The present invention is related in general to the filed of semiconductor devices and processes, and more specifically to the structure, material selection, and fabrication method of solder joints connecting contact pads, whereby the joints even in fine-pitch vertical interconnects through silicon chips are reliable in drop tests.
When semiconductor packages have to be assembled on boards, it has been common practice to select copper or copper alloys as the base metal for the contact pads of the package as well as of the boards, and to use a tin-based solder to interconnect the pads. The copper pads are manufactured in a wide variety of sizes; at present, the smallest diameter is on the order of 150 μm. Recently, the semiconductor industry has started to use copper to fill via-holes through silicon chips (so-called TSVs) so that the contact diameter of a copper surface may be as small as 25 μm, or even smaller.
For the solder, tin-based solders have traditionally been favored. Since pure tin is melting at 232° C., it is common practice to aim for lower temperatures by adding an admixture metal and forming a solder alloy. In the past, lead has been commonly used as an admixture metal, but is now disfavored for environmental reasons. Alternative admixture metals include silver and copper. The alloy of tin and 3.5 weight % silver has a eutectic melting temperature of 221° C., the alloy of tin and 0.7 weight % copper has a eutectic melting temperature of 227° C., and the alloy of tin and 3.4 weight % silver and 0.8 weight % copper has a eutectic melting temperature of 217° C. A modified tin alloy used by the industry has the admixed metals in the composition of 3.0 weight % silver and 0.2 weight % copper.
In order to ensure that the copper pads can be connected by solder without any interference by a copper oxide film on the contact surface, the contact with a pure copper surface are commonly protected either by an organic solderability preservative (OSP) film, which evaporates before the melting temperature of the solder alloy is reached, or by a stack of coats including nickel and a noble metal such as palladium or gold. For most devices, the nickel coat thickness is in the range from about 0.5 to 2.0 μm or higher. Thick nickel coats are especially practical in semiconductor devices, which have to sustain relatively high temperatures in operation, such as in automobile applications, because thick nickel coats prevent the gradual change of device conditions by diffusion of copper atoms from the pads into the solder. Other devices use nickel coats thinner than 0.5 μm, wherein these nickel coats are referred to as thin nickel. The noble metal coats have typically a thickness less than 0.1 μm so that they are dissolved by the liquefied solder alloy during the assembly process flow. In some semiconductor devices, these protective coats may cover the surface of only one of the contacts, while the other contact exhibits the bare pad metal.
In an effort to identify the structure of device contact pads and connecting solder for the best device reliability performance in mechanical drop tests, applicants detected striking differences in the failure rates between device groups of different copper pad structures and solder compositions. Devices of one group had one copper pad protected by stacked coats of nickel and gold, while the other pad was bare copper; the pads were solder-connected by eutectic tin-lead alloy. This group exhibited the earliest failures after about 100 drops. Devices of another group had both copper pads protected by OSP films and the pads solder-connected by eutectic tin-silver-copper alloy; this group showed the earliest failures after about 35 drops. Devices of yet another group had one copper pad protected by stacked coats of nickel and gold, while the other pad was bare copper; the pads were solder-connected by eutectic tin-silver-copper alloy. This group exhibited the earliest failures already after a couple of drops. Devices in yet another group had one copper pad protected by stacked coats of nickel and gold, while the other pad was covered by a layer of thin nickel; the pads were solder-connected by the modified tin-silver-copper alloy. This group also exhibited the earliest failures after only few drops.
Analyzing the failed devices metallurgically under the microscope, applicants discovered that the drop failures were not caused by excessive brittleness, but by a continuous crack, which appeared regularly along the length of continuous layers of different intermetallic compounds. The layer of the intermetallic compound Ni3Sn4 (or the intermetallic compound (Ni, Cu)3Sn4), in contact with the pad, was separated by a gap from another layer of the intermetallic compound Cu6Sn5 (or the intermetallic compound (Cu, Ni, Au)6Sn5) in contact with the solder. As the applicants found, the two intermetallic compounds crystallize with different and incompatible lattice constants; consequently, the interface between the two intermetallic layers is under stress and mechanically weak; the intermetallic layers can separate easily in drop tests. On the other hand, applicants found that dispersed clusters of the intermetallic compound Cu6Sn5 (or (Cu, Ni, Au)6Sn5) do not contribute to failure, when the clusters are localized and randomly distributed in the solder along the Ni3Sn4 layer or (Ni, Cu)3Sn4 on the pad surface.
Applicants further discovered that even originally Cu-free solder may obtain some Cu content by diffusion from the copper pad into the solder during the assembly process. When the Cu content surpasses the value of about 0.3 weight % in the solder, the Cu-rich intermetallic Cu6Sn5 may form as a continuous layer on Ni3Sn4 or (Ni, Cu)3Sn4. Consequently, the copper diffusion effect has to be controlled in the assembly process to limit the copper content of the solder.
Applicants solved the problems of the early drop failures by selecting interconnect structures and fabrication methods so that only one intermetallic compound (e.g., Ni3Sn4) can form as a continuous layer while any other compound (e.g., Cu6Sn5) is restricted to form only discontinuous clusters. To that end, the amount of copper in the solder is restricted by covering each pad with metallic barrier layers so that additional copper cannot diffuse from the pad into the solder during the attachment process; the diffusion prevention is determined by the selection of the barrier layer metal and layer thickness and can be specified together with the solder selection.
