1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to the fabrication of integrated circuit devices, and more particularly, to a method of post-passivation processing for the creation of conductive interconnects.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Improvements in semiconductor device performance are typically obtained by scaling down the geometric dimensions of the Integrated Circuits; this results in a decrease in the cost per die while at the same time some aspects of semiconductor device performance are improved. The metal connections which connect the Integrated Circuit to other circuit or system components become of relative more importance and have, with the further miniaturization of the IC, an increasingly negative impact on the circuit performance. The parasitic capacitance and resistance of the metal interconnections increase, which degrades the chip performance significantly. Of most concern in this respect is the voltage drop along the power and ground buses and the RC delay of the critical signal paths. Attempts to reduce the resistance by using wider metal lines result in higher capacitance of these wires.
To solve this problem, one approach has been to develop low resistance metal (such as copper) for the wires while low-k dielectric materials are used in between signal lines. Current practice is to create metal interconnection networks under a layer of passivation. This approach, however, limits the interconnect network to fine line interconnects and the therewith associated high parasitic capacitance and high line resistivity. The latter two parameters, because of their relatively high values, degrade circuit performance, an effect which becomes even more severe for higher frequency applications and for long interconnect lines that are, for instance, used for clock distribution lines. Also, fine line interconnect metal cannot carry high values of current that is typically needed for ground busses and for power busses.
It has previously been stated that it is of interest to the semiconductor art to provide a method of creating interconnect lines that removes typical limitations that are imposed on the interconnect wires, such as unwanted parasitic capacitances and high interconnect line resistivity. U.S. Pat. No. 6,383,916 to the same assignee as the present invention provides such a method. An analogy can be drawn in this respect whereby the currently (prior art) used fine-line interconnection schemes, which are created under a layer of passivation, are the streets in a city; in the post-passivation interconnection scheme of the above patent, the interconnections that are created above a layer of passivation can be considered the freeways between cities.
From the above the following can be summarized: circuits are created in or on the surface of a silicon substrate, interconnect lines are created for these circuits for further interconnection to external circuitry, the circuits are, on a per I/O pad basis, provided with an ESD circuit; these circuits with their ESD circuit are connected to a power or ground pad that penetrates a layer of passivation. The layer of passivation is the final layer that overlies the created interconnect line structure; the interconnect lines underneath the layer of passivation are fine line interconnects and have all the electrical disadvantages of fine line interconnects such as high resistivity and high parasitic capacitance.
Relating to the diagram that is shown in
The same comments apply to the diagram that is shown in
Further with respect to
It is therefore of interest to the semiconductor art to provide a method of creating interconnect lines that removes typical limitations that are imposed on the interconnect wires, such as unwanted parasitic capacitances and high interconnect line resistivity. The present invention is related to U.S. Pat. No. 6,303,423, to the same assignee as the present invention.
A principal objective of the invention is to provide a method for the creation of interconnect metal that allows for the use of thick and wide metal.
Another objective of the invention is to provide a method for the creation of interconnect metal that uses the application of a thick layer of dielectric such as polymer.
Yet another objective of the invention is to provide a method that allows for the creation of long interconnect lines, whereby these long interconnect lines do not have high resistance or introduce high parasitic capacitance.
A still further objective of the invention is to create interconnect lines that can carry high levels of current for the creation of power and ground distribution networks.
A still further objective of the invention is to create interconnect metal that can be created using cost effective methods of manufacturing by creating the interconnect metal on the surface of and after a layer of passivation has been deposited.
In accordance with the objectives of the invention a new method is provided for the creation of interconnect lines. Fine line interconnects are provided in a first layer of dielectric overlying semiconductor circuits that have been created in or on the surface of a substrate. A layer of passivation is deposited over the layer of dielectric; a thick second layer of dielectric is created over the surface of the layer of passivation. Thick and wide interconnect lines are created in the thick second layer of dielectric. Intra-chip drivers are connected to the thick, wide post-passivation interconnections.
a is a representation of a silicon substrate over which an interconnect network is created according to the invention. Power and/or ground pads are provided for external connection. The structure that is shown in
b further distributes the power and ground to the circuit nodes through power and ground distribution lines that are below a layer of passivation and power and ground distribution lines that are above a layer of passivation. 66 and 66′ each represent one or more than one layer of metal.
c shows an alternative wherein contact is made to a conventional bond pad through the passivation layer rather than through a post-passivation thick wide metal system.
a is a representation of a silicon substrate over which an interconnect network is created according to the invention. An ESD and/or driver and/or receiver circuit access pad is provided through the surface of the layer of dielectric for external connection. The structure that is shown in
b further distributes signal and clock to the circuit nodes through clock and signal distribution lines that are below a layer of passivation in addition to clock and signal distribution lines that are above a layer of passivation. 71 and 71′ each represent one or more than one layer of metal.
