An integrated circuit (IC) die includes a semiconductor substrate and various electronic devices integrated therewith. The electronic devices may generate heat during operation of the IC die. This heat may adversely affect the performance of the IC die, and in some cases may damage one or more of its integrated electronic devices.
Conventional systems use fans and/or temperature monitors to regulate the heat to which an IC die is subjected. Heat spreaders, heat sinks, and or heat pipes may also be used to direct heat away from an IC die.
As shown, thermal conductor 10 comprises an integrated heat spreader. Thermal conductor 10 may comprise any other structure for dissipating heat according to some embodiments, including but not limited to a heat pipe and a heat sink. Thermal conductor 10 may comprise any currently- or hereafter-known thermally conductive material. Non-exhaustive examples include copper and aluminum, which may or may not be plated with a different thermally-conductive material, including but not limited to nickel and gold. In some embodiments, thermal conductor 10 comprises nickel-plated copper that is in turn plated with gold, silver, tin, palladium, and/or another material.
Solder material 20 and solder material 30 may comprise any material usable to unite metal surfaces. In some embodiments, solder material 20 and solder material 30 are composed of elemental indium, an indium-based material, or a tin-based material. A thermal conductivity of the soft solder may approximately equal 30 W/mK, but embodiments are not limited to this value. Solder material 20 and solder material 30 may each have a uniform thickness between 003 in. and 0.020 in., but again embodiments are not limited thereto. The composition and/or thickness of solder material 20 may differ from the composition and/or thickness of solder material 30.
Solder material 20 is coupled to a first side of thermal conductor 10 and solder material 30 is coupled to a second side of thermal conductor 10. According to some embodiments, one or both of the interfaces between solder material 20 and conductor 10 and solder material 30 and conductor 10 are voidless. In comparison to other interfaces, a voidless interface may provide increased strength at the interface, increased heat transfer across the interface and/or increased resistance to the development and propagation of cracks at the interface.
A surface area of solder material 30 is greater than a surface area of solder material 20. Such an arrangement may facilitate the dispersal of heat from a surface to which solder material 20 is coupled to a larger surface to which solder material 30 is coupled.
Electrical contacts 55 are coupled to IC die 50 and may comprise Controlled Collapse Chip Connect (C4) solder bumps. Electrical contacts 55 may be electrically coupled to the electrical devices that are integrated into IC die 50. The electrical devices may reside between a substrate of IC die 50 and electrical contacts 55 in a “flip-chip” arrangement. In some embodiments, such a substrate resides between the electrical devices and electrical contacts 55.
Electrical contacts 55 are also coupled to electrical contacts (not shown) of substrate 60. In some embodiments, die 50 is electrically coupled to substrate 60 via wirebonds in addition to or as an alternative to electrical contacts 55. Substrate 60 may comprise an IC package, a circuit board, or other substrate. Substrate 60 may therefore comprise any ceramic, organic, and/or other suitable material. Substrate 60 comprises solder balls 65 for carrying power and I/O signals between elements of apparatus 40 and external devices. For example, solder balls 65 may be mounted directly to a motherboard (not shown) or onto an interposer that is in turn mounted directly to a motherboard. Alternative interconnects such as through-hole pins may be used instead of solder balls 65 to mount apparatus 40 to a motherboard, a socket, or another substrate.
Solder material 30 is coupled to heat sink 70. As such, apparatus 1 may increase a thermal coupling between die 50 and heat sink 70. Heat sink 70 may comprise any currently- or hereafter-known passive or active heat sink. A thermally-conductive flux, paste or other material may be disposed between solder material 30 and heat sink 70, and/or between solder material 20 and die 50.
Initially, at 81, strips of solder material are clad to a first side and to a second side of a strip of thermal conductor.
Cladding may proceed by inserting strip 95, strip 105, and strip 115 into the junction of bonding rolls 120 and 130. Bonding rolls 120 and 130 are rotated in the direction of their associated arrows to highly compress the strips at the junction. The compression may drastically reduce the cross-sectional area of each strip, thereby creating a new metal surface on each strip that is bonded to a new metal of a facing strip without first exposing the new surfaces to the ambient atmosphere. Accordingly, upon exiting bonding rolls 120 and 130, voidless interfaces may exist between strip 115 and 95, and between strip 105 and 95.
Returning to process 80, portions of solder material are removed from a first side of composite strip 140 at 82. A skiving tool is used in some embodiments to dig a transverse trough across portions of a first side of composite strip 140. Portions of strip 95 might or might not be removed during 82. In some embodiments, some solder material might exist in the portions of the first side of composite strip 140 after 82.
Next, at 84, a discontinuous portion of solder material and an associated portion of thermal conductor are detached from the composite strip. A dashed line in
An integrated heat spreader may be formed from the detached portions at 85. The integrated heat spreader may be formed by stamping thermal conductor 10 or by bending opposite ends of thermal conductor 10 to achieve the shape shown in
The integrated heat spreader may be assembled into an apparatus such as apparatus 40. According to some embodiments, solder material 20 and solder material 30 are reflowed at appropriate times during the assembly to bond to IC die 50 and heat sink 70, respectively. A temperature and/or pressure required to reflow solder material 20 may differ from a temperature and/or pressure required to reflow solder material 30, thereby enabling reflow of each material at different stages of assembly.
According to some embodiments, solder material is present only on one side of the composite strip. Therefore, only one of drums 100 and 110 are used at 81 and flow may proceed from 82 directly to 84. Embodiments of process 80 may result in a voidless interface between solder material and a thermal conductor.
A thermal conductor is placed on a carrier at 151.
Thermal conductor 170 may comprise any material described above with respect to thermal conductor 10, and/or any other suitable material. In some embodiments, thermal conductor 170 comprises copper. As shown in
A piece of solder material is placed on the thermal conductor at 152 so as to substantially create a point or line contact between the piece of solder material and the thermal conductor. Such a point or line contact may be of any size that results in a voidless interface between the solder material and the thermal conductor as described below.
At 153, pressure and/or heat is applied to the piece of solder to create a voidless interface between the piece of solder and the thermal conductor.
Thermal conductor 170 of
Motherboard 310 may electrically couple memory 320 to IC die 50. More particularly, motherboard 310 may comprise a memory bus (not shown) that is electrically coupled to solder balls 65 and to memory 320. Memory 320 may comprise any type of memory for storing data, such as a Single Data Rate Random Access Memory, a Double Data Rate Random Access Memory, or a Programmable Read Only Memory.
The several embodiments described herein are solely for the purpose of illustration. Some embodiments may include any currently or hereafter-known versions of the elements described herein. Therefore, persons skilled in the art will recognize from this description that other embodiments may be practiced with various modifications and alterations.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10729623 | Dec 2003 | US |
Child | 11580377 | Oct 2006 | US |