Integrated circuits and methods for their fabrication

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6740582
  • Patent Number
    6,740,582
  • Date Filed
    Friday, April 26, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 25, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
To fabricate back side contact pads that are suitable for use in a vertical integrated circuit, vias are made in the face side of a wafer, and dielectric and contact pad metal are deposited into the vias. Then the wafer back side is etched until the metal is exposed. When the etch exposes the insulator at the via bottoms, the insulator is etched slower than the wafer material (e.g. silicon). Therefore, when the dielectric is etched off and the metal is exposed, the dielectric protrudes down from the wafer back side around the exposed metal contact pads, by about 8 μm in some embodiments. The protruding dielectric portions improve insulation between the wafer and the contact pads when the contact pads are soldered to an underlying circuit. In some embodiments, before the contact pads are soldered, additional dielectric is grown on the wafer back side without covering the contact pads. In some embodiments, the wafer etch and the fabrication of the additional dielectric are performed one after another by a plasma process while the wafer is held in a non-contact wafer holder. In some embodiments, the wafer is diced and the dice are tested before the etch. The etch and the deposition of the additional dielectric are performed on good dice only. In some embodiments, the dice are not used for vertical integration.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to integrated circuits, and more particularly to chip interconnection and to forming contact pads on the back side of a semiconductor chip, and also to thinning of integrated circuits after circuit elements have been fabricated.




Some techniques for forming contacts on the chip “second” side are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,270,261 issued Dec. 14, 1993 to Bertin et al. and entitled “Three Dimensional Multichip Package Methods of Fabrication”. Alternative techniques are desired.




SUMMARY




The invention provides methods for making back-side contact pads in a semiconductor die (or “chip”). The back-side contact pads are suitable for connecting the die to an underlying die to form a multi-die vertical integrated circuit. The invention also provides vertical integrated circuits. In addition, the invention provides methods for thinning of individual dice whether or not the dice will be part of a vertical integrated circuit.




In some embodiments of the present invention, back-side contact pads are formed as follows. A masked etch of the face side of a semiconductor wafer creates a via over each location where a back-side contact pad is to be formed. A dielectric is deposited over the via, and a conductive layer (for example, metal) is deposited over the dielectric. The bottom portion of the conductive layer in each via will form the back-side contact pad.




After the integrated circuit has been formed, the wafer is etched from the back side until the back-side contact pad is exposed. The etch etches the wafer substrate faster than it etches the dielectric separating the substrate from the pad. Therefore, the wafer substrate is receded relative to the dielectric so that the dielectric protrudes down relative to the substrate around each back-side contact pad. Thus the dielectric insulates the back-side contact pads from the substrate.




In some embodiments, the wafer is held by a non-contact wafer holder during the back-side etch. The face side of the wafer does not physically contact the holder. Therefore, there is no need to cover the face side with any protective layer to protect the wafer during the etch. Further, the holder protects the face side circuitry from the etch.




The wafer is diced into dice before or after the back-side etch.




In some embodiments, the back-side contact pads are used for vertical integration.




In some embodiments, the dice are not used for vertical integration. The dice are thinned to reduce their vertical dimension.




Other embodiments and variations are within the scope of the invention.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIGS. 1-7

,


8


A and


8


B are cross section illustrations of a semiconductor wafer in the process of fabrication of a back-side contact pad.





FIGS. 9 and 10

show three dice having back-side contact pads of

FIG. 8A

; the dice are being connected together in a vertical integrated circuit.





FIGS. 11-13

are cross-section illustrations of a semiconductor wafer in the process of creating a back-side contact pad.





FIGS. 14 and 15

each show three dice connected in a vertical integrated circuit.





FIG. 16

illustrates the process and apparatus for thinning a semiconductor wafer by a back-side etch.





FIGS. 17 and 18

illustrate thinning of individual dice.











DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS





FIG. 1

shows a wafer


104


a portion of which will provide a die having an integrated circuit with back-side contact pads. The back-side contact pads are suitable for connecting the die to an underlying die to create a “vertical integrated circuit”. The two dice will be stacked on top of each other, reducing the lateral area taken by the circuit.




