparatus and techniques for the production thereof.
There is thus provided in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention an integrally packaged optronic integrated circuit device including:
Preferably, the device also includes at least one spectral filter associated with a radiation transparent protective surface thereof.
Additionally in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the device includes a semiconductor substrate which is sufficiently thin as to enable to device to be responsive to back illumination.
Preferably, the device also includes at least one color filter associated with a radiation transparent protective surface thereof.
Further in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, lenses may be integrally formed on a transparent protective surface of the device.
Additionally in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, light coupling bumps may be integrally formed on a transparent protective surface of the device.
Further in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention a waveguide and other optical components integrally formed on a transparent protective surface of the device.
Additionally in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, an optical grating may be integrally formed on a transparent protective surface of the device.
Further in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention a polarizer may be formed on a transparent protective surface of the device.
There is also provided in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention an integrally packaged optronic integrated circuit device including:
There is also provided in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention a method for producing an integrally packaged optronic integrated circuit device comprising the steps of:
The present invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
Reference is now made to
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, contacts 12 extend over edge surfaces onto the planar surfaces 16 of the, package. This contact arrangement permits both flat surface mounting and edge mounting of package 10 onto a circuit board. It is noted that the integrated circuit package 10 may include one or more of the following elements (not shown): an integrally formed dichroic filter, color filter, antireflective coating, polarizer, optical grating, integrated wave guide and optical coupling bumps.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, and as illustrated in
The cover plate 26 may be colored or tinted in order to operate as a spectral filter. Alternatively, a dichroic or colored spectral filter may be formed on at least one surface of the cover plate 26.
It is a particular feature of the present invention that cover plate 26 and epoxy layer 28 are preferably transparent to radiation in a spectral region useful for optronic applications.
It is appreciated that certain steps in the conventional fabrication of silicon wafer 20 may be eliminated when the wafer is used in accordance with the present invention. These steps include the provision of via openings above pads, wafer back grinding and wafer back metal coating.
The complete silicon wafer 20 may be formed with an integral color filter array by conventional lithography techniques at any suitable location therein. Prior to the bonding step of
Following the bonding step described hereinabove, the silicon wafer is preferably ground down to a decreased thickness, typically 100 microns, as shown in
Following the reduction in thickness of the wafer, which is optional, the wafer is etched, using a photolithography process, along its back surface along predetermined dice lines which separate the individual dies. Etched channels 30 are thus produced, which extend entirely through the thickness of the silicon substrate, typically 100 microns. The etched wafer is shown in
The aforementioned etching typically takes place in conventional silicon etching solution, such as a combination of 2.5% hydrofluoric acid, 50% nitric acid, 10% acetic acid and 37.5% water, so as to etch the silicon down to the field oxide layer, as shown in
The result of the silicon etching is a plurality of separated dies 40, each of which includes silicon of thickness about 100 microns.
As seen in
The sandwich of the etched wafer 20 and the first and second insulating packaging layers 26 and 42 is then partially cut along lines 50, lying along the interstices between adjacent dies 40 to define notches along the outlines of a plurality of pre-packaged integrated circuits. It is a particular feature of the invention that lines 50 are selected such that the edges of the dies along the notches are distanced from the outer extent of the silicon 40 by at least a distance d, as shown in
It is a particular feature of the present invention that partial cutting of the sandwich of
Referring now particularly to
Reference is now made to
It is a particular feature of the present invention that metal contacts are formed onto the dies in electrical contact with surfaces 51 of pads 34 without first separating the dies into individual chips.
Reference is now made to
The bonded wafer (
The wafer is then-etched at its non-active surface, preferably by photolithography, such as by using conventional spin-coated photoresist, which is commercially available from Hoechst, under the brand designation AZ 4562.
The photoresist is preferably mask exposed by a suitable UV exposure system 185, such as a Karl Suss Model KSMA6, through a lithography mask 186 to define etched channels 30.
The photoresist is then developed in a development bath (not shown), baked and then etched in a silicon etch solution 190 located in a temperature controlled bath 188. Commercially available equipment for this purpose include a Chemkleen bath and a WHRV circulator both of which are manufactured by Wafab Inc. of the U.S.A. A suitable conventional silicon etching solution is Isoform Silicon etch, which is commercially available from Micro-Image Technology Ltd. of England. The wafer is conventionally rinsed after etching. The resulting etched wafer is shown in
Alternatively, the foregoing wet chemical etching step may be replaced by dry plasma etching.
The etched wafer is bonded on the non-active side to another protective layer 42 by bonding apparatus 192, which may be essentially the same as apparatus 182, to produce a doubly bonded wafer sandwich as shown in
Notching apparatus 194 partially cuts the bonded wafer sandwich of
The notched wafer is then subjected to anticorrosion treatment in a bath 196, containing a chromating solution 198, such as described in any of the following U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,501,956; 2,851,385; and 2,796,370, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Conductive layer deposition apparatus 200, which operates by vacuum deposition techniques, such as a Model 903M sputtering machine manufactured by Material Research corporation of the U.S.A., is employed to produce a conductive layer on one or more surfaces of each die of the wafer as shown in
Configuration of contact strips, as shown in
The photoresist is preferably light configured by a UV exposure system 204, which may be identical to system 185, using a mask 205 to define suitable etching patterns. The photoresist is then developed in a development bath 206, and then etched in a metal etch solution 208 located in an etching bath 210, thus providing a conductor configuration such as that shown in
The exposed conductive strips shown in
The wafer is then diced into individual prepackaged integrated circuit devices. Preferably the dicing blade 214 should be a diamond resinoid blade of thickness 4-12 mils. The resulting dies appear as illustrated generally in
Reference is now made to
Reference is now made to
In contrast to the embodiments of
Whereas in the embodiment of
It is appreciated that silicon is transparent to certain radiation spectra, such as IR radiation. When an IR responsive device is provided, the embodiment of
The modifications shown in
Reference is now made to
It is appreciated that filter 356 may alternatively be located on an inner facing surface of transparent protective layer 357.
Reference is now made to
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
In the illustrated embodiment of
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
In the embodiments of
Reference is now made to
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
Reference is now made to
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
Reference is now made to
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
Reference is now made to
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
Reference is now made to
Reference is now made to
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
Reference is now made to
It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that the present invention is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described hereinabove. Rather the scope of the present invention includes both combinations and subcombinations of the various features described hereinabove as well as modifications and variations thereof as would occur to a person of skill in the art upon reading the foregoing specification and which are not in the prior art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
123207 | Feb 1998 | IL | national |
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/385,555, filed Mar. 11, 2003, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/601,895, filed Sep. 22, 2000, which in turn is a 371 of International Application PCT/IL/99/00071, filed Feb. 3, 1999, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10385555 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 11588490 | US | |
Parent | 09601895 | US | |
Child | 10385555 | US |