This invention relates to solder bonding, and in particular, to a method and solder compositions for kinetically controlled solder bonding of parts. The invention particularly applies to the bonding of multiple components to a single substrate such as those used in optoelectronic and electronic hybrid integrated circuits.
Optoelectronic and electronic hybrid integrated circuits are key components of modern telecommunication systems. These circuits typically comprise various circuit elements which are precisely aligned and bonded to a single substrate with high strength, electrically and thermally conductive bonds. Some circuit elements such as laser chips must be aligned to submicron tolerances.
Soldering is the method often used for achieving these conductive bonds. Soldering involves placing a metal mixture between the circuit element and the substrate, melting the mixture to allow it to intimately contact the circuit element and the substrate, and resolidifying the mixture to cause it to bond the circuit element to the substrate. Resolidification of the mixture is typically achieved by lowering the temperature of the circuit element, substrate and mixture. This causes the mixture to freeze and adhere to the circuit element and the substrate. In order to maintain the requisite spatial alignments, each circuit element is individually placed, precisely aligned, and heated to solder the element to the substrate.
Unfortunately, the heat applied during soldering of a subsequent circuit element may cause an earlier soldered circuit element to become misaligned or dislodged because the solder remelts. Solder remelting may also occur during subsequent circuit processing which involves heating of the substrate.
Solder remelting may be reduced or substantially eliminated by using a kinetically controlled solder bond. The assignee herein in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/955,686 filed on Oct. 22, 1997, by Coult et al. describes a method and compositions for achieving a kinetically controlled solder bond. Coult et al. uses a binary gold-tin (Au—Sn) solder composition for bonding the circuit elements to the substrate, a quenching layer which freezes the solder bonds produced by the binary solder, and a barrier layer that delays the freezing action of the quenching layer for a selected period of time. The quenching layer comprises one of the two metallic elements of the binary solder and the barrier layer comprises a third metallic element, such as platinum (Pt), which remains a minority component of the mixture. Accordingly, an Au5Sn intermetallic solder bond compound is formed between the circuit elements and the substrate. Because the barrier layer forms only a minority component of the of the final solder bond composition, 5 parts of Au must be used for each part of Sn.
The method and solder compositions of Coult et al. are satisfactory for many applications. However, there are applications that require more efficient use of metallic materials and allow debonding of components from the substrate. Accordingly, there is a need for an improved method and solder compositions for kinetically controlled solder bonding parts which utilize materials more efficiently and permit part debonding.
An improved method for kinetically controlled part bonding comprises applying at least a first chemical element layer of an intermetallic compound to a first part and applying at least a second chemical element layer of the intermetallic compound to a second part. The first and second parts are placed together so that the chemical element layers contact each other. The parts are heated from a storage temperature to a bonding temperature which is slightly above a first melting temperature that melts the chemical element layer of one of the first and second parts into a liquid mixture. The composition of liquid mixture varies with time during heating due to the formation of the intermetallic compound therein by progressive incorporation of the other one of the first and second chemical layers into the mixture. The melting temperature of the liquid mixture increases with time as the composition changes until the melting temperature of the liquid mixture is about equal to the bonding temperature thereby soldifying the liquid mixture into a bond. The parts are then held at a holding temperature which is higher than the storage temperature to maintain diffusion of the other one of the first and second chemical layers into the bond. This forms a quantity of the intermetallic compound in the bond which is sufficient to raise the melting temperature of the bond to a desired usage temperature that is substantially above the first melting temperature. The intermetallic compound is typically a ternary intermetallic compound.
The method and solder composition is especially useful for sequentially bonding multiple device elements to a single optoelectronic circuit support substrate.
The advantages, nature and various additional features of the invention will appear more fully upon consideration of the illustrative embodiments described in detail below, considered together with the accompanying drawings. In the drawings:
It should be understood that the drawings are for purposes of illustrating the concepts of the invention and are not to scale.
At this stage of the method, the parts 10, 16 can be maintained at a storage temperature Tstorage until bonding is required. Additionally, the chemical element layers 12a–12d can be reversed on the parts 10, 16 so that the quenching chemical element layer 12d is applied to the first part 10 and the chemical element layers 12a–12c defining the solder 14 are applied to the second part 16. However, if the second part 16 requires pre-bonding processing which involves part heating, the quenching chemical element layer 12d should be applied to the second part 16 to avoid accidental melting of the low melting solder 14.
