This invention is based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2005-066533, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a semiconductor device and its manufacturing method specifically to a technology to form a via hole exposing a pad electrode formed on a semiconductor substrate from a back surface of the semiconductor substrate.
2. Description of the Related Art
A CSP (Chip Size Package) has received attention in recent years as a three-dimensional mounting technology as well as a new packaging technology. The CSP is a small package having about the same outside dimensions as those of a semiconductor die packaged in it.
A BGA (Ball Grid Array) type semiconductor device has been known as a type of CSP. A plurality of ball-shaped conductive terminals made of a metal such as solder is arrayed in a grid pattern on one principal surface of a package of the BGA type semiconductor device and is electrically connected with the semiconductor die mounted on the other side of the package.
When the BGA type semiconductor device is mounted on electronic equipment, the semiconductor die is electrically connected with an external circuit on a printed circuit board by bonding the conductive terminals to wiring patterns on the printed circuit board.
Such a BGA type semiconductor device has advantages in providing a large number of conductive terminals and in reducing a size over other CSP type semiconductor devices such as an SOP (Small Outline Package) and a QFP (Quad Flat Package), which have lead pins protruding from their sides. The BGA type semiconductor device is used as an image sensor chip for a digital camera incorporated into, for example, a mobile telephone.
A semiconductor die 104 is sealed between a first glass substrate 102 and a second glass substrate 103 through epoxy resin layers 105a and 105b in the BGA type semiconductor device 101. A plurality of conductive terminals 106 is arrayed in a grid pattern on a principal surface of the second glass substrate 103, that is, on a back surface of the BGA type semiconductor device 101. The conductive terminals 106 are connected to the semiconductor die 104 through a plurality of second wirings 110. The second wirings 110 are connected with wirings of aluminum pulled out from inside of the semiconductor die 104, making each of the conductive terminals 106 electrically connected with the semiconductor die 104.
Further explanation on a cross-sectional structure of the BGA type semiconductor device 101 is given hereafter referring to
A first wiring 107 is provided on an insulation layer 108 on a top surface of the semiconductor die 104. The semiconductor die 104 is bonded to the first glass substrate 102 with the resin layer 105a. The back surface of the semiconductor die 104 is bonded to the second glass substrate 103 with the resin layer 105b.
One end of the first wiring 107 is connected to the second wiring 110. The second wiring 110 extends from the end of the first wiring 107 onto a surface of the second glass substrate 103. And the ball-shaped conductive terminal 106 is formed on the second wiring 110 extended over the second glass substrate 103.
Relevant technology mentioned above is disclosed, for example, in Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2002-512436.
However, there is a possibility that the first wiring 107 and the second wiring 110 are disconnected at the point of contact between them, since the area of the point of contact is very small in the semiconductor device 101 described above. Also there is a problem in step coverage of the second wiring 110. This invention is directed to solving the problems addressed above and offers a semiconductor device with improved reliability and its manufacturing method.
The invention provides a semiconductor device that includes a semiconductor substrate having a front surface and a back surface and having a first opening penetrating the semiconductor substrate from the back surface to the front surface, a first insulation layer disposed on the front surface of the semiconductor substrate and having a second opening that is connected to the first opening, and a pad electrode disposed on the first insulation layer so as to cover the second opening. The fist opening has its maximum lateral size in a position closer to the front surface than to the back surface, and the second opening has a larger lateral size at the end that is connected to the first opening than at the end that is covered by the pad electrode.
The invention also provides a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device. The method includes providing a device intermediate having a semiconductor substrate, a first insulation layer disposed on its front surface and a pad electrode disposed on the first insulation layer, forming a first opening in the semiconductor substrate from its back surface so that the first insulation layer is exposed at a bottom of the first opening and that the fist opening has a maximum lateral size thereof in a position closer to the front surface than to the back surface, and removing the exposed first insulation film to form a second opening so that the pad electrode is exposed at a bottom of the second opening and that the second opening has a larger lateral size at the end that is connected to the first opening than at the end that is covered by the pad electrode.
FIGS. 8 to 1OC are cross-sectional views showing a method of manufacturing a semiconductor device of a second embodiment of the invention.
