This invention relates generally to electrical components, and more particularly to a system and method for an integrated inductor.
In current electronic applications, discrete inductors, such as ferrite bead inductors, are often used to protect conductor lines against electromagnetic interference (EMI). These EMI filter ferrite bead inductors provide a resistance at high frequency that dissipates high frequency energy in the form of heat. Another application of ferrite inductors is output voltage smoothing for DC/DC-converter. Here, the ferrite inductor acts as a device with a high capability to store energy.
In both cases, ferrite inductors are widely used together with capacitors in order to provide efficient low pass characteristics. To date, ferrite inductors are manufactured as discrete SMD-devices in standard rectangular two terminal packages. For example, inductors are available in 0402 packages with a dimension corresponding to 1.0 mm by 0.5 mm. With mobile units like cellular phones and MP3-players becoming continuously smaller and requiring more power conversion functionality, the cost and size required for discrete inductors is becoming a limiting factor for further miniaturization.
Conventional discrete inductors are manufactured using a layered approach. A ferrite layer is provided on which a conductor is deposited, typically by printing. A second ferrite layer is deposited on the inductor and everything is baked together to enable a continuous magnetic flow in ferrite material. If more than one conductive layer is used, for example, to provide higher inductances, additional conductive and ferrite layers are stacked on one another and vias are provided to interconnect the conductive layers. The layered ferrite approach, however, is limited in the case of higher integration with other passive or active devices.
In one embodiment, an inductor has a substrate, a conductor disposed above the substrate and a seamless ferromagnetic material surrounding at least a first portion of the conductor.
The foregoing has outlined, rather broadly, features of the present invention. Additional features of the invention will be described, hereinafter, which form the subject of the claims of the invention. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the conception and specific embodiment disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other structures or processes for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. It should also be realized by those skilled in the art that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
a-2g illustrate cross-sectional diagrams of embodiment inductors;
a-3g illustrate cross-sectional diagrams of embodiment inductors having partial magnetic fill;
a-4e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of an embodiment inductor;
a-5e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of an another embodiment inductor;
a-6e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of an another embodiment inductor;
a-7d illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of an another embodiment inductor;
a-8e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of an another embodiment inductor;
a-9f illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of an another embodiment inductor;
a-10e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing the fabrication of a further embodiment inductor;
a-11c illustrate plan view examples of embodiment conductor shapes and magnetic material geometries;
a and 13b illustrate a plan view and a cross section of another embodiment inductor; and
a and 14b illustrates embodiment having an inductor and other components on the same substrate.
Corresponding numerals and symbols in different figures generally refer to corresponding parts unless otherwise indicated. The figures are drawn to clearly illustrate the relevant aspects of embodiments of the present invention and are not necessarily drawn to scale. To more clearly illustrate certain embodiments, a letter indicating variations of the same structure, material, or process step may follow a figure number.
The making and using of embodiments are discussed in detail below. It should be appreciated, however, that the present invention provides many applicable inventive concepts that may be embodied in a wide variety of specific contexts. The specific embodiments discussed are merely illustrative of specific ways to make and use the invention, and do not limit the scope of the invention.
The present invention will be described with respect to embodiments in a specific context, namely systems and methods for an integrated inductor. Embodiments of this invention may also be applied to systems and methods directed toward other magnetic circuits.
In embodiments of the present invention, a conductor is deposited on a substrate, a portion of the substrate material is etched away and a magnetic material is filled around portions of the conductor and within a portion of the void etched from the substrate. In embodiments, magnetic material with a large cross-section is formed. In further embodiments, other electronic components, such as capacitors and active circuitry is included on the substrate.
In an embodiment, conductor line 104 is a planar spiral inductor on top of an isolated substrate 102. Alternatively, conductor line 104 can form a loop, one or more windings, a spiral geometry with a flat or high aspect ratio profile, a coil in two or more planes, a solenoid, a simple line, or other geometry. The material for conductor line 104 can include copper, aluminum, silver, gold, any of the above mentioned materials with small portion of added other elements, or other conductive materials in embodiments of the present invention. Alternatively, conductor line can be made from other materials available in a semiconductor process such as highly doped polysilicon, for example. Embodiment materials for substrate 102 include, but are not limited to, semiconductor substrates, isolator material, ceramic substrates, metal pad, composite material, polymer substrates, or stacks made of layers of the before mentioned materials.