Wafer


104


includes silicon substrate


110


. In some embodiments, the wafer has been processed to form transistors, capacitors, resistors, conductive lines, and/or other circuit elements, or portions of circuit elements, in, above and/or below substrate


110


. In other embodiments, no portions of any circuit elements have been formed. The wafer thickness is greater than the thickness of the die to be manufactured. In some embodiments, wafer


104


is 600-750 μm thick (dimension W is 600-750 μm). When the integrated circuit fabrication will be completed, the wafer will be thinned by an etch of the wafer back side


104


B. The final thickness of the die will be 100-350 μm or less in some embodiments. Other thicknesses are achieved in other embodiments. Providing a greater wafer thickness at the beginning of fabrication makes the wafer stronger and thus increases the manufacturing yield.





FIGS. 1-3

show an etch of silicon substrate


110


on the wafer face side to form vias in which the back-side contact pads will be fabricated. As shown in

FIG. 1

, an aluminum layer


120


is deposited on silicon


110


. In some embodiments, the aluminum layer is 0.8-1.2 μm thick, 1 μm thick in some embodiments. Other thicknesses are used in other embodiments. Photoresist (not shown) is deposited and patterned. The aluminum


120


is etched to form an opening


124


exposing the silicon


110


. In some embodiments, aluminum


120


is etched by an acid dip. In other embodiments, aluminum


120


is etched by a Cl-based vacuum plasma etch described in “VLSI Electronic Microstructure Science”, the volume “Plasma Processing for VLSI” (edited by Norman G. Einspruch, Academic Press, Inc. 1984), hereby incorporated herein by reference. Other aluminum etches are used in other embodiments.




The width of opening


124


is shown as A. In some embodiments, opening


124


is round of a diameter A. In other embodiments, the opening is a square having a side A. Other opening shapes are used in other embodiments. The center of the opening is located directly above the center of the corresponding back-side contact. The opening dimensions are not greater than the dimensions of the back-side contact pad to be formed under the opening.




Other openings similar to opening


124


are formed simultaneously at the location of each back-side contact pad. Different openings may have different shapes and dimensions in the same wafer.




The photoresist is stripped, and silicon


110


is etched with aluminum


120


as a mask (FIG.


2


). In some embodiments, the silicon etch is an isotropic vacuum plasma etch described in the aforementioned volume “Plasma Processing for VLSI”. Other known etches are used in other embodiments. The etch forms vias


130


of a depth B at the location of each back-side contact pad. Only one via


130


is shown in

FIGS. 2 and 3

. The via depth B is at least as large as the final thickness of the die to be manufactured. In some embodiments, the bottom side of via


130


has the same shape and dimensions as the corresponding opening


124


in aluminum


120


. The via widens as it goes up. As shown in

FIG. 3

, in some isotropic etch embodiments the dimensions of the top of via


130


are larger by


2


B than the respective dimensions of the bottom of the via. In other embodiments, the top dimension is A+2C, where C≧0, e.g. 0≦C≦B. If the etch is a perfectly anisotropic vertical etch (e.g. the horizontal etch rate is zero; this holds true for some known reactive ion etches), then C=0.




Aluminum


120


is removed by an acid dip or another method known in the art (FIG.


3


).




In some embodiments, the mask used in the etch of vias


130


is made of a photoresist; aluminum is not used for the mask. However, in some embodiments in which the via depth B exceeds 20 μm, the mask is formed from aluminum or another material sufficiently resistant to the silicon etch of vias


130


.




A dielectric layer


140


(

FIG. 4

) is deposited over the wafer. In some embodiments, layer


140


is undoped silicon dioxide and/or BPSG, 1-2 μm thick, e.g. 1 μm thick. Other materials or thicknesses are used in other embodiments. In

FIG. 4

, layer


140


is BPSG formed by chemical vapor deposition at the atmospheric pressure. The distance between the top of silicon


110


and the bottom of vias


130


remains equal to B. Other deposition techniques, including thermal oxidation, are used in other embodiments.




