The present invention relates to a semiconductor manufacturing process or electronics surface mount assembly process, and more particularly, to a method and system for fabricating semiconductor chips in a three dimensional array on a printed circuit board.
Semiconductor chips are typically connected to a printed circuit board that, in turn, interconnects the chips to the rest of circuitry with which the chips will operate, including other chips on the printed circuit board. In the past, the chips were spread out across the printed circuit board on their large flat sides in a simple two dimensional array. Over the years, the trend in the computer industry has been towards more densely packed printed circuit boards. Among the causes for this are the increasing demand for larger random access computer memories, faster computers, more compact computers, and a push to decrease costs of printed circuit boards by increasing the circuit density on the printed circuit board. In the mid-to-late 1980s, the industry switched over from a technology that attached computer chips to a printed circuit board through holes in the printed circuit board to one that used surface mounting technology. With the advent of surface mount technology, conventional through-holes on printed circuit boards have been replaced with conductive mounting pads on the surface of the printed circuit board. This allows for multiple layered circuit boards with a complex network of interconnect lines running between the layers of the board. In turn, this has allowed for the increase in the density of chips on a printed circuit board that not only decreases the size of the board, but also increases the operating speed of the computer by reducing the distance signals have to travel between chips on the board.
The move to surface mount technology has consequently resulted in the practice of positioning chips on a printed circuit board in a variety of configurations to increase chip density on the circuit board, and thereby decrease the distance between the chips to speed up operation of the overall system. Generally, conventional configurations stack the chips on one another to increase density. The practice of stacking the chips on one another is particularly adaptable to memory chips given the redundancies in their circuits. Up until the present, in order for the chips to be stacked on one another to increase chip density and achieve a three dimensional array on a circuit board, computer makers had to send chips to a third-party manufacturer that specialized in the technique of permanently bonding chips in a stacked fashion. Stacking the chips generally consisted of soldering them together. This, in turn, created a variety of problems including time delays inherent in having to rely on an outside manufacturing facility, and potential damage to the chip as a result of directly soldering the chips together.
Recent developments, in particular, those of the applicant of the present invention have resulted in new and much more efficient means for stacking chips on a printed circuit board in a three dimensional array. These developments are described in detail in U.S. Patents owned by the applicant herein, namely: U.S. Pat. No. 6,313,998 for a “Circuit Board Assembly Having a Three-Dimensional Array of Integrated Circuit Packages,” filed Apr. 2, 1999, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,487,078 for an “Electronic Module Having a Three-Dimensional Array of Carrier-Mounted Integrated Circuit Packages,” filed Mar. 13, 2000. Both of these U.S. Patents are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety and made part hereof as if set forth herein at length. The two referenced U.S. Patents describe a unique electronic module that, in effect, provides a platform that is placed over a chip on a circuit board and connects to contact pads on the circuit board that the platform shares with the chip underneath it. The second chip is then connected to the top of the platform to achieve a stacked three-dimensional array, as more fully described in the above referenced U.S. Patents. One variation of a chip carrier described and claimed in the above referenced U.S. Patents and is depicted in
To maximize the advantages of the electronic chip carrying modules, the present invention provides, for example, a manufacturing process and apparatus that may automate and optimize their installation. Additionally, it should, for example, preferably be a manufacturing process and apparatus that may be used in-house by a surface mount assembly, computer or circuit board manufacturer without the need to use the services of a third-party manufacturer.
It is the object of an embodiment of the present invention to provide, for example, an efficient and cost effective manufacturing process and apparatus that allows placing chips in a three dimensional array on a printed circuit board. It is a further object of an embodiment of the present invention to provide, for example, an apparatus and method that can be utilized with current methods and semiconductor or surface mount assembly manufacturing machines used in the assembly of printed circuit boards.
These and other objects of certain embodiments of the present invention are achieved by, for example, providing a method for populating a circuit board with a three dimensional array of semiconductor chips with the following steps: a) verifying that electrical contacts on a plurality of chip carriers are properly aligned for an assembly process; b) preparing a chip receiving side of the chip carriers to receive a chip and passive components; c) preparing a circuit board for a chip assembly process; d) populating the circuit board with a first layer of chips and passive components, wherein the chips and passive components are positioned to make contact with pre-selected and predetermined electrical contact points; e) positioning the chip carriers over the first layer of chips so that the chip carriers make contact with pre-selected electrical contact points on the circuit board; f) placing on each of the chip carriers a semiconductor chip with passive components; and g) interconnecting in a permanent fashion the chips, passive components, and chip carriers to the circuit board.
