This application is based on Japanese patent application No. 2009-166657, the content of which is incorporated hereinto by reference.
1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing a semiconductor device, and a semiconductor manufacturing apparatus used in the method.
2. Related Art
As portable electronic devices have been becoming smaller and achieving higher speeds in recent years, flip-chip mounting technique is now widely used to connect semiconductor chips to interconnect substrates not by wire bonding but with solder bumps. In the flip-chip mounting, interconnect lengths can be made shorter, and higher-speed transmission characteristics can be achieved than in a case where connections are performed by wire bonding. Also, smaller packages can be realized.
As such a method for forming a solder bump, Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2004-6818 discloses a method by which a solder paste is applied by a printing technique, and then hydrogen plasma is supplied during reflow soldering to volatilize the flux. By this method, excellent soldering can be performed.
Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication Nos. 2007-266054 and 2008-41980 also disclose methods by which hydrogen plasma is used to remove the oxide film formed on each solder bump surface.
Flux is used to remove oxide in solder prior to melting of the solder and prevent reoxidation of the solder during the melting of the solder. However, it has become apparent from findings by the inventor that flux has following problems. Flux might cause a thermal alteration (a chemical reaction) during a heat treatment for melting solder. Particularly, where the compounding ratio of Pb in solder formed by mixing lead (Pb) with tin (Sn) is 95% or higher, solder melting temperature becomes as high as 300° C. or even higher. As a result, a chemical reaction of flux easily occurs. The chemically-altered flux is not easily dissolved with an organic solvent. Therefore, even if a removing process using an organic solvent is performed later, flux remains on a surface of each solder bump.
When a semiconductor element formed on a substrate with remaining flux on surfaces of solder bumps is mounted on an interconnect substrate, electric contact failures are caused between the solder bumps of the interconnect substrate and the solder bumps of the semiconductor element. As a result, yield in manufacturing the semiconductor device is lowered.
By any of the conventional techniques disclosed in Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication Nos. 2004-6818, 2007-266054, and 2008-41980, however, the chemically-altered flux cannot be removed.
In one embodiment, there is provided a method for manufacturing a semiconductor device including forming an electrode pad over a substrate, forming a solder bump over the electrode pad, at least part of a surface of the solder bump being covered with flux, and exposing the solder bump to oxygen gas reactive therewith.
In another embodiment, there is provided a semiconductor manufacturing apparatus including a stage over which a substrate is placed, an electrode pad being formed over the substrate, flux-containing solder being applied onto the electrode pad, a heating unit that melts the solder applied onto the electrode pad, and an oxygen supply unit that supplies oxygen gas reactive with a solder bump formed through melting of the solder.
According to the present invention, the reactive oxygen gas is supplied after the solder bump is formed by melting the solder. Therefore, the flux chemically altered through a heating treatment for melting the solder can be removed from the solder bump. Accordingly, a solder bump of an interconnect substrate and the solder bump of the semiconductor element can be properly connected.
According to the present invention, a solder bump of an interconnect substrate and the solder bump of the semiconductor element can be properly connected. Thus, yield in manufacturing the semiconductor device can be made higher.
The above and other objects, advantages and features of the present invention will be more apparent from the following description of certain preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The invention will be now described herein with reference to illustrative embodiments. Those skilled in the art will recognize that many alternative embodiments can be accomplished using the teachings of the present invention and that the invention is not limited to the embodiments illustrated for explanatory purposes.
Embodiments according to the present invention are described hereinbelow with reference to the drawings. In all the drawings, equivalent components are denoted by the same reference numerals, and their redundant explanations will not be repeated.
Hereinafter, this embodiment is described in detail. First, a solder paste 13 made, by mixing minute solder particles with flux is applied onto the electrode pad 11 (
To apply the solder paste 13, there is a way to print the solder paste on the electrode pad 11. Specifically, the solder paste is imprinted after patterning by applying a resist film onto the substrate 12. In other cases, the solder paste 13 is imprinted on a metal mask after pressing the metal mask onto a semiconductor element.
A heating treatment is then performed at a temperature equal to or higher than the solder melting temperature. After the heating treatment, the solder paste 13 is melted and turned into the spherical solder bump 14. At this point, the flux 15 contained in the solder paste 13 has served to remove oxide from the solder prior to the solder melting and prevent reoxidation of the solder during the solder melting. The flux 15 then remains on the surface of the solder bump 14 (
Here, part of the flux causes a chemical reaction such as a carbonization reaction or an oxidation reaction during the solder melting. For example, it is well known that abietic acid, which is a kind of flux component, turns into neoabietic acid when heated to 300° C. Accordingly, chemically-altered flux 16 also remains on the surface of the solder bump 14.
The flux 15 remaining on the surface of the solder bump 14 is then removed. To remove the flux 15, the flux 15 is dissolved with an organic solvent such as ethylene glycol, for example. At this point, the chemically-altered flux 16 is not easily dissolved with the organic solvent. Therefore, the chemically-altered flux 16 remains on the solder bump surface after the treatment with the organic solvent (FIG. 1D).
The ozone gas (O3 gas) is then supplied for a certain period of time (
Note that the solder bump 14 may be treated with oxygen-containing plasma, instead of the O3 gas exposure.