A conductive layer


150


(

FIG. 5

) is deposited over dielectric


140


. In some embodiments, layer


150


is a 0.8-1.2 μm (e.g. 1 μm) layer of aluminum, gold, or nickel; these metals can be deposited by vacuum sputtering. In other embodiments, layer


150


is some other metal or alloy used in VLSI for contact pads, for example, aluminum doped with silicon or copper or both.




The thickness of layer


150


in one Al/Si/Cu embodiment is 0.8-1.2 μm. The bottom portions


150


C of layer


150


in vias


130


will provide the back-side contact pads.




The bottom portions


150


C in vias


130


have about the same dimensions (such as A) as the respective openings


124


(FIG.


1


).




A silicon dioxide glass layer


160


(

FIG. 6

) is deposited from TEOS and is spun on the wafer to fill the vias


130


. Oxide


160


has a planar top surface. In some embodiments, no voids are left in the vias. Excess oxide


160


is etched off the wafer by a blanket etch so that the oxide remains in vias


130


but not outside the vias and the top surface of the wafer is planar.




Other materials and processes are used to fill vias


130


in other embodiments.




Conductive layer


150


is patterned by standard photolithographic techniques to form conductive lines (not shown) connecting the back-side contact pads


150


C in vias


130


to integrated circuit elements (formation of these elements may not yet be completed at this point).




In some embodiments, layer


150


is patterned at the stage of

FIG. 5

before the deposition of oxide


160


rather than after the deposition of oxide


160


. The photoresist mask (not shown) used to pattern metal


150


protects the metal inside vias


130


. After the patterning, the mask is removed, and spin-on glass


160


is deposited from TEOS. Glass


160


is used to planarize the wafer.




Then steps are performed to complete fabrication of the integrated circuit, forming other circuit elements and, in particular, face side contact pads. In the embodiment of

FIG. 7

, these steps include:




1. Chemical vapor deposition of a dielectric layer


170


(silicon dioxide, undoped and/or BPSG, 1 μm thick). Layer


170


is patterned if needed for circuit fabrication.




2. Deposition of the last metal layer


180


(e.g. 0.8-1.2 μm of Al/Si) over dielectric


170


. Metal


180


is patterned to provide face side contact pads. In the embodiment of

FIG. 7

, one such pad


180


C overlies a back-side pad


150


C.




3. Deposition of protective dielectric


190


(such as undoped silicon dioxide and/or BPSG, 1 μm thick) over layer


180


.




4. Masked etch of dielectric


190


to expose the underlying contact pads in metal


180


.




Then the wafer


104


back side is etched by an atmospheric pressure plasma etch described in O. Siniaguine, “Plasma Jet Etching at Atmospheric Pressure for Semiconductor Production”, 1996 1st International Symposium on Plasma Process-Induced Damage, May 13-14, 1996, California, U.S.A., pages 151-153 hereby incorporated herein by reference. A suitable etcher is the plasma etcher of type “PLASM-AZ-05” described in “Plasma Jet Etching. Technology and Equipment. Silicon Wafer Thinning & Isotropical Etching at Atmospheric Pressure” (Az Corporation, Geneva, Switzerland, SEMICON/EUROPA '95), April 1995. See also the following PCT publications incorporated herein by reference: WO 96/21943 published Jul. 18, 1996; WO 92/12610 published Jul. 23, 1992; WO 92/12273 published Jul. 23, 1992. The plasma is a fluorine containing plasma maintained at the atmospheric pressure. The etch parameters are as follows: Ar (1 slm)+CF4 (3 slm) plasma in air ambient at atmospheric pressure. (“Slm” stands for standard liters per minute.) The DC power is 12 kW. The wafer temperature is about 300° C. The silicon etch rate is about 10 μm/min for an 8-inch wafer. Thus, a wafer can be etched from a 720 μm thickness down to 120 μm in 1 hour. Alternatively, 1.6 wafers per hour can be etched from 720 μm down to 360 μm. The etch is illustrated in

FIG. 16

described below.




This etch etches BPSG


140


about 10 times slower than silicon.