Another aspect of an embodiment of the invention provides, for example, a system for populating a circuit board with a three dimensional array of semiconductor chips comprising: a) a plurality of chip carriers attachable to a circuit board with space for a chip to be positioned directly on the circuit board beneath each chip carrier, as well as for positioning a chip on top of the chip carrier to thereby create a three dimensional array of chips on the circuit board; b) a pallet for holding and moving a plurality of chip carriers during a circuit board assembly process, the pallet having a matrix of chambers in a frame like form with the chambers being open at least at a top side of the pallet, each chamber being formed to hold a chip carrier during the circuit board assembly process, the chip carriers being positioned in each of the chambers of the pallet with a top, chip receiving side of the chip carrier facing out from the top of the pallet to thereby make the top side of the chip carrier accessible during the circuit board assembly process; and c) a mechanism to move and position the pallet during the assembly process so that the plurality of chip carriers held by the pallet can be prepared to receive a chip during the assembly process, easily accessed, removed from the pallet, and positioned on the circuit board over chips positioned directly on the circuit board with chips positioned on each chip carrier to thereby create a three dimensional array of chips on the circuit board.
Another aspect of an embodiment of the invention provides, for example, an apparatus for positioning and securely, but detachably holding a chip module during a semiconductor or surface mount assembly process This process may include, for example: a) a pallet for holding chip modules, the pallet having a two dimensional matrix of chambers, the chambers being open at first and second opposing parallel sides of the pallet, the chambers having, at a base adjacent to the opening on the second side of the pallet, a flange around the inside of the chamber to allow the chamber to retain a chip module of approximately the same dimensions as the chamber when the first side of the pallet faces up; b) a print fixture pedestal with a two dimensional matrix of raised portions that match the matrix of the chambers of the pallet such that the raised portions are sized such that the raised portions fit on a one-for-one basis into the chambers of the pallet from the second side of the pallet; and c) wherein when the chambers are filled with chip modules and the print fixture pedestal is joined with the pallet at the pallet's second side, the raised portions elevate chip modules located in the chambers to a work position from which they can be worked on from the first side of the pallet.
Another embodiment of the invention provides, for example, an apparatus for positioning and securely, but detachably holding a chip module during a surface mount assembly process. This embodiment includes, for example: a) a pallet for holding chip modules, the pallet having a two dimensional matrix of chambers, the chambers being open at first and second opposing parallel sides of the pallet, the chambers on the first side of the pallet embedded in a ridge with pins left and right of the chamber, to retain a chip module on the first side of the pallet; b) a print fixture pedestal with a single planar surface to match a single recessed flange surrounding the matrix of the chambers on the lower side of the pallet, such that the planar pedestal may be sized to fit into the second side of the pallet; and c) wherein when the upper chambers hold chip modules and the print fixture pedestal is joined with the pallet at the pallet's second side, the raised portion may apply indirectly a vacuum to the chip modules located on the chambers, holding them to the pallet so they can be worked on from the first side of the pallet.
Another embodiment of the invention provides, for example, a method for partially pre-processing the “chip carrier” (e.g., canopy™) and packing it in tape and reel, the partially pre-processing comprising: a) application of solder or equivalent material to chip carrier land patterns for only those devices, such as resistors or capacitors, having no solder or insufficient solder on their terminations for formation of acceptable electrical interconnections during a heating process such as, for example, a reflow process; b) placing devices selected for pre-processing on the chip carrier and forming interconnections, for example, solder joints; c) application of tacky flux to the remaining unpopulated carrier land patterns, such as, for example, ball-grid array (BGA) chips, chip-scale packages, flip-chips, various packaged or unpackaged integrated circuits, canopies,™ or other chip carrier; and d) packing the partially pre-processed chip carrier in tape and reel.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides, for example, a method for partially pre-processing the “chip carrier” (e.g., canopy™) and placing it in tape and reel, the processing comprising: a) application of solder or other material to a chip carrier receiving side land patterns; b) placement of devices, such as resistors or capacitors, to be added during the partial pre-processing and forming interconnections; c) optional flattening of the unpopulated solder deposits; d) application of tacky flux to the flattened unpopulated chip carrier land patterns, such as BGA chips, chip-scale packages, flip-chips, other packaged or unpackaged integrated circuits, canopies,™ or other chip carrier; and d) packing the partially pre-processed chip carrier in tape and reel.