In an embodiment method of producing inductor 100, conductive line 104 is first provided on substrate 102. Conductive line 104 is provided by using a physical vapor deposition (PVD) process followed by patterning and etching. Alternatively, PVD followed by lift-off, plating, printing, or other techniques known in the art can be used. Conductive line 104 is isolated and passivated after being deposited on substrate 102. In alternative embodiments conductor 104 is left non-insolated. Pad 106 is then provided at the inductor terminals with conductive surface material for assembly. In some embodiments, pad 106 has a bondable or solderable surface for later assembly using bondwires, direct bonding, solder joints or other forms of assembly. In other embodiments, pads 106 have a solderable surface adapted for under bump metallization for later application of solder areas such as solder balls. Alternatively pad 106 can have a solder material,
A material-free loop is provided by removing substrate material in and below the core of conductor line 104 and outside the inductor area. In an embodiment, this is realized by etching a hole into substrate 102 from the top side to a certain depth, and then thinning the substrate from the backside until the before etched hole is reached. Alternatively, the a cavern can be etched into substrate 102 beneath without forming a complete hole. The geometry of the cavity can completely envelop or partially envelop conductor 104. In embodiments, substrate 102 can be etched by using techniques known in the art such as dry etching, wet etching, selective etching, local etching with lithography mask, sawing using mechanical methods, laser etching, or other forms of etching.
In an embodiment, magnetic material 108 is applied by molding with mold material that contains ferrite particles (magnetic mold) and a mold tool that forms a cavity and defines the later outside dimensions. After removal from a mold tool inductor 100 is fully enclosed in magnetic mold with pads 106 extending to the surface. Alternatively, the magnetic fill material can be a magnetic polymer, magnetic paste, a material using magnetic micro- or nanoparticles, or other magnetic material. In embodiments of the present invention, the fill processes can be an injection, compression, or transfer process that uses a tool to form a cavity to limit the mold dimensions, for example. Alternatively, magnetic material 108 can be applied by printing, spray, spin-on, or combinations of different methods. Because magnetic material 108 is applied in the same process step, magnetic material 108 is a seamless magnetic material having a low magnetic resistance in some embodiments. Sequential multistep-processes for frontside and backside application of magnetic material 108, however, can also be used. After magnetic material 108 is applied to inductor 100, subsequent treatment, such as annealing and/or magnetic field can be performed in some embodiments in order to apply the desired magnetic properties of magnetic material 108.
After magnetic material 108 is applied to conductor 104, subsequent process steps including pad connection, passivation, thinning and separation and backside are performed in embodiments of the present invention. Pad connection includes opening the pads through the magnetic layer or through a protection layer, as well as finalization of pads 106 with protective layers, barrier layers, solderable layers or solder in some embodiments. Backside processes include, but are not limited to providing die attach material, metal connections, and isolation. Passivation is performed using techniques known in the art to protect inductor 100 against humidity, contamination, or mechanical impact and other environmental factors. In some embodiments, a subset of the subsequent process steps are performed depending on the application and its specifications. Alternatively, subsequent process can be omitted.
a to 2g illustrate cross-sections of different embodiment inductors.
b illustrates embodiment inductor 210 having conductor 104 within substrate 102, where the magnetic loop is closed by locally removing substrate material in areas beside conductor line 104. These regions and the areas below and above the substrate are filled with magnetic material 108.
c illustrates embodiment inductor 220 having conductor 104 a distance d over substrate 102. In embodiments, distance d is between about 0.5 μm and about 50 μm. Alternatively, other distances outside of this range can be used depending on the application and its specifications. In this embodiment, substrate 102 is first coated by a dummy layer on which conductor 104 is formed. In succeeding steps the dummy layer is removed, thereby leaving conductor 104 in place, and magnetic material 108 is applied to fill the area around conductor 104 to provide a complete magnetic loop around conductor 104. The dummy layer can be applied by any deposition method like spin-on, spray, printing, lamination, CVD or PVD and its material can contain at least portions from the group of polymers, aerogels, carbon, silicon dioxide or doped silicon dioxide.
