Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to integrated circuit packaging, and particularly to an interface between a die and a heat spreader in integrated circuit packages.
Computers and other electronic devices usually have a semiconductor die enclosed in an integrated circuit package. The die often has an integrated circuit for performing an electrical function. The integrated circuit generates heat when it operates. Excessive heat may destroy the integrated circuit. To dissipate the heat, the die is commonly attached or bonded to a heat spreader through a thermal interface material.
For improved performance, reliability, and longevity of the integrated circuit, bonding the die to the heat spreader may involve the following factors: low coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) mismatch between the heat spreader and the die, high bond quality, low thermal resistance of the integrated circuit, ease of handling of the thermal interface material, compatibility with existing processes, and low cost.
In some integrated circuit packages, satisfying most or all of the above factors may be difficult.
Heat spreader 120 may include a copper layer or a copper layer with one or more layers of other metals covering at least a portion of a surface 126 of heat spreader 120. Die 130 includes a semiconductor material in which an integrated circuit 135 is formed. Integrated circuit 135 may have circuitry to perform a function such as processing data, or storing data, or both. Die 130 has a surface 136. At least a portion of surface 136 may be covered with one or more layers of material (e.g., one or more layers of metals). As shown in
Thermal interface 110 includes a main layer 114 having surfaces 101 and 102, a covering layer 111 on surface 101 of main layer 114, and a covering layer 112 on surface 102 of main layer 114.
Covering layers 111 and 112 may serve one or more of the following functions: reducing or preventing oxidation to surfaces 101 and 102 of main layer 114 to enhance wetting to improve bond quality between heat spreader 120 and die 130; improving the handing of thermal interface 110; and enabling bonding of thermal interface 110 to heat spreader 120 and die 130 at different process temperatures.
Covering layers 111 and 112 may have an identical material or different materials. Covering layer 111, covering layer 112, and main layer 114 may all have different materials. For example, covering layer 111 may have a first material, covering layer 112 may have a second material, and main layer 114 may have a third material.
Each of the covering layers 111 and 112 may include only a single material or a combination of multiple materials. Main layer 114 may include only a single material or combination of multiple materials. The combination of multiple materials described herein may include only two materials or more than two materials. The combination of the multiple materials may be an alloy. In some embodiments, the alloy may be a eutectic alloy.
In some embodiments, the materials for each of the main layer 114, covering layer 111, and covering layer 112 may include indium, gold, silver, and tin. In other embodiments, the materials for main layer 114, covering layer 111, and covering layer 112 include other materials. In embodiments where main layer 114 includes only two materials, the materials may be indium and silver. The indium to silver weight ratio may be about 97% indium to about 3% silver (97In3Ag). In some embodiments, the indium to silver weight ratio may be different from about 97% indium to about 3% silver.
As shown in
As described above, thermal interface 110 may have different combinations of materials and a range of thickness values. Therefore, in some embodiments, by choosing the materials and the thickness for thermal interface 110 according to the materials and thickness described herein, the handling of thermal interface 110 before bonding may be improved. Further, in some embodiments, by selecting the materials and the thickness for thermal interface 110 combined with a process order, such as the process order mentioned above, thermal interface 110 may provide a high bond quality after bonding such that separation between thermal interface 110 and die 130 or between thermal interface 110 and heat spreader 120 may be avoided.
In some embodiments, at some thickness dimensions and materials of main layer 114, or at some processing conditions, the quality and handling of main layer 114 may be acceptable such that thermal interface 110 may include only main layer 114, or main layer 114 plus only one of the covering layers 111 and 112. Thus, in some embodiments, one or both of covering layers 111 and 112 may be omitted from thermal interface 110.
In some embodiments, bonding heat spreader 120 to die 130 may be performed with flux. When bonding with flux, as shown in
In some embodiments, where flux is used, only one (not both) of flux 171 and flux 172 may be applied to apparatus 100. Thus, in some embodiments, only flux 171 is applied and flux 172 is omitted, or only flux 172 is applied to and flux 171 is omitted. In some embodiments, the use of only one of flux 171 and flux 171 is independent of the inclusion or omission of covering layers 111 and 112. For example, only flux 171 may be used when covering layer 111 is included in or omitted from thermal interface 110. For another example, only flux 172 may be used when covering layer 112 is included in or omitted from thermal interface 110.
In some embodiments, bonding heat spreader 120 to die 130 may be performed in the absence of flux. Thus, in some embodiments, both flux 171 and second flux 172 are omitted from apparatus 100. In some embodiments, the omission of both flux 171 and flux 172 is independent of the inclusion or omission of covering layers 111 and 112. For example, both flux 171 and flux 172 may omitted when both covering layers 111 and 112 are included in thermal interface 110. For another example, both flux 171 and flux 172 may be omitted from thermal interface 110 when only one of the covering layers 111 and 112 is included in thermal interface 110.