Another embodiment of the invention provides, for example, a method for partially pre-processing a chip carrier (e.g., canopy™) and packing it in a protective pallet, the processing comprising: a) application of solder or other material to chip carrier land patterns for only those devices, such as resistors or capacitors, to be added during the partial pre-processing. These devices may be used in this process because they have no solder or insufficient solder on their terminations for formation of acceptable electrical interconnections during a heating process such as, for example, a reflow process; b) placing devices selected in step (a) or for pre-processing on the chip carrier and forming interconnections, for example, solder joints; c) application of tacky flux to the remaining unpopulated carrier land patterns, such as for example, BGA chips, chip-scale packages, flip-chips, various packaged or unpackaged integrated circuits, canopies,™ or other chip carrier; and d) packing the partially processed chip carrier in the protective pallet.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides, for example, a method for pre-processing a chip carrier or interposer (e.g., canopy™) and placing it in a protective pallet, the processing comprising: a) application of solder or other material to a chip carrier receiving side land patterns; b) placement of devices, such as resistors or capacitors, to be added during the partial pre-processing and forming interconnections; c) optional flattening of the unpopulated solder deposits; d) application of tacky flux to the flattened unpopulated chip carrier land patterns, such as BGA chips, chip-scale packages, flip-chips, other packaged or unpackaged integrated circuits, canopies,™ or other chip carrier; and e) packing the partially processed carrier in the protective pallet.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides, for example, a method for populating a circuit board with a three dimensional array of semiconductor chips comprising the steps of: a) placing tape and reel or protective pallet containing, for example, partially pre-processed chip carriers on a surface mount technology placement machine; b) picking up the partially pre-processed chip carrier with a nozzle; c) placing the partially pre-processed chip carrier over an integrated circuit chip and passive devices that have been placed directly on a circuit board; d) placing another integrated circuit chip on the first partially pre-processed chip carrier and soldering.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides, for example, a method for populating a circuit board with a three dimensional array of semiconductor chips comprising the steps of: a) placing tape and reel or protective pallet containing partially pre-processed chip carriers on a surface mount technology placement machine; b) picking up the pre-partially processed chip carrier with a nozzle; c) placing the partially pre-processed chip carrier over an integrated circuit chip and passive devices that have been placed directly on a circuit board; d) placing integrated circuit chip(s) on the receiving side of the chip carrier; e) placing another partially pre-processed chip carrier on the previous pre-processed chip carrier; f) placing integrated circuit chip(s) on the uppermost partially processed chip carrier; g) repeating steps d) and e) as desired and soldering.
The invention will be better understood by an examination of the following description, together with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The method of a preferred embodiment of the present invention uses, for example, a three-step fabrication process that automates the surface mounting on a printed circuit board of the chip carriers similar to those depicted as 21A and 21B in
A preferred embodiment of the present invention may use, for example, two new devices to aid in the movement and stenciling of a large number of chip carriers at one time. During the fabrication process the chip carriers 21, for example, are held by a chip carrier pallet 23 as depicted in
Each chamber 25 in this preferred embodiment has four abutments 27 around the top outside edge as depicted in
The second new device is the print fixture pedestal 31 shown in a raised perspective view in
Print fixture pedestal 31 is designed to fit like a glove into the bottom of pallet 23, and raise and secure the chip carriers 21 in the chambers 25 of pallet 23. When print fixture pedestal 31 is joined with pallet 23 (
A preferred embodiment of the present invention may use, for example, an automated stencil printer for the stenciling process. As depicted in
Once the stenciling process has been completed, pallet 23 can be disengaged from print fixture pedestal 31, and the pallet 23 with stenciled chip carriers 21 can be moved onto the next stage, the circuit board assembly process, as depicted, for example, in
The third and final step can be a heating process such as, for example, a reflow process during which the circuit board 65 with components attached is passed through an oven 87 to permanently attach the components to the board by melting the solder previously placed on the board and chip carriers.
Another embodiment of the present invention is a pallet 89 shown in
The pallet 89, embodied in
In this embodiment, chip modules may include chip carriers.
The bottom surface of each chamber, in this embodiment, has four protrusions.
The pallet 89, for example, may be created from injected molded plastic or another durable plastic forming process. In another example, the pallet 89 may also be comprised of a metal such as aluminum. A variety of materials may be used for the pallet without deviating from the spirit of the present invention.
Another embodiment of the present invention is a print fixture pedestal 110 as shown in
An exemplary stencil is shown in
Once a manufacturing process, such as a stenciling process, is complete the pallet 89 may then be disengaged from the print fixture pedestal and moved to another stage of processing, such as, for example, the circuit board assembly process depicted in
Another embodiment of the present invention is a method of pre-processing chip modules with, for example, group-one components, storing the preprocessed chip modules until placement on a circuit board is required, and then populating the chip module with group-two components, usually, for example, at the time of assembly of a three dimensional array of chips. The definition of a group-two component will depend on factors, such as, for example, the cost, cost to inventory the chips and/or the populated chip modules, industry, market, and amount of time the chip modules will be stored. Because many electronic components, such as, for example, memory modules, may be subject to large price fluctuations wherein the price of the components decrease drastically over time, even in short periods of time, placing such a component, for example, on a chip carrier early in the processing cycle may be economically unwise. Group-one components on the other hand are those components not considered group-two components. Thus, it would not be cost efficient to preprocess a chip module with group-two components if that group-two component may likely cost less when the chip module is being assembled onto the circuit board. However, pre-processing a chip module with group-one components, for example, low cost components, storing the preprocessed module, and then placing the group-two components onto the chip module at the time the chip module is placed on the circuit board would be more cost efficient. Furthermore, storing expensive group-two components in inventory may also affect business decisions and raise overhead. The chip placement or three dimensional assembly process may be sped up because the chip module already has many of the components placed thereon prior to assembly. Some of the factors that lead to defining a group-two component may further include the market, historical cost trends, present cost, supply, demand, availability, complexity, sensitivity, durability, process considerations, cost, etc.