d illustrates embodiment inductor 230 having conductor 104 above substrate 102 at a distance d above the bottom of cavity 109. During processing, cavity 109 is etched into substrate 102 below conductor 104 overlapping the conductor area. Magnetic material 108 is filled into cavity 109 and around conductor 104 to form a closed magnetic loop. In an alternative embodiment, substrate cavity 109 can extend all the way through substrate 102.
e illustrates embodiment inductor 240 having conductor 104 above substrate 102 at a distance d above the bottom of cavity 109. During processing, conductor 104 is fabricated within substrate 102 using techniques known in the art. Next, cavity 109 is etched into substrate 102 below and around conductor 104. Magnetic material 108 is filled into cavity 109 and around conductor 104 to form a closed magnetic loop. In an alternative embodiment, substrate cavity 109 can extend all the way through substrate 102.
f illustrates embodiment inductor 250 having two conductive layers 114 and 116. Bottom conductor 114 is above substrate 102 at a distance d above the bottom of cavity 109, and top conductor 116 is a distance e above the top surface of bottom conductor 114. In embodiments, distance e is between about 0.2 μm and about 20 μm, however, in alternative embodiments distances outside of this range can be used depending on the application and its specifications. During processing, material between bottom and top conductors 114 and 116 is etched away, and cavity 109 is etched into substrate 102 below bottom conductor 114. Magnetic material 108 is then filled into cavity 109 and around and between conductors 114 and 116 to form a closed magnetic loop. In an alternative embodiment, substrate cavity 109 can extend all the way through substrate 102. In an alternative embodiment of the present invention, substrate cavity 109 is not etched. In a further embodiment, substrate 102 is omitted and the multilayer structure is realized by a sequence of magnetic mold applications and conductor lines.
g illustrates embodiment inductor 260 having two layers of conductors 114 and 116. Bottom conductor 114, which is fabricated within substrate 102 prior to substrate etching, is above substrate 102 at a distance d above the bottom of cavity 109, and top conductor 116 is a distance e above the top surface of bottom conductor 114. During processing, material between bottom and top conductor lines 114 and 116 is etched away. Cavity 109 is etched into substrate 102 below bottom conductor line 114. Magnetic material 108 is then filled into cavity 109 and around and between conductors 114 and 116 to form a closed magnetic loop. In an alternative embodiment, substrate cavity 109 can extend all the way through substrate 102. In an alternative embodiment of the present invention, substrate cavity 109 is not etched. In a further embodiment, substrate 102 is omitted and the multilayer structure is realized by a sequence of magnetic mold applications and conductor lines.
a to 3g illustrate cross-sections of different embodiment inductors in which magnetic material is partially filled.
b illustrates embodiment inductor 310 having conductor portions 306 and 304 on substrate 102. Processing is similar to the embodiment shown in
c illustrates embodiment inductor 320 having conductor portion 306 on substrate 102, and conductor portion 304 a distance d above the bottom of cavity 109, which is etched in substrate 102 under conductor portion 304 and not under conductor portion 306. Magnetic material 108 is partially filled so that it surrounds conductor portion 304 and not conductor portion 306. By having conductor portion 306 on substrate 102, the resulting structure is more stable.
d illustrates embodiment inductor 330 having conductor portions 306 and 304 in substrate 102. Processing is similar to the embodiment shown in
e illustrates embodiment inductor 340 having conductor portion 306 in substrate 102, and conductor portion 304 a distance d above the bottom of cavity 109, which is etched in substrate 102 under conductor portion 304 and not under conductor portion 306. Magnetic material 108 is partially filled so that it surrounds conductor portion 304 and not conductor portion 306. By having conductor portion 306 in substrate 102, the resulting structure is more stable.
