The present invention relates to a method for establishing an electrical connection, features and a contact point.
A single-wire contacting method, called bonding, is known for establishing an electrical connection between at least two contact surfaces. In doing this, individual wires, in particular, gold or aluminum wires, are positioned between the contact surfaces to be bonded, using a wire-bonding tool. In bonding, the contact wire is bonded to the contact surfaces by applying ultrasonic pressure and heat. The free end of the bonding wire is first melted to form a ball, by applying thermal energy, and subsequently pressed onto the first contact surface, using a bonding capillary. The contact wire bonds to the contact surface as a result of atomic bonding forces (material fusion) arising at the boundary between the contact surface and the contact wire. During bonding to the first contact surface, the ball that was previously melted on is deformed into a nail head. The contact wire is then led to the second contact surface, using the wire-bonding tool. To prevent the contact wire from breaking away at the first contact point, the contact wire is formed into a loop. The contact wire is then pressed onto the second contact surface with the wire-bonding tool by again applying ultrasonic pressure and heat. This produces necking of the contact wire, causing the latter to form a rupture joint at which the contact wire breaks away from the second contact surface as the wire-bonding tool moves on. The contact wire is bonded to the second contact surface by a “stitch,” with atomic bonding forces again arising at the boundary between the contact wire and the second contact surface.
This known ball-wedge bonding method (ball bonding with the first contact surface, and stitch bonding with the second contact surface) produces a strong dependency between the materials of the contact wire and the contact surface, thus forming strong atomic bonding forces at the boundaries. Particularly when contacting the second contact surface, a relatively weak surface bonding forms between the stitch and the contact surface, resulting in contacting errors, particularly in the case of contact surfaces made of hard-to-bond materials.
The method according to the present invention offers an advantage over the related art in that it considerably improves the contact stability of the bond between the contact wire and the second contact surface. The fact that the wire-bonding tool provides the contact point with an additional contact securing element after bonding the second contact surface increases the contact stability of the second contact point (stitch or wedge) independently of the generation of atomic bonding force between the contact wire and the second contact surface.
In one preferred embodiment of the present invention, the additional contact securing element is provided by the ball shape, applied to the contact point and subsequently deformed by the bonding tool, at the end of the contact wire that remains free after contacting the second contact surface. This makes it possible, after forming the electrical connection between the contact wire and the second contact surface, to immediately form the ball on the end of the contact wire that is now free and to position it over the contact point as an additional contact securing element. A particularly preferred feature is to deform the ball with the wire-bonding tool so that the contact point overlaps, producing at least one, preferably two, additional bonding areas between the additional contact securing element and the contact surface. The atomic bonding forces generated cause the additional bonding areas to adhere to the contact surface, forming a sort of tensile strain relief for the contact wire bonded to the second contact surface. This very reliably prevents the contact wire from breaking away from the second contact surface. The possibility of the contact wire breaking away is now determined only by the rupture strength of the contact wire itself, and no longer by the adhesion between the contact wire and the second contact surface, i.e., the contact wire itself breaks before the contact point ruptures.
According to another preferred embodiment of the present invention, the production of the additional contact securing element can be precisely reproduced through wire-bonding tool settings, in particular, by programming a corresponding controller of the wire-bonding tool. This makes it possible to create identical contact securing elements among a large number of contacts, and these identical contact securing elements can be easily tested on the basis of a predictable, reproducible result. One particularly preferred feature is that a visual, preferably automatic visual, inspection of the contact point is carried out, in which the contact securing elements that are not precisely produced, i.e., according to the specified degree of reproducibility, are reliably detected. This makes it possible to achieve a sort of zero error rate in producing bonds that result in a higher production yield.
A contact point according to the present invention advantageously ensures a high contact stability between the contact wire and contact surface. Since the contact point includes an additional contact securing element which at least partially engages over the contact wire in the area of the contact point and forms at least one additional bonding surface with the contact surface, the available overall surface is advantageously increased for contacting the contact wire with the contact surface, enabling the contact point to withstand higher mechanical stresses. Particularly when used in safety-related components, this contact point can maintain highly redundant electrical connections.
a shows a first schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
b shows a second schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
c shows a third schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
d shows a fourth schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
e shows a firth schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
f shows a sixth schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
g shows a seventh schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
h shows a eighth schematic view of the process steps in establishing an electrical connection.
