The present invention relates to probes for making electrical contact to a device under test (DUT).
Probes for making electrical contact to a device under test (DUT) are typically resilient devices that deform in a controllable manner in use. Probe deformation can perform various functions, such as providing a suitable scrub motion between probe tip and contact pad to facilitate making a reliable electrical contact. The shape of a probe has a significant effect on its deformation properties, and accordingly many kind of probe shapes have been considered in the art. Representative examples of known probe shapes include U.S. Pat. No. 6,707,311, U.S. Pat. No. 6,482,013, U.S. Pat. No. 6,278,284, U.S. Pat. No. 5,832,601, U.S. Pat. No. 6,956,389, U.S. Pat. No. 6,677,245, and US 2003/0027423.
Various probe fabrication methods have been employed to make such probes. One of these methods is referred to as micro-fabrication, and entails building up a probe (or probe array) by deposition of appropriately patterned layers having probe material and sacrificial material, such that eventual removal of the sacrificial material exposes the fabricated probe(s). Micro-fabrication approaches typically impose an overall height limit on the fabricated probe. A typical height limit for micro-fabrication is on the order of 0.8 mm. The existence of some such limit is unsurprising, since deposition of an unlimited number of layers is unlikely to be practical.
Probes provided by micro-fabrication have been considered in the art. Examples include the probes of US 2005/0189958, U.S. Pat. No. 6,917,525, U.S. Pat. No. 6,218,203, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,027,630, where several zigzag and folded probe geometries are considered. Many of these probe designs can be regarded as a scaling of known probe geometries to comply with the vertical height limit of probe micro-fabrication.
However, we have found that such scaling of known probe geometries to comply with the height limit of probe micro-fabrication tends to provide probes having unfavorable performance characteristics. In particular, it is difficult to obtain sufficient lateral scrub motion from conventional probe geometries scaled to comply with a height limit on the order of 0.8 mm.
Accordingly, it would be an advance in the art to provide a probe geometry for providing improved lateral scrub motion while complying with a vertical height limit.
According to the invention, a vertically folded probe can provide improved scrub performance in cases where the probe height is limited. More specifically, such a probe includes a base and a tip, and an arm extending from the base to the tip as a single continuous member. The probe arm is vertically folded, such that it includes three or more vertical arm portions. The vertical arm portions have substantial vertical overlap, and are laterally displaced from each other. When such a probe is vertically brought down onto a device under test, the probe deforms. During probe deformation, at least two of the vertical arm portions come into contact with each other. Such contact between the arm portions can advantageously increase the lateral scrub motion at the probe tip, and can also advantageously reduce the probe inductance.
a-b show two views of a probe according to an embodiment of the invention.
a-c show a probe according to an embodiment of the invention in various deformation conditions.
a-b show two exemplary options for mounting probes according to an embodiment of the invention.
a-b show embodiments of the invention having probes orthogonally and diagonally aligned with respect to an array of contact pads.
a-b show two views of a probe according to an embodiment of the invention. The probe includes a probe base 102, a probe tip 114, and an arm 104 extending from probe base 102 to probe tip 114 as a continuous member. Arm 104 includes three or more vertical arm portions, which in this example are labeled as 106, 108, and 110. The vertical arm portions are substantially parallel to a direction of relative motion between probe and DUT as contact is made. The vertical arm portions are laterally displaced from each other, as shown. Finally, the vertical arm portions have a substantial vertical overlap with each other, also as shown. The net effect of these geometrical constraints is to ensure that arm 104 is folded vertically from base 102 to tip 114, as opposed to being folded horizontally between base 102 and tip 114.
Optionally, probe arm 104 can include a lateral termination 112, on which probe tip 114 is located. Also optionally, probe tip 114 can include a reduced width protrusion 116 to facilitate making electrical contact.
a-c show a probe according to an embodiment of the invention in various deformation conditions.
In the initial stages of the contact motion, gap C becomes narrower as the contact motion proceeds, and eventually vertical arm portions 108 and 110 make contact as shown on
This specific probe deformation can provide significant advantages. A first advantage is that a relatively large lateral scrub motion can be achieved in a probe configuration having a relatively small total vertical height. It is important that the scrub motion be sufficient to effectively remove oxide and other impediments to reliable electrical contact. In one design example, a lateral scrub of 50 μm or more was achieved with a probe configuration having a total height on the order of 0.8 mm (i.e., consistent with a typical micro-fabrication height limit). The total length of the vertically folded probe arm in this example was 1.5 mm.
A second advantage is that the contact formed between vertical arm portions 108 and 110 on
The amount of lateral scrub provided by the probe of
Probes according to the invention can be fabricated from any mechanically resilient and electrically conductive material. Suitable materials for probe base 102, probe arm 104 and probe tip 114 are well known in the art, and any such materials can be employed in practicing the invention. Suitable tip materials are electrically conductive and wear-resistant, and include Rh and Cr. As indicated above, the invention can be especially advantageous in connection with micro-fabrication, but probes according to the invention can be fabricated via any probe fabrication method. Suitable methods include, but are not limited to, standard multi-layer metal deposition techniques such as plating and sputtering; photolithographic techniques; micro-fabrication and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) techniques.
a-b show two exemplary options for mounting probes according to an embodiment of the invention.
A key point of this example is that the mechanical stresses arising from probe deformation do not reach solder bump 318, which tends to be mechanically weak. Instead, these stresses reach the junction between probe base 102 and pad 306 and the junction between pad 306 and carrier 304, and both junctions can have mechanical strength comparable to that of the probe itself. By ensuring that mechanical stress from probe deformation does not reach the solder bumps, mechanical reliability can be improved.
a-b show embodiments of the invention having probes orthogonally and diagonally aligned with respect to an array of contact pads.
In cases where a dense array of contact bumps is to be probed, it is preferred for the probe array to have probes which are disposed diagonally with respect to the contact bump array, e.g., as shown on
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application 60/748,438, filed on Dec. 7, 2005, entitled “Micro-Fabricated Low Profile Probe”, and hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60748438 | Dec 2005 | US |