c and 4d show smaller intra-chip circuit drivers.
a is a representation of a silicon substrate over which an interconnect network is created according to the invention. No I/O connect pad is provided for external connection in specific networks. The structure that is shown in
b differentiates between clock and signal distribution lines that are below a layer of passivation and clock and signal distribution lines that are above a layer of passivation.
c and 5d show smaller intra-chip circuit drivers.
a and 6b are representations of the interconnect structure of the present invention.
c and 6d are representations of the interconnect structure of the present invention including wirebonding.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,383,916 teaches an Integrated Circuit structure where re-distribution and interconnect metal layers are created in layers of dielectric over the passivation layer of a conventional Integrated Circuit (IC). A layer of passivation is deposited over the IC, a thick layer of polymer is alternately deposited over the surface of the layer of passivation, and thick, wide metal lines are formed over the passivation.
Referring now more specifically to
Layers 14 (two examples are shown) represent all of the metal layers and dielectric layers that are typically created on the dielectric layer 12. Layers 14 contain multiple layers of dielectric or insulation and the like; conductive interconnect lines 13 make up the network of electrical connections that are created throughout layers 14. Overlying and on the surface of layers 14 are points 16 of electrical contact. These points 16 of electrical contact can, for instance, be bond pads that establish electrical interconnects to external circuits. These points of contact 16 can be points of interconnect within the IC arrangement that establish electrical interconnects to the transistors and other devices in the surface of the substrate. A passivation layer 18, formed of, for example, a composite layer of silicon oxide and silicon nitride (the thickness of silicon nitride is usually thicker than 0.4 μm for the passivation purpose), is deposited over the surface of layers 14, and functions to prevent the penetration of mobile ions (such as sodium ions), moisture, transition metals (such as gold, copper, silver), and other contamination. The passivation layer is used to protect the underlying devices (such as transistors, polysilicon resistors, poly-to-poly capacitors, etc.) and the fine-line metal interconnection.
The key steps of U.S. Pat. No. 6,383,916 begin with the deposition of a thick layer 20 of a polymer, preferably polyimide, that is deposited over the surface of passivation layer 18. Access must be provided to points of electrical contact 16; for this reason a pattern of openings is formed through the polyimide layer 20 and the passivation layer 18. Contact points 16 are, by means of the openings that are created in the layer 20 of polyimide, electrically extended to the surface of layer 20.
After formation of the openings, metallization is performed to create patterned wide metal layers 24 and 25 and to connect to contact points 16. Lines 24 and 25 can be of any design in width and thickness to accommodate specific circuit design requirements. This structure allows for the interconnection of circuit elements at various distances using the thick, wide (as compared to the underlying “fine line” metallization in layers 14) metal of 25. Thick, wide metal 25 has smaller resistance and capacitance than the fine line metal 14 and is also easier and more cost effective to manufacture. The thick, wide metals, usually formed by photoresist defined electroplating, are electroplated metals. Gold and copper are preferred. Optionally, a layer of polymer (not shown in
Referring now to
c and 6d are analogous to
The following comments relate to the size and the number of the contact points 16 in
The referenced application does not impose a limitation on the number of contact pads that can be included in the design; this number is not only dependent on package design requirements but is mostly dependent on the internal circuit design requirements. Layer 18 in
The most frequently used passivation layer in the present state of the art is plasma enhanced CVD (PECVD) oxide and nitride. In creating layer 18 of passivation, a layer of approximately 0.5 μm PECVD oxide can be deposited first followed by a layer of approximately more than 0.4 μm nitride. Passivation layer 18 is very important because it protects the device wafer from moisture and foreign ion contamination. To achieve the passivation purpose, the silicon nitride is usually thicker than 0.4 μm. The positioning of this layer between the sub-micron process (of the integrated circuit) and the tens-micron process (of the interconnecting metalization structure) is of critical importance since it allows for a cheaper process that possibly has less stringent clean room requirements for the process of creating the interconnecting metalization structure.
Layers 20, 21, and 22 are a thick polymer dielectric layer (for example polyimide) that have a thickness in excess of 2 μm (after curing). The range of the polymer thickness can vary from 2 μm to 150 μm, dependent on electrical design requirements.
For the deposition of layers 20, 21, 22 the Hitachi-Dupont polyimide HD 2732 or 2734 or Asahi polyimide LS800, I-83005, or 8124, can, for example, be used. The polyimide can be spin-on coated and cured. After spin-on coating, the polyimide will be cured at 370 degrees C. for 1 hour in a vacuum or nitrogen ambient. For thicker polyimide, the polyimide film can be multiple coated and cured. The polyimide also can be formed by screen printing.