The etch does not etch the aluminum, gold or nickel in layer


150


.




The resulting structure is shown in FIG.


8


A. When silicon dioxide


140


becomes exposed during the back-side etch, the etch etches silicon dioxide


140


about 8-10 times slower than silicon


110


. Therefore, when the silicon dioxide is etched off the back-side contact pads


150


C, the bottom portions


140


A,


140


B of the silicon dioxide around the metal


150


protrude down father than silicon


110


. These protruding portions


140


A,


140


B help insulate the silicon substrate


110


from metal


150


. In some embodiments in which the oxide


140


is 1 μm thick, 10 μm of silicon is etched during the time during which 1 μm of oxide


140


is etched off the back-side contact pads


150


C. Thus, the vertical dimension V of protruding oxide portions


140


A,


140


B is 8-10 μm (at least 9 μm in some embodiments), which is sufficient to insulate the back-side contact pads


150


C from the silicon substrate in some embodiments.




In some embodiments, oxide


140


is thicker, and the vertical dimension V of the protruding portions


140


A,


140


B left after exposing the contact pads


150


C is larger.




In some embodiments, the plasma processing continues to grow a dielectric layer


192


(

FIG. 8B

) on the wafer back-side. In particular, when the etch has been completed, the fluorine containing gas (for example, CF


4


) is turned off in the plasma reactor. Oxygen (or water vapor), or nitrogen, or both oxygen and nitrogen (for example, air), are supplied with the plasma. The oxygen and/or nitrogen react to silicon


110


to form silicon oxide (SiO or SiO


2


), silicon nitride SiN


x


(for example, Si


3


N


4


), and/or oxy-nitride SiO


x


N


y


.




In some embodiments, dielectric


192


is 0.01-0.02 μm thick to provide reliable electrical isolation in a packaged vertical integrated circuit powered by supply voltages below 5 V.




In some embodiments of

FIG. 8B

, insulator


192


is grown at a wafer temperature of 300-500° C. The concentration of oxygen and/or nitrogen is 20-80%. In some embodiments using oxygen without nitrogen, the processing time is about 10 minutes to grow silicon oxide of a 0.02 μm thickness. The thickness of layer


192


can be increased by using higher wafer temperature, higher oxygen and/or nitrogen concentration, or longer processing time.




In embodiments having the layer


192


, metal


150


is chosen so as not to form a non-conductive layer on its bottom surface during the layer


192


fabrication. Thus, in some embodiments, metal


150


is gold, platinum, or some other metal that does not react with the species (oxygen or nitrogen) used to form layer


192


. In other embodiments, metal


150


is titanium, or some other metal, that forms a conductive layer (for example, TiN) when the dielectric


192


is grown. In still other embodiments, metal


150


is a stack of metal layers such that the bottom layer of the stack does not form a non-conductive material on its surface. For example, in some embodiments, the bottom layer is gold, platinum or titanium, and an overlying layer is aluminum.




Steps of fabrication of the integrated circuit elements can be intermixed with the back-side contact pad fabrication steps of

FIGS. 1-7

,


8


A,


8


B in any suitable manner.




Then wafer


104


is diced into dice.

FIGS. 9-10

show vertical interconnection of three dice


200


.


1


,


200


.


2


,


200


.


3


which have been obtained from wafers processed as in

FIGS. 1-7

,


8


A, and possibly


8


B (layer


192


is not shown in

FIGS. 9-10

but is present in some embodiments). Different dice


200


may contain different integrated circuits and may be obtained from different wafers


104


. Suffix “.i” (i=1, 2, 3) in reference numerals in

FIGS. 9-10

indicates correspondence to the same numeral of

FIGS. 1-7

,


8


A,


8


B in die


200


.i. For example,


150


C.


3


denotes a back-side contact pad in die


200


.


3


.




After the wafers are diced, a solder ball


210


.i (

FIG. 9

) is placed by a robot over each face-side contact pad in metal


180


.i. Solder


210


has a lower melting temperature than metal


150


or any other metal possibly present in the dice. In some embodiments, solder


210


.i is made of tin, lead or their alloys. In some embodiments, the solder melting temperature is 120-180 degrees Celsius.