In the next step of the method as depicted in
In the third step of the method as depicted in
During heating at Tbond, Tsolder of the liquid mixture 18 increases with time due to the formation of the intermetallic compound therein which changes the composition of the liquid mixture 18. This change is caused by the progressive incorporation of the quenching chemical layer 12d. Once the melting temperature of the liquid mixture 18 becomes about equal to Tbond, the liquid mixture 18 solidifies or freezes into a bond 20 (
In the final step of the method as depicted in
Solid state diffusion causes the quenching chemical element layer 12d to diffuse into the bond 20 while the temperature is high, due to the enthalpy of formation of the intermetallic compound in the bond 20. Once a sufficient quantity of intermetallic compound is formed in the bond 20 to raise its melting temperature to Tusage, the temperature is reduced from Thold to Tstorage. The formation of the intermetallic compound in the bond 20 can also occur prior to the reduction in temperature when the reaction between the chemical element layer 12d and the bond 20 ceases, due to the consumption of the chemical element layer 12d or when the composition of the bond 20 is completely converted to the intermetallic compound.
It is preferred that the intermetallic compound formed in the bond 20 be a ternary intermetallic compound. Such a compound can be obtained by admixing a Pt quenching layer 12d with a Au—Sn binary solder compound 14 to form a AuPt2Sn4 ternary intermetallic compound in the bond 20. Similarly, Fe admixed with Au—Sn forms a AuFe2Sn4 ternary intermetallic compound, Co admixed with Au—Sn forms a AuCo2Sn4 ternary intermetallic compound, and Ni admixed with Au—Sn forms a AuNi2Sn4 ternary intermetallic compound.
The kinetically controlled solder bonding method of the present invention substantially reduces or eliminates the problem of solder remelting during subsequent processing of the bonded parts 10, 16. The melting temperature of the bond 20 is still low enough, however, to enable debonding of the parts 10, 16 for failure analysis or circuit repair without damaging them.
The kinetically controlled solder bonding method of the present invention has particular application to hybrid optoelectronic circuits, especially circuits having multiple optoelectronic devices bonded to a common base or circuits which are bonded to a package. For example, the second part 16 can be an optoelectronic circuit element such as a laser chip and the first part 10 can be a support structure for the chip such as a planar lightwave circuit defined on a single silicon substrate.
The method of the present invention advantageously provides more efficient use of materials than previous kinetically controlled solder bonding methods. To illustrate this, the chemical element layers of a Au—Sn—Pt ternary solder composition can be used to form an AuPt2Sn4 intermetallic compound in the bond 20 using the method of the present invention. In previous methods, chemical element layers of a Au—Sn binary solder composition have been used to form bonds having an Au5Sn intermetallic compounds, with the aid of Pt barrier layer. Because the Pt barrier layer forms only a minority component of the of the final solder bond composition, 5 parts of Au must be used for each part of Sn. However, because the Pt layer in the present invention forms a majority component of the AuPt2Sn4 intermetallic compound in the bond 20, only 0.25 parts of Au and 0.5 parts of Pt must be used for each part of Sn. Accordingly, the Au and Pt layers used in the ternary intermetallic compound formed in the present invention can be up to ten times thinner than the Au and Pt layers used in forming the previous binary intermetallics.
Example 1
A multilayered binary solder was applied to two areas of a planar lightwave circuit. Each solder structure included eight (8) alternating layers of Au and Sn with the uppermost layer being Au which produced a binary solder composition of about 65.28% Au and 34.72% Sn that has a melting temperature of about 280° C. Two laser chips were each provided with a Pt solder quenching layer and a Au wetting layer. The Pt solder quenching layer was about 600 nm thick and the Au wetting layer was about 150 nm thick. The first laser chip was bonded to the circuit using a bonding temperature Tbond of about 360° C. and the second laser chip was then bonded to the circuit using a bonding temperature Tbond of about 320° C. Bonding times were about 8 to 30 seconds in duration. The sub-micron alignment of each laser chip was maintained during soldering.
It should be understood that the above described embodiments are illustrative of only a few of the many possible specific embodiments which can represent applications of the principles of the invention. Numerous and varied other arrangements can be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This is a divisional of U.S. aplication Ser. No. 09/197,074 filed Nov. 20, 1998.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3593068 | Rosier | Jul 1971 | A |
3925808 | Rai-Choudhury | Dec 1975 | A |
5282565 | Melton | Feb 1994 | A |
5421507 | Davis et al. | Jun 1995 | A |
5559817 | Derkits, Jr. et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5622305 | Bacon et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
5658827 | Aulicino et al. | Aug 1997 | A |
5667132 | Chirovsky et al. | Sep 1997 | A |
5691210 | Mori et al. | Nov 1997 | A |
5714803 | Queyssac | Feb 1998 | A |
5831336 | DiGiacomo | Nov 1998 | A |
5838069 | Itai et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
5990560 | Coult et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6053395 | Sasaki | Apr 2000 | A |
6214716 | Akram | Apr 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
56056644 | Oct 1979 | JP |
61113246 | May 1986 | JP |
402128486 | May 1990 | JP |
03283542 | Dec 1991 | JP |
408148496 | Jun 1996 | JP |
08181392 | Jul 1996 | JP |
08236529 | Sep 1996 | JP |
08290288 | Nov 1996 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20020045330 A1 | Apr 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09197074 | Nov 1998 | US |
Child | 10021174 | US |