Apparatus 100, after being assembled, may have a structure as shown in
In some embodiments, apparatus 200 includes an embodiment of apparatus 100 of
Heat spreader 220 includes a layer 225, and layers 227 and 228 covering layer 225.
Die 230 includes surfaces 251 and 252, and an integrated circuit 235 located at an active side of die 230. In
Die 230 also includes a metallization structure 236 on surface 252 (on the backside) of die 230. Metallization structure 236 includes a stack of layers 231 and 232. Layer 231 may include nickel or an alloy having nickel. Layer 232 may include gold. Metallization structure 236 may include other materials instead of nickel and gold. In some embodiments, metallization structure 236 may include fewer or more than two layers.
Thermal interface 210 includes a main layer 214, a covering layer 211, and a covering layer 212. In some embodiments, thermal interface 210 includes the embodiments of thermal interface 110 of
In some embodiments, both covering layer 211 and 212 may be omitted from apparatus 200 such that main layer 214 directly contacts both heat spreader 220 and die 230. In other embodiments, only one of the covering layers 211 and 212 may be omitted from apparatus 200 such that main layer 214 directly contacts either only heat spreader 220 or only die 230.
In
In
In the bonding process with flux, the interface between heat spreader 220 and die 230 (i.e., the interface including thermal interface 210), may be substantially free of voids. Substantially free of voids means that no voids are present, or if any voids are present, the voids are less than about 1% by volume. The void fraction can be determined by any known technique. For example, the void fraction can be determined by the Archimedes method, which determines a known density for a given material. For another example, the void fraction can also be determined by using a scanning acoustic microscope (SAM).
In the bonding process without flux, the interface between heat spreader 220 and die 230 (i.e., the interface including thermal interface 210), is substantially free of an organic flux or an organic flux residue. The term “substantially free” means that, under clean-room conditions that are used during the bonding process, analytical evaluation of apparatus 200 at the level of thermal interface 210 will result in no detectable flux or flux residue, absent a false positive. No detectable flux means that if there were any organic flux present, it would be below detection, and if not below detection, it would be tracked to a contaminant and not to a residue of a process that was used.
In some embodiments, by choosing the materials and the thickness for thermal interface 210 according to the materials and thickness described herein, apparatus 200 may have a relatively low CTE mismatch between heat spreader 220 and die 230.
In some embodiments, apparatus 200 may have a relatively low thermal resistance. The thermal resistance of a package such as apparatus 200 is determined, in part, by thermal junction-to-case resistance (Rjc) of the package. The Rjc of the package is commonly the measurement of the thermal resistance between a junction within the package (e.g., a top or bottom surface of a die) and a reference point (e.g., a top or bottom of the package). In
In some embodiments, apparatus 200 has a center Rjc of about 0.071° C/W. In other embodiments, apparatus 200 has a center Rjc of about 0.08° C/W. In some other embodiments, apparatus 200 has a center Rjc between about 0.071° C/W and about 0.08° C/W. In some embodiments, apparatus 200 has a corner Rjc of about 0.0054° C/W. In other embodiments, apparatus 200 has a corner Rjc of about 0.042° C/W. In some other embodiments, apparatus 200 has a corner Rjc between about 0.0054° C/W and about 0.042° C/W.
Activity 310 of method 300 places a thermal interface over a die. The thermal interface and the die in method 300 may include embodiments of thermal interfaces and the dice described in
Activity 320 of method 300 places a heat spreader over the thermal interface and the die. The heat spreader may include embodiments of heat spreader 120 of
Activity 330 of method 300 bonds the thermal interface to the heat spreader and the die in a bonding process.
In some embodiments, method 300 bonds the thermal interface to the heat spreader and the die with flux or without flux.
In some embodiments, where flux is used, the flux may be applied to both the area between the die and the thermal interface and the area between the thermal interface and the heat spreader. For example, a first flux may be applied to a surface of the die before the thermal interface is placed over the surface of the die; a second flux may be applied to a surface of the thermal interface before the heat spreader is placed over both the thermal interface and the die. In this example, the first flux contacts the die and a first surface of the thermal interface after the thermal interface is placed over the die; the second flux contacts a second surface of the thermal interface and the heat spreader after the heat spreader is place over both the thermal interface and the die. In other embodiments, where flux is used, the flux may be applied to only the area between the die and the thermal interface or to only the area between the thermal interface and the heat spreader.