Some embodiments use conductive epoxy or conductive polymer instead of solder.




The dice are aligned so that each back-side contact pad


150


C which is to be connected to an underlying die is positioned over the respective solder ball


210


in the underlying die. For example, contact pad


150


C.


3


is positioned over solder ball


210


.


2


. In some embodiments, other dice (not shown) overly die


200


.


3


and underlie die


200


.


1


. The dice are pressed together and heated. The heating temperature is sufficient to melt or soften the solder


210


. The heating temperature is 120 to 180 degrees C. in some embodiments. The pressure is sufficient to create a good electrical contact between face-side pads in metal


180


and the overlying back-side pads


150


C. The force applied to press the wafers together is 100-200 grams in some embodiments.




The dimensions of the solder


210


and the openings in dielectric


190


that expose the face-side contact pads in metal


180


are chosen so that the melted solder does not reach the lateral edges of the back-side contact pads


150


C. For example, the melted solder


210


.


2


does not reach the edge


150


C.E.


3


of contact pad


150


C.


3


. The melted solder in contact with the corresponding back-side contact pad


150


C is held at the center of the back-side contact pad by the surface tension force acting at the interface between the solder and the pad. As a result, solder


210


does not contact the silicon


110


of the overlying wafer. The protruding portions


140


A,


140


B (

FIG. 8A

) increase the distance between the exposed metal


150


and the silicon


110


. Since the solder adheres to the metal but not to the oxide


140


, the protruding portions


140


A,


140


B help to prevent the solder


210


from contacting the silicon


110


. In the embodiments using dielectric


192


(FIG.


8


B), the dielectric


192


provides additional protection against silicon


110


contacting the solder.




Then the structure is cooled. The dice remain connected together in a vertical integrated circuit.




To strengthen the structure, the structure is placed in a vacuum chamber, and a dielectric adhesive


220


is introduced between the dice


200


by methods known in the art. The adhesive fills the spaces between the contacts formed by solder


210


.





FIG. 10

shows the structure with back-side contact pads


150


C seated on solder


210


. In some embodiments, the width W


10


of each of the openings in dielectric


190


that expose the face-side contact pads is 50 to 100 μm. In some embodiments, each opening is round, and the opening width is the opening diameter. In other embodiments, the opening is square, and its width is its side length. The width W


11


of each back-side contact pad


150


C is 30-50 μm. The width is the diameter or the side length, as described above for the openings in dielectric


190


. The distance D


10


between the bottom surfaces of silicon substrates


110


of adjacent dice is below 50 μm. The aspect ratio of each via


130


is below 2:1 in some embodiments, and is about 1:1 in some embodiments. The low aspect ratio increases the yield. The large width of openings in dielectric


190


and of contact pads


150


C, and hence the large area of solder connections, improves heat dissipation when local heating occurs.




The multi-die structure is then encapsulated into a plastic or ceramic package, or some other package, using methods known in the art.




In

FIGS. 11-13

, the material


160


filling the vias


130


is metal rather than silicon dioxide. In

FIG. 11

, the wafer has been processed as shown in

FIGS. 1-5

. A metal ball


160


is placed by a robot into each via


130


using a method known in the art. Alternatively, metal


160


is deposited by electrodeposition. Before the electrodeposition process, the wafer face side is masked by a dielectric mask (not shown). The mask is made of photoresist in some embodiments. An opening is made in the mask in the area of each via


130


. Then electrodeposition is performed to deposit metal


160


into the vias through the openings. The mask is then removed. Other methods to deposit metal


160


are used in other embodiments.




Metal


160


has a higher melting temperature than solder


210


(

FIG. 9

) that will be used to make contacts between the dice. However, metal


160


has a lower melting temperature than layer


150


. Suitable metals include tin (melting temperature 232° C.), zinc (melting temperature 420° C.), and their alloys. In some embodiments that use aluminum for interconnects, the metal


160


melting temperature does not exceed 600° C. (the aluminum melting temperature is 660° C.).