Next, a semiconductor device according to a first embodiment of this invention and its manufacturing method will be described, referring to
First, a pad electrode 3 made of aluminum, an aluminum alloy, or copper is formed on the front surface of a semiconductor substrate 1 through a first insulation layer 2 made of, for example, silicon oxide or silicon nitride, as shown in
Next, a photoresist layer 6 having an opening corresponding to the pad electrode 3 is formed on the back surface of the semiconductor substrate 1. The semiconductor substrate 1 is dry-etched using the photoresist layer 6 as a mask to form a first opening 7A in the semiconductor substrate 1 extending from the back surface of the semiconductor substrate 1 to the first insulation layer 2 on the pad electrode 3, as shown in
Then, a portion of the first insulation layer 2 on the pad electrode 3 is removed by etching with an etching gas including fluorocarbon such as CF4 or CHF3 using the photoresist layer 6 as a mask to form a second opening 7B exposing the pad electrode 3, as shown in
Although the first opening 7A is widened in its bottom portion, the diameter K3 of the opening in its upper portion in the first insulation layer 2 on the pad electrode 3 is formed to have about the same size as the diameter of the first opening 7A in the upper portion, since the photoresist layer 6 and the upper portion of the sidewall of the opening 7A serve as a mask to prevent the etching gas from spreading laterally. There can be a case where the diameter K4 is almost the same as the diameter K5 while keeping the relation of K3>K4, depending on the etching condition.
In this process, the etching may be made without using the photoresist layer 6 as the mask. In this case, a portion of the first insulation layer 2 on the pad electrode 3 is removed by an etching using the semiconductor subrstrate 1 as a mask after the photoresist layer 6 is removed.
Next, a second insulation layer 9 made of silicon oxide or silicon nitride is formed on the back surface of the semiconductor substrate 1 and an inner surface of the via hole 8 as shown in
Using this process, since the taper shape of the sidewall of the second opening 7B formed in the first insulation layer 2 is reflected on the shape of the end portion X of the second insulation layer 9A, the end portion X of the second insulation layer 9A is formed being gradually thinned toward the center of the via hole 8. Since the end portion X of the second insulation layer 9A covers the first insulation layer 2 along the slope thereof, there is no edge portion in the third opening 8A, forming a smoothly curving taper-shape, as shown in
The shape of the sidewall of the via hole 8 in the third opening 8A can be formed in the more smoothed taper-shape by the process of the embodiment than by a process where the first opening 7A is formed on the semiconductor substrate 1, then the second insulation layer 9 is formed on the first insulation layer 2 and on the semiconductor substrate 1 including in the first opening 7A, and a portion of the first insulation layer 2 and second insulation layer 9 is removed by etching at a time to expose the pad electrode 3. This is because the shape of the sidewall of the first insulation layer 2 is reflected on the shape of the end portion X of the second insulation layer 9A by the process of the embodiment. This embodiment uses such a process that the coverage of each of the barrier layer 10, the seed layer 11, the wiring layer 12 and so on to be formed in subsequent processes can be enhanced and a highly reliable semiconductor device can be manufactured.
Then a barrier layer 10 is formed over the back surface of the semiconductor substrate 1 and the inner surface of the via hole 8, as shown in
The second insulation layer 9A may be formed by removing the portion of the second insulation layer 9 on the pad electrode 3 using a photoresist layer (not shown) formed over the semiconductor substrate as a mask. Or it may be formed by etching without using the photoresist layer as the mask.
The difference in thickness of the second insulation layer 9 over the via hole 8 is utilized in the etching without using the photoresist layer as the mask. Although
Also, etching characteristics of the second insulation layer 9 is taken into account in this embodiment. That is, the etch rate of the second insulation layer 9 formed at the bottom of the via hole 8 is lower than the etch rate of the second insulation layer 9 formed on the back surface of the semiconductor substrate 1. The etch rate of the second insulation layer 9 formed on the back surface of the semiconductor substrate 1 is 1.5 times of the etch rate of the second insulation layer 9 formed at the bottom of the via hole 8, for example. Therefore, the reliability of the manufacturing process is improved by utilizing both the difference in the thickness of the second insulation layer 9 and the etching characteristics of the second insulation layer 9.