In embodiments where flux is used, the bonding in activity 330 may be performed in a vacuum oven or in an oven with a pressure inside the oven being lower than the pressure outside the oven. For example, the bonding in activity 330 may be performed in an oven with a pressure inside the oven being lower than the atmospheric pressure. It is understood that the average atmospheric pressure is one atmosphere (1 amt or 760 Torr). In some embodiments, the bonding in activity 330 may be performed in an oven in which the pressure in the oven is about 50 Torr to about 100 Torr. In some embodiments, the lower than atmospheric pressure may be applied to the oven for only a fraction of the time of the bonding process in activity 330. In other embodiments, the lower than atmospheric pressure may be applied to the oven for the entire time of the bonding process in activity 330. Causing the pressure inside the oven to be lower than the atmospheric pressure may enable suction or extraction of volatiles and chemical reaction products of the flux or flux residue from the interface between the die and the heat spreader and the thermal interface (i.e., the interface including thermal interface). The suction may reduce voiding level or voids in the interface between the die and the heat spreader after the bonding process is completed.
In some embodiments, where flux is absent, the bonding in activity 330 may be performed in an oxygen-free environment (e.g., a nitrogen environment). In some embodiments, where flux is absent, the bonding in activity 330 may include removing oxidation or surface oxide from the surfaces of the thermal interface, the heat spreader, the die, or any combination of these surfaces. In some embodiments, a material may be introduced into the oven to remove the surface oxide. The material used to remove the surface oxide may be a gas or a plasma. For example, fluorine gas or plasma may be used to remove the surface oxide. Other materials besides fluorine may be used. In some embodiments, where flux is absent, the bonding in activity 330 may be performed in an oven in which the pressure inside the oven may be lower than the atmospheric pressure. A lower than atmospheric pressure inside the oven may reduce voids in the interface between the die and the heat spreader after the bonding process is completed.
Bonding the thermal interface to the heat spreader and the die may be performed at a process temperature. In embodiments where the thermal interface includes indium, a relatively low process temperature may be used. In some embodiments, the process temperature is about the melting point or the eutectic point of the materials of the thermal interface. In other embodiments, the process temperature is either about the melting point or about the eutectic point of the materials of the thermal interface plus an increased temperature range. In some embodiments, the increased temperature range is about (5X+1)° C. to about 5Y° C., where X>0, and Y=X+1. For example, the process temperature is either about the melting point or about the eutectic point of the materials of the thermal interface plus an increased temperature range of 1° C. to 5° C. (X=0), 6° C. to 10° C. (X=1,), or 11° C. to 15° C. (X=2). In some embodiments, the processing temperature in activity 330 is between about 143° C. and about 180° C.
In some embodiments, the bonding process in activity 330 may be performed for about two minutes to about one and one-half hours. In some embodiments, method 300 may use a device to clip the heat spreader, the thermal interface, and the die together with a clip force to improve bonding.
In method 300, some embodiments or examples in one of the activities 310, 320, and 330 may be included in, or substituted for, those of other activities.
Processor 410 may be a general purpose processor or an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC). I/O controller 450 may include a communication module for wired or wireless communication. Memory device 420 may be a dynamic random access memory (DRAM) device, a static random access memory (SRAM) device, a flash memory device, or a combination of these memory devices. Thus, in some embodiments, memory device 420 in system 400 does not have to include a DRAM device.
One or more of the components shown in system 400 may be included in one or more integrated circuit packages. For example, processor 410, or memory device 420, or at least a portion of I/O controller 450, or a combination of these components may be included in an integrated circuit package that includes at least one embodiment of an article or apparatus described in
Thus, one or more or the components shown in system 400 may include at least one or a combination of a die, a heat spreader, and a thermal interface such as those described in
System 400 may include computers (e.g., desktops, laptops, hand-helds, servers, Web appliances, routers, etc.), wireless communication devices (e.g., cellular phones, cordless phones, pagers, personal digital assistants, etc.), computer-related peripherals (e.g., printers, scanners, monitors, etc.), entertainment devices (e.g., televisions, radios, stereos, tape and compact disc players, video cassette recorders, camcorders, digital cameras, MP3 (Motion Picture Experts Group, Audio Layer 3) players, video games, watches, etc.), and the like.
The above description and the drawings illustrate some specific embodiments of the invention sufficiently to enable those skilled in the art to practice the embodiments of the invention. Other embodiments may incorporate structural, logical, electrical, process, and other changes. In the drawings, like features or like numerals describe substantially similar features throughout the several views. Examples merely typify possible variations. Portions and features of some embodiments may be included in, or substituted for, those of others. Many other embodiments will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reading and understanding the above description. Therefore, the scope of various embodiments is determined by the appended claims, along with the full range of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
The Abstract is provided to comply with 37 C.F.R. §1.72(b) requiring an abstract that will allow the reader to quickly ascertain the nature and gist of the technical disclosure. The Abstract is submitted with the understanding that it will not be used to interpret or limit the scope or meaning of the claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/423,551, filed Jun. 12, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11423551 | Jun 2006 | US |
Child | 12813277 | US |