In some embodiments, the volume of metal


160


in each via


130


is less than the volume of the via so that when the metal


160


melts, it will not overflow its via.




The wafer is heated to melt the metal


160


(

FIG. 12

) without melting the layer


150


. In

FIG. 12

, the top surface of the metal filling


160


is coplanar with, or below, the top surface of metal


150


outside the via. In some embodiments, metal


160


overflows the vias and spreads over the top surface of the wafer outside the vias.




Then any other circuit elements can be formed over the via surface as shown in FIG.


13


. In particular, in some embodiments, metal layer


150


is patterned to form conductive lines as described above for the embodiment of FIG.


6


. When the metal


150


is etched, any overlaying metal


160


that may have overflowed the vias


130


is etched at the same time.




Dielectric


170


(e.g. BPSG), last metal


180


(e.g. Al/Si) providing the face-side contact pads, and dielectric


190


(e.g. BPSG; see

FIG. 13

) are deposited and photolithographically patterned similarly to the embodiment of FIG.


7


. In some embodiments, metal


180


is aluminum deposit by vacuum sputtering or thermal evaporation. The wafer temperature during deposition does not exceed 250-300° C. The wafer temperature does not exceed the melting temperature of metal


160


.




The wafer is thinned as described above in connection with FIG.


8


A. In some embodiments, dielectric


192


is deposited as described above in connection with FIG.


8


B. In other embodiments, dielectric


192


is omitted. Then fabrication proceeds as shown above in

FIGS. 9 and 10

. All the processing steps of

FIGS. 8A

,


8


B,


9


,


10


, including melting or softening the solder


210


, are performed at temperatures below the melting temperature of metal


160


.




Metal


160


increases the mechanical strength of the integrated circuit. Metal


160


also improves heat dissipation when local heating occurs.




In

FIG. 14

, fillings


160


are omitted. After fabrication of the structure of

FIG. 5

, dielectric


190


(BPSG in some embodiments) is deposited directly on conductive layer


150


. Dielectric


190


is removed in vias


130


by a masked etch. The etch also removes dielectric


190


from other selected areas of metal


150


, such as area


150


F, to form face-side contact pads away from vias


130


.




The wafers are diced into dice. Solder balls


210


of a diameter larger than the depth of vias


130


are placed in the vias. Solder is also placed over those face-side contact pads


150


F which are to be connected to back-side contact pads


150


C of overlying dice. Solder


210


in vias


130


is sufficiently thick so that when the solder is melted or softened, the top surface of the solder is at about the same height as the top surface of solder portions (not shown) over contacts


150


F. The dice


200


are aligned, pressed together, and heated, as described above in connection with

FIGS. 9-10

. The solder melts or softens and creates contacts between adjacent dice.




In some embodiments, layer


190


of each die except the top die contacts silicon substrate


110


or dielectric


192


(if present) of the adjacent overlying die. Adhesive is omitted in some embodiments since friction between layers


190


and silicon


110


or dielectric


192


creates sufficient resistance to shearing forces.




The width W


14


of each via


130


at the top is 90-150 um in some embodiments. The width W


11


of each back-side contact pad


150


C is 30-50 μm. The distance D


14


between similar points on the adjacent dice, for example, between bottom surfaces of substrates


110


of the adjacent dice, is 30-50 μm.




In

FIG. 15

, face-side contact pads do not overlie vias


130


. Face-side contact pads


150


F are made outside vias


130


. Pads


150


F are made from Al/Si layer


150


as described above in

FIG. 14

, or from another metal layer. Fillings


160


are omitted in some embodiments, but are present in other embodiments. Solder balls


210


are placed in openings in BPSG


190


over contact pads


150


F. The dice are aligned to position the back-side contact pads


150


C over corresponding face-side contact pads


150


F. The dice are heated and pressed together as described above in connection with

FIGS. 9

,


10


and


14


. Solder


210


forms contacts between the contact pads. Adhesive (not shown) is introduced in spaces between the dice as described above in connection with

FIGS. 9 and 10

. Dielectric


192


(

FIG. 8B

) is present in some embodiments of

FIG. 15

but not in other embodiments.