A seed layer 11 (a Cu layer, or the like) is formed on the barrier layer 10 and a wiring layer 12 made of copper (Cu), or the like, is formed on the seed layer 11 by plating, as shown in
The barrier layer 10 and the seed layer 11 may be formed by MOCVD (Metal Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition). However, it increases the production cost. A directional sputtering such as long-throw sputtering is less expensive than the MOCVD and is capable of improving coverage compared with conventional sputtering. By using the directional sputtering, the barrier layer 10 and the seed layer 11 can be formed with a good coverage even when the via hole has a slope of less than 90 degrees or an aspect ratio of three or higher.
Then, the semiconductor substrate 1 and the layers stacked on it are cut along a predetermined dicing line into individual semiconductor dice, although not shown in the figure. A dicing method, an etching method, a laser cutting method, or the like is used as the method of dividing those into the individual semiconductor dice. A BGA type semiconductor device, in which the pad electrode 3 and the ball-shaped terminal 13 are electrically connected, is formed as described above.
According to this embodiment, the second insulation layer 9A, the barrier layer 10, the seed layer 11 and the wiring layer 12 formed on the sidewall of the via hole 8 are strongly adhered to the semiconductor substrate 1 and hardly detached from the semiconductor substrate 1, because the layers are mechanically engaged with the semiconductor substrate 1 at the extended-diameter portion of the via hole 8 formed by the lateral etching in the lower portion of the opening. In addition, the connection between the pad electrode 3, the seed layer 11 and the wiring layer 12 are improved.
Furthermore, the extended diameter of the via hole 8 exposing the pad electrode 3 relaxes the stresses generated in the seed layer 11 and the wiring layer 12 subsequently formed in the via hole 8, leading to improved reliability.
The second opening 7B is formed in the first insulation layer 2, continuing from the first opening 7A, so as to have the smaller diameter in a portion close to the pad electrode 3 than in a portion close to the front surface of the semiconductor substrate 1. This can further relax the stress since the stress is prevented from concentrating on an edge portion, compared with a semiconductor device where a diameter of an opening in a first insulation layer is uniform all through the first insulation film, for example.
When the sidewall of the via hole is straight or tapered down toward the bottom or trailing at the bottom as shown in
Since the connection between the pad electrode on the semiconductor die and the conductive terminal is made through the via hole, the disconnection and the decline in step coverage of the connection are prevented. Thus a highly reliable semiconductor device is made available.
Next, a second embodiment of the invention will be described referring to figures. The semiconductor device of the first embodiment and its manufacturing method may cause the pad electrode deformation, i.e., part of the pad electrode projecting into the space of the via hole 8, when the via hole 8 is formed.
This deformation of the pad electrode is caused by that the stress accumulated in the pad 10 electrode when the pad electrode is deposited in the front-end processes (also called residual stress or intrinsic stress) loses its balance by a thermal load in a thermal cycle test or the like, and thus the stress is concentrated in the pad electrode so as to be released therefrom. Such deformation of the pad electrode is likely to occur when the first opening 7A reaching the first insulation layer 2 is formed or when the first insulation layer 2 is etched to expose the pad electrode 3.
Furthermore, the deformation of the pad electrode 3 may occur when the pad electrode 3 is pulled toward the via hole 8 side while the barrier layer 10, the seed layer 11, or the wiring layer 12 is formed in the via hole 8. This deformation is caused by the difference in magnitude between residual stress accumulated in the barrier layer 10, the seed layer 11, or the wiring layer 12 when these layers are formed and stress accumulated in the pad electrode 3 when it is formed.
Furthermore, the deformation of the pad electrode 3 sometimes causes damage or disconnection in the pad electrode 3 and connection failure due to poor coverage of the barrier layer 10, the seed layer 11, or the wiring layer 12, resulting in reduction of reliability and a yield of the semiconductor device.
The second embodiment of the invention is directed to solving this problem. In the following description, the same numerals are used for the same structure as that of the described first embodiment and its description will be omitted.