Second chip 110 has conductive via holes through the thickness of the chip; the vias are commonly referred to as TSVs (through-silicon vias). Towards the semiconductor material, the via holes are lined with an insulating film (not shown in
Contact pads 112 are aligned with contact pads 102 so that they can be connected by solder to form a contact joint. Device reliability requires that these joints retain not only electrical conductivity for the life of the device, but are also mechanically robust enough to withstand drop tests and thermo-mechanical stress in temperature swings. More detail about fabrication and characteristics of the solder joints below. The space gap between chips 101 and 110 and especially around the solder joints is preferably filled with a polymer compound 130 loaded with inorganic filler particles (so-called underfill compound), in order to support the distribution of thermomechanical stress on the joints and thus to enhance joint reliability.
As
The coat (115, 125) over the pad (114, 124) serves two purposes: It prevents atoms of the pad metal to migrate, or diffuse, away from the pad, and it ensures solderability of the pad. To suppress the outdiffusion of copper atoms, a nickel layer (115, 125) over a copper pad (114, 124) in the thickness range from about 0.5 to 2.0 μm is generally sufficient as a barrier; even thinner nickel layer can be employed. If there are, however, additional requirements such as the device operation at temperatures substantially elevated over ambient temperature, as in automotive applications, nickel layers thicker than 25 μm are advisable. The prevent copper diffusion from the pads into the solder, both pads 114 and 124 have to be covered by a coat layer (115 and 125, respectively), and a dissolvable coat such as a film of OSP (organic solderability preservative) is not sufficient.
The enhance the solderability of the pads, a layer of a noble metal such as palladium or gold less than 0.1 μm thick over the nickel is helpful. This coat of non-oxidizing metal is dissolved into the liquid solder at the melting temperature of the solder alloy.
Solders 203 based on tin (melting temperature 232° C.) are preferably alloyed with at least one other admixture metal, and avoid lead. Alternative admixture metals preferably include copper and silver. The alloy of tin and 0.7 weight % copper has a eutectic melting temperature of 227° C., the alloy of tin and 3.5 weight % silver has a eutectic melting temperature of 221° C., and the alloy of tin and 3.4 weight % silver and 0.8 weight % copper has a eutectic melting temperature of 217° C. A modified tin alloy used by the industry has the admixed metals in the composition of 3.0 weight % silver and 0.2 weight % copper.
Referring to
An example of such failure by a crack along fully formed layers of crystals of the first and second intermetallic compounds, respectively, is illustrated in the metallurgical micrographs of
As stated above in conjunction with
Another embodiment of the invention is a method for assembling a solder joint with robust characteristics relative to mechanical drop tests. The first and the second pad to be assembled are aligned across a gap; preferably, the pads are made of copper or a copper alloy. A coat, preferably made of nickel, is deposited over each pad; the coat serves to prevent the out-diffusion of copper atoms from the pads and to facilitate the solderability of the pads. To further enhance the solderability, another thin layer of a noble metal such palladium or gold may be deposited over the nickel.
In the next process step, a solder alloy is applied to one of the coated pads. A preferred method is the screen-printing of the solder paste. Alternatively, the solder paste may be deposited on one of the pads and reflowed for a first time. The solder alloy preferably includes tin and copper; it may further include another metal, preferably silver; alternatively, the solder may include zinc or indium. Care is taken in the selection of the solder alloy to limit the copper content of the alloy to about 0.3 weight % or less of the solder weight.
Next, the coated pad with the solder is brought into contact with the other coated pad so that the gap is closed. Thermal energy is then supplied to the assembly in order to elevate the assembly temperature from ambient temperature to the melting temperature of the solder alloy (preferably, to a temperature slightly higher than the melting temperature). When the solder alloy is liquid, several process steps are progressing concurrently the steps include:
A layer of crystals of first intermetallic compounds, such as (Ni, Cu)3Sn4, is formed to cover the surface of each nickel coat on the copper pad. Further, isolated crystals of second intermetallic compounds, such as (Cu, Ni)6Sn5 and Ag3Sn, different from the first intermetallic compounds are formed on top of the layer of crystals of first intermetallic compounds. Since no additional copper can be added from the coated pads, the limited supply of copper from the solder alloy prevents the formation of a layer of crystals of second intermetallic compounds. Further, an alloy of solder is formed between the isolated crystals, the alloy including the residual of the solder at the start of the process flow. Finally, the temperature is lowered again the ambient temperature.
While this invention has been described in reference to illustrative embodiments, this description is not intended to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications and combinations of the illustrative embodiments, as well as other embodiments of the invention, will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to the description. As an example, the invention applies to copper contacts of any semiconductor device and is not limited to devices with copper-filled through-silicon vias. Further the invention applies to any solder contact, in which the formation of intermetallic layers need to be limited to a single layer in order to prevent the stress at the interface of two intermetallic layers in contact.
It is therefore intended that the appended claims encompass any such modifications or embodiments.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61052499 | May 2008 | US |