In some embodiments, the die thickness T


15


measured from the top surface of dielectric


190


to the bottom surface of back-side contact pads


150


C is 25 μm. Other thicknesses are used in other embodiments.





FIG. 16

illustrates the back-side plasma processing that includes the etch exposing the contact pads


150


C and (optionally) the deposition of dielectric


192


. The processing is performed at atmospheric pressure in an etcher described above in connection with FIG.


8


A. During the etch and deposition, the wafer


104


is held in a non-contact wafer holder


1610


. The wafer face side is oriented towards the holder


1610


. Holder


1610


holds the wafer from the top without physically contacting the wafer. See also the USSR inventor certificate 732198 of inventors A. F. Andreev and R. A. Luus, published May 8, 1980, and incorporated herein by reference. Circular gas flow (vortex)


1614


between wafer holder


1610


and wafer


104


holds the wafer up close to the holder, but does not allow the wafer to contact the holder. Hence, a protective layer is not needed to protect circuitry


1618


on the wafer face side from physical contact with the holder or from being etched or otherwise damaged by plasma jet


1624


. Plasma jet generator


1620


moves horizontally so that the plasma jet


1624


generated by the generator scans the wafer back side


104


B.





FIGS. 17-18

show an alternate atmospheric-pressure process suitable for thinning the wafer.

FIG. 17

consists of

FIGS. 17A-17D

.

FIG. 17A

illustrates the wafer


104


right before the thinning process. Circuitry


1618


has been fabricated on the wafer face side. In some embodiments, the wafer thickness is 600-720 μm. Silicon is removed from the wafer back side by known methods (e.g. mechanical grinding) to reduce the wafer thickness to 150-350 μm. The resulting wafer is shown in FIG.


17


B. The wafer is diced into chips


200


(FIG.


17


C). The thickness of each chip is 150-350 μm. The chips are tested and sorted as known in the art. The chips are thinned further by fluorine-containing plasma at atmospheric pressure, and (optionally) dielectric


192


is deposited on the back side immediately after the etch as shown in FIG.


18


. The etcher and the process of

FIG. 18

are similar to those of

FIG. 16

, but in

FIG. 18

the non-contact chip holder


1610


holds several individual chips (3 chips in

FIG. 18

) rather than a wafer. Each chip


200


is placed in an individual segment of holder


1610


and is held in place by gas flow


1614


similarly to FIG.


16


. The plasma jet


1624


scans all the chips from the back side until the dielectric


140


at the via bottoms is removed and (optionally) dielectric


192


is deposited. No protective layer for circuitry


1618


is needed.




The atmospheric-pressure back-side etch of the chips reduces the chip thickness to below 50 μm (FIG.


17


D).




Chips


200


can be stack packaged as described above in connection with

FIGS. 10

,


14


,


15


.




The two-stage process of

FIG. 17

(e.g. mechanical grounding followed by plasma processing) reduces manufacturing costs in some embodiments. Indeed, depending on the manufacturing yield, the area of the wafer occupied by “bad” dice together with unused regions may be considerable, for example, 50% of the wafer. If the wafer is diced before the thinning is completed as in the process of

FIG. 17

, and only “good” dice are thinned to completion and (optionally) provided with dielectric


192


, time and resources are saved in thinning and deposition as compared to thinning the whole wafer and depositing dielectric


192


over the whole wafer. Further, a wafer of a 6-8 inch diameter, thinned down to 50 μm, is more fragile than a die having the same thickness but smaller lateral dimensions (below 1 inch in some embodiments). This is another reason why the manufacturing costs in some embodiments of

FIG. 17

are lower.




In some embodiments, the processes of

FIGS. 16

,


17


and


18


are used to thin wafers or dice that are not used in vertical integrated circuits. In such embodiments, the back side etches may or may not expose any conductive contacts. The processes of

FIGS. 16-18

follow fabrication of one or more circuit elements in or over the face side of each die or wafer. Therefore, the circuit element fabrication is performed when the wafer is thicker than its final thickness and, therefore, is mechanically stronger.