Resistors and capacitors, for example, may be considered group-one components. IC memory chips may, for example, be considered group-two components. These designations are exemplary only and may change as the industry changes and component pricing changes.
When a circuit board is being populated with components, the preprocessed chip carrier may be loaded at a surface mount technology placement machine. The chip carriers may be picked from a tape and reel or from a pallet depending on how they were stored. A chip carrier may then be placed on the circuit board over an IC chip and/or other passive components. After which an IC chip and/or other passive components may be placed on the chip carrier. During these placement processes application of solder to the chip carrier can be obviated by pre-processing. Flux may be applied to group-two components by a dip process, for example, an industry standard dip process. Pre-processing may obviate the necessity of a dip process.
Chip carriers may be stacked on top another as shown in
Another pre-processing embodiment may, for example, comprise the following steps. First, solder paste or other material serving the same function may be applied to the upper surface of the chip carrier. Solder coverage may include all pads. The solder paste or equivalent material may alternatively be applied only to those devices, such as resistors or capacitors, having no solder or insufficient solder on their own terminations for formation of acceptable electrical interconnections during a heating process such as, for example, a reflow process. Second, components selected for pre-processing such as group-one components may be placed on the chip carrier and reflowed. Third, solder deposits on unpopulated pads can be flattened. Fourth, tacky flux can be applied to the land patterns of unpopulated pads. Fifth, the chip carriers can then be packed in a tape and reel, as shown in
A surface mount technology (SMT) process may further include the following steps. The SMT step may involve placing a tape and reel containing the chip carriers on a feeder at the SMT placement machine, picking a chip carrier with a nozzle, visioning and placing the chip carrier over an IC chip and/or other passive devices such as capacitors or resistors, for example, that have been placed directly on the circuit board. Placing packaged or unpackaged integrated chips or other chip carriers on the chip carriers and then performing a heating or reflow process with the chip carriers.
Another embodiment of the present invention may include the loading of a pallet at a SMT placement machine table or tray feeder instead of the tape and reel. The remainder of the SMT process may be similar to the first embodiment described above.
The embodiments described above may provide, for example, 1) a simplified robust setup of the vacuum pedestal at the printer by changing the number of interleaving chambers from fifty four to one and increasing the setup positional tolerances from <±1 mm to ˜±4 mm; 2) lowered cost of pallets, by, for example, use of molding processes; 3) adaptation of the tray to, for example, meet JEDEC standards for use with standard tray handling equipment enabling greater automation of a process.
Furthermore, co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/098,269 is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. This application provides certain exemplary process information regarding, for example, the automated build of a three dimensional circuit board with packaged and or unpackaged integrated circuit chips or other chips. The processes and embodiments described herein, for example, may include: 1) the availability of ready to use partially prepared chip carriers; and 2) the ability to reduce a three step process to a standard process on a high volume surface mount technology (SMT) assembly line configuration, where a specialized tray feeder or tray table machine may not be required.
Although the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made to it without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application is a continuation-in-part of and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/098,269 filed Mar. 14, 2002 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,103,970, and entitled “A Method for Fabricating a Circuit Board with a Three Dimensional Surface Mounted Array of Semiconductor Chips,” which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/275,843 filed Mar. 14, 2001. The present application is a continuation-in-part of and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/371,061 filed Feb. 21, 2003 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,102,892, and entitled “Modular Integrated Circuit Chip Carrier,” which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/360,473 filed Feb. 26, 2002. The present application is also a continuation-in-part and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 to U. S. patent application Ser. No. 10/648,029 filed Aug. 26, 2003, and entitled “Carrier-based Electronic Module,” which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/688,500, filed Oct. 16, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,713,854. All applications and patents from which priority is claimed are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
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Child | 10098269 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 11270317 | US | |
Parent | 10371061 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 10648026 | US | |
Parent | 10098269 | Mar 2002 | US |
Child | 10371061 | US |