At this point, an oxide film 17 might be formed on the surface of the solder bump 14 due to the O3 gas exposure (
Through the above processes, the solder bumps are formed on the semiconductor element and an interconnect substrate, and those solder bumps are connected. After that, predetermined processes are performed to complete the semiconductor device.
This apparatus may further include a hydrogen gas supply unit 102 (a reduction gas supply unit) that supplies hydrogen gas, and a plasma generating unit 105. A hydrogen gas amount generated from the hydrogen gas supply unit 102 is adjusted by a valve 125 before the hydrogen gas is supplied to the chamber 106. The plasma generating unit 105 generates the hydrogen plasma with the hydrogen gas supplied from the hydrogen gas supply unit 102. In this manner, the oxide film 17 formed on the solder bump 14 due to the O3 gas is subjected to the hydrogen plasma treatment, and as a result, the oxide film 17 is removed through a reduction. The gas in the chamber 106 is then evacuated from the chamber 106 by an exhaust pump 115. An exhaust valve 110 adjusts an exhausted gas amount from the chamber 106.
In the apparatus illustrated in
Next, a method for manufacturing a semiconductor device of this embodiment using the apparatus illustrated in
Functions and effects of this embodiment are now described with reference to
By the method according to this embodiment, the oxide film 17 on the surface of the solder bump 14 formed by the O3 gas treatment can be reduced and removed by the hydrogen plasma treatment performed after the O3 gas treatment. Accordingly, the solder bumps of the interconnect substrate and the solder bumps on the semiconductor element can be properly connected.
In this embodiment, the altered flux is removed with the O3 gas, and then the oxidized surface of the solder bump 14 is reduced by the hydrogen plasma treatment. Some part of the altered flux that is not removed with the O3 gas is more efficiently removed through the following operations. Specifically, the altered flux is once transformed into the oxide through the oxidization by the O3 gas. The hydrogen plasma treatment is then performed to combine the oxide with hydrogen and remove the oxide from the solder bump 14. In this manner, the altered flux can be effectively removed. By the above operations, the altered flux can be more effectively removed in this embodiment than in a case where the altered flux is removed only with an O3 gas or by a hydrogen plasma treatment.
Although embodiments of the present invention have been described so far with reference to the drawings, they are merely examples of the present invention, and various other configurations may be employed.
For example, although the solder paste 13 is applied onto the electrode pad 11 in the above embodiment, a solder bump may also be formed by performing plating on an electrode pad in the present invention.
After the photoresist as the patterning film is removed, flux 35 is applied so as to cover the electrode pad 31 and the solder-plate film 33 (
A heating treatment is then performed to melt the solder-plate film 33 and form a solder bump 34. At this point, part of the flux 35 is chemically altered, and the chemically-altered flux 36 remains on the surface of the solder bump 34 (
The flux 35 is then removed with the use of an organic solvent such as ethylene glycol (
O3 gas is then supplied for a certain period of time to oxide the chemically-altered flux 36 and volatilize the chemically-altered flux 36 as gas (COx) such as carbon dioxide gas (
To remove an oxide film 37 (
As described above, the present invention can adopt the solder bump forming method with either the printing method or the plating method. Accordingly, yield loss in manufacturing the semiconductor device can be prevented.
Although the flux 35 is used in the above described modification, the flux 35 may not be used. Referring now to
Hereinafter, shown are the results of experiments carried out to verify the effects of the present invention.
In the experiments, the solder bump 14 was formed on the substrate 12 through the method illustrated in
In
As described above, the O3 gas exposure time should be 10 seconds or longer to restrain defective connections. Preferably, the O3 gas exposure time should be 20 seconds or longer, or more preferably, 30 seconds or longer but not longer than 40 seconds.
Lastly, an example according to the present invention is described with referring a comparative example.
The solder paste 93 applied onto the electrode pad 91 is then subjected to a heating treatment at a temperature equal to or higher than the solder melting temperature. In this manner, the electrode pad 91 and the solder are chemically bound, and a solder bump 94 is formed on the electrode pad 91 (
Here, the flux 95 is used to remove the oxide from the solder prior to the melting of the solder and prevent reoxidation of the solder during the melting of the solder. Therefore, the flux 95 becomes unnecessary after the solder bump 94 is formed. If the flux 95 remains on the solder bump 94, defective connections may be caused between the solder bump 94 and a solder bump formed on another substrate or the like at the time of a connection to another member. Therefore, the flux 95 remaining on the surface of the solder bump 94 is normally removed after the formation of the solder bump 94. As a conventional method of removing the flux 95, there is a method with a removing process using an organic solvent and a rinsing process using DIW (De-Ionized Water) performed subsequently thereto, for example.
In such a case, once a chemically-altered (thermally-altered) flux 96 is formed on the solder bump 94 (
In the present invention, on the other hand, the thermally-altered flux 96 formed as described above is exposed to the reactive oxygen gas. Accordingly, the thermally-altered flux 96 can be effectively removed.
Although the O3 gas is used in the above described embodiment, oxygen plasma may be used instead of the O3 gas. By introducing oxygen gas into a gas chamber and then making the oxygen gas plasma activated, the solder bump can be irradiated with oxygen plasma. In addition, the hydrogen gas is used as the reduction gas in the above embodiment, but any gas other than the hydrogen gas may be used, as long as the gas has reduction characteristics.
It is apparent that the present invention is not limited to the above embodiment, and may be modified and changed without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-166657 | Jul 2009 | JP | national |