The embodiments described above illustrate but do not limit the invention. In particular, the invention is not limited by the number of dice in a vertical integrated circuit (the number of dice can be any number greater than one), or by any particular thicknesses, opening widths, or other dimensions. The invention is not limited by any particular materials. Non-silicon wafers are used in some embodiments.



Claims
  • 1. A method for fabricating an integrated circuit, the method comprising:(a) providing a body having one or more openings in a first side; (b) fabricating a first dielectric and a conductor in each of the one or more openings with the conductor in each of the openings being separated from the body by the first dielectric; (c) removing material of the body from a second side of the body to expose the first dielectric on the second side, wherein when the first dielectric becomes exposed on the second side, the first dielectric covers the conductor on the second side so that the conductor is not exposed on the second side; (d) after the first dielectric has been exposed on the second side, removing the material of the body and the first dielectric from the second side to expose the conductor in each of the openings, wherein the removing of the material of the body and the first dielectric comprises a process in which the removal rate of the first dielectric is lower than the removal rate of material of the body; wherein the body comprises a transistor and/or a capacitor.
  • 2. The method of claim 1 wherein in said process the removal rate of the first dielectric is about 10 times lower than the removal rate of the material of the body.
  • 3. The method of claim 1 wherein removing material from the second side comprises plasma etching of the second side of the body at about an atmospheric pressure as the body is held in a non-contact holder.
  • 4. The method of claim 1 wherein the body comprises semiconductor material.
  • 5. The method of claim 1 further comprising, after the removal of the material from the second side, connecting at least one integrated circuit of the body to one or more other integrated circuits to form a vertical integrated circuit, with at least one of the exposed conductors contacting a contact pad of another integrated circuit.
  • 6. The method of claim 1 wherein said process removes at least a substantial portion of the total amount of the first dielectric removed in the operation (d).
  • 7. The method of claim 1 wherein all of the first dielectric removed in the operation (d) is removed simultaneously with removal of material of the body but at a lower rate than the material of the body.
  • 8. The method of claim 1 wherein all of the first dielectric removed in the operation (d) is removed simultaneously with removal of semiconductor material of the body but at a lower removal rate than the semiconductor material of the body.
  • 9. The method of claim 8 wherein the semiconductor material is silicon.
  • 10. The method of claim 1 wherein the first dielectric in each of said openings, when viewed from the second side, is laterally surrounded by semiconductor material of the body, andwhen the first dielectric is being removed in each of said openings to expose the conductor from the second side, the laterally surrounding semiconductor material of the body is being removed simultaneously and at a faster rate than the first dielectric.
  • 11. The method of claim 1 wherein removing the first dielectric at a lower rate than the material of the body improves electrical insulation between the conductor in each of said openings and the body.
  • 12. The method of claim 1 further comprising attaching at least one conductor exposed on the second side to another conductor with solder, wherein the first dielectric protrudes from the second side around the exposed conductor and improves electrical insulation between the solder and the body.
  • 13. The method of claim 1 wherein the operation (d) is an unmasked etch removing all of the material exposed on the second side at least until the conductor is exposed in each of the openings.
  • 14. The method of claim 1 wherein after the conductor in each of the openings is exposed, said process continues to remove the material of the body and, at the same time, to remove the first dielectric at a lower rate than the material of the body.
  • 15. The method of claim 1 wherein at the conclusion of the operation (d) the conductor protrudes from the second side at each of the openings.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/466,535 filed Dec. 17, 1999, incorporated herein by reference, which is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/083,927 filed May 22, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,184,060, incorporated herein by reference, which is a continuation of international application PCT/US97/18979, with an international filing date of Oct. 27, 1997, which is incorporated herein by reference, which claims priority of U.S. provisional application No. 60/030,425 filed Oct. 29, 1996, which is incorporated herein by reference.

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Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/030425 Oct 1996 US
Continuations (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/466535 Dec 1999 US
Child 10/133595 US
Parent PCT/US97/18979 Oct 1997 US
Child 09/083927 US