First, the pad electrode 3 is formed on the front surface of the semiconductor subrstrate 1 including an electronic device (not shown) through the first insulation layer 2, in the same manner as shown
Next, as shown in
The diameter Y of the first opening 14, which is larger than the width K5 of the pad electrode 3, can make stress accumulated when the pad electrode 3 is deposited effectively released when the first opening 7A reaching the first insulation layer 2 is formed or the first insulation layer 2 is etched to expose the pad electrode 3, thereby preventing the pad electrode 3 from projecting toward the via hole 8 side. This prevents damage or disconnection of the pad electrode 3, improves coverage of the layers (the barrier layer 10, the seed layer 11, the wiring layer 12, or the like) formed on the pad electrode 3 to prevent connection failure between the layers and the pad electrode 3, resulting in improvement of reliability and a yield of the semiconductor device.
Furthermore,
The wiring layer 12 is not necessarily made by plating as described in the embodiment. The wiring layer 12 may also be made, for example, without forming the seed layer 11 by a method other than the plating. It may be made by sputtering of, for example, aluminum or aluminum alloy.
This embodiment is not limited to the semiconductor device where the ball-shaped terminals 13 are formed as described above. The embodiment may be applied to any semiconductor device as long as a via hole is formed to penetrate a semiconductor substrate, for example, a LGA (Land Grid Array) type semiconductor device.
Although the supporting body 5 is attached to the front surface of the semiconductor substrate 1 in the described embodiments, the embodiment can be applied to a semiconductor device without the supporting body 5 and its manufacturing method, as shown in
In
Although the via hole 8 is circular in its lateral shape in the described embodiments, the via hole 8 can also form any shape such as an oval or a square in its lateral shape.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005-066533 | Mar 2005 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5149674 | Freeman et al. | Sep 1992 | A |
5229647 | Gnadinger et al. | Jul 1993 | A |
5248903 | Heim | Sep 1993 | A |
5397907 | Lee | Mar 1995 | A |
5432119 | Le et al. | Jul 1995 | A |
5910687 | Chen et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
5949140 | Nishi et al. | Sep 1999 | A |
5985749 | Lin et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6031293 | Hsuan et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6204074 | Bertolet et al. | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6281448 | Tsukamoto | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6297563 | Yamaha | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6391770 | Kosaki et al. | May 2002 | B2 |
6562709 | Lin | May 2003 | B1 |
6720661 | Hanaoka et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
6768205 | Taniguchi et al. | Jul 2004 | B2 |
6773952 | Armbrust et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6943442 | Sunohara et al. | Sep 2005 | B2 |
7045896 | Ahn | May 2006 | B2 |
7094701 | Umemoto et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7101735 | Noma et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
7214615 | Miyazama | May 2007 | B2 |
7247939 | Huang et al. | Jul 2007 | B2 |
7339273 | Kameyama et al. | Mar 2008 | B2 |
20020025587 | Wada | Feb 2002 | A1 |
20030025173 | Suminoe et al. | Feb 2003 | A1 |
20030137056 | Taniguchi et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20030230805 | Noma et al. | Dec 2003 | A1 |
20040016942 | Miyazawa et al. | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20040045668 | Iwasaki et al. | Mar 2004 | A1 |
20040104485 | Yokoyama | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20040188807 | Hiraoka et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20040251554 | Masuda | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20050023700 | Singh et al. | Feb 2005 | A1 |
20050189637 | Okayama et al. | Sep 2005 | A1 |
20060087042 | Kameyama et al. | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20060108691 | Kameyama et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
20060108695 | Kameyama et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
20070249158 | Okayama et al. | Oct 2007 | A1 |
20080132038 | Kameyama et al. | Jun 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1376678 | Jan 2004 | EP |
1376678 | Jan 2004 | EP |
1 564 805 | Aug 2005 | EP |
2003-309221 | Oct 2003 | JP |
2005-183548 | Jul 2005 | JP |
WO-9613062 | May 1996 | WO |
WO-9940624 | Aug 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060202348 A1 | Sep 2006 | US |