This application claims priority to German Patent Application 10 2004 026 092.3, which was filed May 25, 2004, and is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a chip arrangement and a process for producing a chip arrangement.
In SGRAM products, the chips are equipped with a peripheral arrangement of bonding pads, i.e., the bonding pads are arranged along the outer edges of the chip. In this case, the chips are surrounded by a housing, produced, for example, by molding, with the chips being chip-bonded to a substrate in the traditional face-up technology, i.e., with the active side facing upward. For electrical contact-connection, wire bridges connect the bonding pads on the chip to the contact islands on the substrate on the chip side.
Furthermore, on the opposite side from the chip, the substrate is provided with soldering balls (microballs, μ-balls), which are connected to the contact islands via rewiring in the substrate. To enable this to be realized, multi-layer substrates are used. Housing arrangements of this type are also referred to, inter alia, as an FBGA (fine ball grid array).
Recently, a technology has been developed that makes it possible by simple means to apply a redistribution layer to a completed chip, which is still joined to the wafer, i.e., to its passivation layer, which is the layer that protects the chip from harmful environmental influences.
This redistribution layer can be used to rewire the bonding pads that are kept clear in the passivation layer to other more favorable positions by means of a metallic interconnect. This means that bonding pads can be, as it were, “laid” independently of the interconnect structure in the chip by way of the redistribution layer.
This redistribution layer (RDL) usually has a fixedly predetermined layer structure by virtue of first of all a seed layer being applied to the uppermost passivation layer on the chip, then a layer sequence of copper, nickel and gold being applied to the seed layer in accordance with the desired interconnect structure of the redistribution layer by means of standard photolithographic processes and layer deposition.
The nickel layer, which is located on the copper (which has been deposited for example by electroplating), serves to protect the copper layer from corrosion. The gold layer, which is deposited on the nickel, is required in order to allow contact-connection of the reroute layer contact surfaces, for example by soldering or wire-bonding.
It is generally known that the bonding between a gold layer as the uppermost layer of a structure and a molding compound is extremely inadequate. This is because of the particular surface structure of gold, i.e., the surface of gold is particularly smooth, so that the bonding of a molding compound to a gold layer is not very good. This effect also occurs in a similar way with other precious-metal coatings, e.g., comprising Ag, Pt, etc.
The inevitable poor bonding of the molding compound to gold is not a problem if the proportion of the surface area of the chip formed by gold layers is small. However, as soon as larger proportions of the surface area of a chip have redistribution layers of this type, poor bonding of the molding compound ensues.
This poor bonding may cause the molding compound to become partially or completely detached even during simple handling of a chip arrangement of this type, or at the latest in the event of a fluctuating temperature load, with the associated thermal stresses. In both cases, the chip arrangement would become unusable.
A large and therefore disruptive proportion of the surface of the redistribution layer is found, for example, on chips that have a single-row or multi-row central arrangement of bonding pads, which are then rewired to the edge of the chips by means of the reroute layer.
It is in principle possible for the redistribution layer to be coated with a dielectric layer in order to create favorable bonding conditions for the molding compound. However, this requires an additional process and lithography step. However, an operation of this type is not desirable since the additional dielectric has to be dried, and consequently the processing of a dielectric entails an additional thermal budget for the wafer and has an adverse effect on the chip data, e.g. the moisture properties.
Another possible way of improving the bonding between the gold layer and the molding compound consists in subjecting the gold layer to a plasma treatment prior to the molding operation. However, this is a technically highly complex and expensive process.
In one aspect, the invention provides a process for producing a chip arrangement provided with a molding compound, in which the drawbacks described are avoided and in which, in particular, good bonding between the active side of the chip and a molding compound surrounding is ensured.
In one embodiment, the invention is based on a process of the type described in the introduction by virtue of the fact that after patterning of the rewiring, a resist is deposited on the chip and exposed in such a manner that after the resist has been developed, the upper precious-metal layer is uncovered between the bonding pads and that the uncovered precious-metal layer is then removed by etching.
In a refinement of the invention, the precious metal used is preferably gold.
To prevent environmental influences from affecting the uncovered rewiring after the etching of the gold layer, the chip arrangement is surrounded by a molding compound immediately after the etching of the gold layer.
The invention is to be explained in more detail below on the basis of an exemplary embodiment. In the associated figures of the drawings:
The following list of reference symbols can be used in conjunction with the figures:
In the preferred embodiment, the invention relates to a process for producing a chip arrangement provided with a molding compound and having a chip that is chip-bonded face-up on a substrate and has a preferably central arrangement of bonding pads, a rewiring composed of copper, nickel and a covering layer of a precious metal, which rewires the bonding pads on the chip having been deposited on the chip above a passivation layer, and the substrate being ultimately surrounded by a molding compound on the active side of the chip. Other modifications are also possible.
FIGS. 1 to 3 show a rewiring 3 that has been built up on the active side of a chip 1 above a passivation 2 in accordance with the prior art. This rewiring 3 connects the bonding pads 4 on the chip 1 to contact pads 5 on contact bumps 6 (
The layer structure of the rewiring 3 can be seen from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 026 092.3 | May 2004 | DE | national |