a shows an electrical connection 10 between a first contact surface 12 and a second contact surface 14. Contact surface 12 is provided on a substrate 16 and contact surface 14 on a substrate 18. Electrical connection 10 is produced by bonding in the known manner (ball-wedge bonding). To do this, a wire-bonding tool (not illustrated) is used to first heat the free end of a contact wire 20, forming it into a ball 21. A capillary nozzle of the wire-bonding tool is then used to press this ball 21 onto first contact surface 12, thus producing atomic bonding forces at the boundary between what is then a plastically deformed ball 21 and contact surface 12. The wire-bonding tool is then moved toward second contact surface 14, thus forming a loop 22 in contact wire 20. Contact wire 20 is pressed with the capillary nozzle onto second contact surface 14, where it is plastically deformed, thus producing atomic bonding forces between contact wire 20 and second contact surface 14. The plastic deformation of contact wire 20 (stitch) by the capillary nozzle simultaneously creates a rupture point at which contact wire 20 breaks after the capillary nozzle is removed. The design of second contact point 24 (wedge) has a relatively small contact area between contact wire 20 and contact surface 14. As a result, contact point 24 allows contact wire 20 to pull away from contact surface 14. Enormous contact problems arise, especially if contact surface 14 is made of a hard-to-bond material.
Electrical connection 10 illustrated in
b to 1h illustrate the method according to the present invention for establishing electrical connection 10, with this method being based on an electrical connection previously established according to
b shows a schematic representation of a capillary nozzle 26 of a wire-bonding tool 28. Capillary nozzle 26 has a passage 30 through which contact wire 20 is fed. Suitable feed devices enable contact wire 20 to move through capillary nozzle 26. After electrical connection 10 shown in
According to the next process step illustrated in
The plastic deformation of ball 34 follows the shape of this inner cone 38. The application of contact force F, combined with ultrasound energy, produces atomic bonding forces between ball 34 and, extending from center 40 of bonding point 24 to the wedge, causing deformed ball 34 adhere to contact point 24 during a motion away from contact surface 14, as shown in
In a subsequent process step, illustrated in
h shows an enlarged representation of contact point 24 after electrical connection 10 has been established with additional contact securing provided by segment 34′. It is clear that segment 34′ has certain shape characteristics that are derived from the size of ball 34 (
The present invention is, of course, not limited to the embodiment illustrated in
According to further exemplary embodiments, it is possible, in particular, to provide a more shallow depression between tip 50 and segment 34′. This means that the transition between segment 34′ and point 50 occurs through a relatively shallow depression, thereby improving the positive-lock joint between contact wire 20 and segment 34′ or contact point 24 in the example.
By way of example,
It is also possible to modulate segment 34′ as a largely rectangular object having a defined elongation in the x-direction, y-direction, and z-direction by setting the bonding parameters and/or placement parameters of capillary nozzle 26 while shaping segment 34′. Parameters that can be set while shaping ball 34 into “rectangular” segment 34′ make it possible to set precisely reproducible dimensions in the x-, y-, and z-directions. A subsequent visual, in particular automatic visual, inspection of contact point 24 can be used to easily and effectively check contact point 24 for freedom from errors.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
198 23 623 | May 1998 | DE | national |
This application is a division of prior application Ser. No. 09/701,224, filed Mar. 12, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,477,768.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3373481 | Lins et al. | Mar 1968 | A |
3623649 | Keisling | Nov 1971 | A |
4415115 | James | Nov 1983 | A |
5111989 | Holdgrafer et al. | May 1992 | A |
5172851 | Matsushita et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5176310 | Akiyama et al. | Jan 1993 | A |
5421503 | Perlberg et al. | Jun 1995 | A |
5476211 | Khandros | Dec 1995 | A |
5836071 | Falcone et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
5852871 | Khandros | Dec 1998 | A |
6079610 | Maeda et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
6158647 | Chapman et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6270000 | Nishiura | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6295729 | Beaman et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6316838 | Ozawa et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6715666 | Imai et al. | Apr 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
57 012 530 | Jan 1982 | JP |
59 195 836 | Nov 1984 | JP |
61 280 626 | Dec 1986 | JP |
63 244 633 | Oct 1988 | JP |
01 057 725 | Mar 1989 | JP |
01 158 742 | Jun 1989 | JP |
01 239 861 | Sep 1989 | JP |
01 276 729 | Nov 1989 | JP |
03 289 149 | Dec 1991 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030019098 A1 | Jan 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09701224 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 10251417 | US |