Another material that can be used to create layers 20, 21, 22 is the polymer benzocyclobutene (BCE). This polymer is at this time commercially produced by for instance Dow Chemical and has recently gained acceptance to be used instead of typical polyimide application.
The thick layers 20, 21, 22 of polymer can be coated in liquid form on the surface of the layer 18 of passivation or it can be laminated over the surface of layer 18 or passivation by dry film application.
Additional electrical components such as an inductor, a capacitor, and the like, not shown, can be created on the surface of layer 20 or 22 of polyimide and in electrical contact with underlying metallization.
Now, the process of the present invention will be described in detail. Referring now specifically to
From the representation that is shown in
Some points of interest can be listed at this time as they relate to prior art methods and to the invention.
In this respect and related to the above provided comments, it must be remembered that power and ground pads do not require drivers and/or receiver circuitry.
The Invention:
The method that is used to create the interconnect network that is shown in
b provides further insight into the creation of the power and ground interconnect lines of the invention whereby these interconnect lines have been shown as interconnect lines 66 and interconnect lines 66′. Interconnect lines 66 have been created above the layer 62 of passivation and act as global power and ground interconnect lines. Interconnect lines 66′ have been created below the layer 62 of passivation and act as local power and ground interconnect lines.
c provides an alternative in which contact is made to a conventional aluminum metal 61′, for example, through the passivation layer 62 rather than making contact to the post-passivation thick, wide metal system 66. The top layer of metal 61′ is used for wirebonding purposes and for connection between wirebonding pads and the wide, thick interconnect lines 66. The distance of 61′ is a short distance; for example, <500 μm in length.
In the process of the present invention, in all aspects shown in the figures, the post passivation metallization 66 can optionally be performed directly on the passivation layer 62 without the intervening polymer layer. Although the polymer layer provides distinct advantages, it may be desirable to dispense with the polymer layer in order to save costs.
Referring now to
The features not previously highlighted that are shown in
The method that is used to create the interconnect network that is shown in cross section in
b provides further insight into the creation of the signal and clock interconnect lines of the invention whereby these interconnect lines have been shown as interconnect lines 71 and interconnect lines 71′. Interconnect lines 71 have been created above the layer 62 of passivation and act as global signal and clock interconnect lines. Interconnect lines 71′ have been created below the layer 62 of passivation and act as local signal and clock interconnect lines. Furthermore, internal circuits 42 have no driver, no receiver, and no ESD connections.
Intra-chip drivers and receivers 80 may be necessary if the interconnection distance is long and/or the load of the net of circuits 42 is large, as shown in
Further provided are:
Intra-chip circuits 80 are usually smaller than the off-chip drivers 45′. The intra-chip driver circuits 80 are different from the off-chip circuits 45′ in that they have no I/O circuits and no ESD circuits.
a shows a representation of a silicon substrate 40 over which an interconnect network 74 is created according to the invention, with the interconnect network 74 created in a thick layer 64 of dielectric overlying a layer 62 of passivation. No ESD circuit, receiver, driver or I/O circuit access pad is provided for external connection to the internal circuits 42. Shown in
The method that is used to create the wide thick line interconnect lines 74 that is shown in cross section in
b provides further insight into the creation of the signal and clock interconnect lines of the invention whereby these interconnect lines have been shown as interconnect lines 71 and interconnect lines 71′. Interconnect lines 71 have been created above the layer 62 of passivation and can act as global signal and clock interconnect lines. Interconnect lines 71′ have been created below the layer 62 of passivation and act as local signal and clock interconnect lines. Also as shown in
It must further be emphasized that, where
It is further of value to briefly discuss the above implemented and addressed distinction between fine-line interconnect lines and wide, thick interconnect lines. The following points apply in this respect:
In summary, the post-passivation interconnection of the present invention can connect to three types of circuits (i) off-chip drivers, receivers, I/O circuits, and ESD circuits, (ii) intra-chip drivers and receivers, and (iii) internal circuits. No driver is required for freeway interconnection with a distance<“D”. A smaller driver is used for freeway interconnection with a distance>“D”; that is, intra-chip connection. For I/O and ESD circuits, a large driver, larger than the intra-chip driver, is used for off-chip connection.
Although the invention has been described and illustrated with reference to specific illustrative embodiments thereof, it is not intended that the invention be limited to those illustrative embodiments. Those skilled in the art will recognize that variations and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. It is therefore intended to include within the invention all such variations and modifications which fall within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 12/019,635, filed on Jan. 25, 2008, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,928,576, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 11/788,221, filed on Apr. 19, 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,459,790, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/685,872, filed on Oct. 15, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,230,340.
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Parent | 12019635 | Jan 2008 | US |
Child | 13071203 | US | |
Parent | 11788221 | Apr 2007 | US |
Child | 12019635 | US | |
Parent | 10685872 | Oct 2003 | US |
Child | 11788221 | US |