f illustrates embodiment inductor 350 having two layers of conductors 114 and 116. Bottom conductor 114 is on substrate 102, and top conductor 116 is a distance e above the top surface of bottom conductor 114. During processing, material between bottom and top conductor lines 114 and 116 is etched away. Magnetic material 108 is then filled around and between conductors 114 and 116 to form a closed magnetic loop, but portion 355 above substrate 102 remains uncovered by magnetic material.
g illustrates embodiment inductor 360 having two layers of conductors 114 and 116. Bottom conductor 114 is in substrate 102, and top conductor 116 is a distance e above the top surface of bottom conductor 114 and substrate 102. During processing, material between bottom and top conductor lines 114 and 116 is etched away. Magnetic material 108 is then filled around and between conductors 114 and 116 to form a closed magnetic loop, but portion 355 above substrate 102 remains uncovered by magnetic material.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the area and/or geometric distribution of the magnetic material can be adjusted during the application of the magnetic material to trim or to adjust the inductance of the resultant inductor. For example, a higher inductance can be achieved if a larger percentage of the conductor is surrounded by the magnetic material. Likewise, a lower inductance can be achieved by surrounding a lower percentage of the conductor with magnetic material.
a-4e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 410 of the present invention.
e illustrates a plan view of inductor 410, where line x represents the location at which the cross-sectional diagrams of
a-5e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 420.
e illustrates a plan view of inductor 420, where line x represents the location at which the cross-sectional diagrams of
a-6e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 430.
a-7d illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 440.
a-8e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 450 of the present invention.
a-9f illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 460 of the present invention.
e illustrates a plan view of inductor 460, where line x represents the location at which the cross-sectional diagrams of
a-10e illustrate cross-sectional diagrams and a plan view diagram showing fabrication of an embodiment inductor 470.
e illustrates a plan view of inductor 470, where line x represents the location at which the cross-sectional diagrams of
a-11c illustrate plan view examples of embodiment conductor shapes and magnetic material geometric distribution.
In an embodiment, inductor 1200 is fabricated using existing packaging machinery and processes known in the art, and replacing existing molding compounds used in packaging with magnetic material such as CoZrTa, CoFeHfO, CoAlO, FeSiO, CoFeAlO, CoNbTa, CoZr, and other amorphous cobalt alloys, NiMoFe, Nife, NiZn or other nickel alloys, FeSiO, FeCuNbSiB or other iron alloys, MnZn or other manganese alloys.
a and 13b illustrate an embodiment inductor 1300.
Using a TSV approach provides low ohmic and low inductance contacts from top to bottom. In an embodiment of the present invention, the TSV is not contacted on the back side of substrate 1302, but is used to provide a vertically integrated copper line. By using a TSV approach, a low cross sectional area and high edge ratio can provide high current capability and low ohmic inductors on a very small area.
Advantages of particular embodiments include having a high cross-sectional area of the magnetic material in the inductor core to avoid magnetic saturation. Such a high cross-sectional area allows for high inductance per unit board space. Furthermore, for embodiments that provide the application of magnetic material in late stage of process after the conductor is formed, the formation of the conductor itself poses no contamination issues with respect to the magnetic material. Furthermore a seamless magnetic material having a low magnetic resistance is achievable in some embodiments that apply the magnetic material in a single step.
In embodiments of the present invention, inductors can be integrated with other passive components like capacitors, resistors as fabricated by typical semiconductor processes, as well as easy monolithic integration with active devices such as ESD-protection elements, diodes or transistors. For example,
Some embodiments of the present invention provide higher inductance values at low series resistance compared to conventional chip inductors. Furthermore, some embodiments, fabrication is more cost effective due to the use of parallel process of many devices on one substrate. Embodiments also offer easy and cost effective application of magnetic material even in complicated geometries by using fill process, such as printing, injection or other methods.
In embodiments, dual use of mold material is possible. For example using magnetic material in a packaging process offers standard protection and handling support as well as providing for a closed magnetic loop. For compact and an inexpensive integration, many wafer level packing (WLP) and system in a package (SiP) assembly techniques are available for embodiments of the present invention. In some embodiments, no patterning of magnetic material is necessary because geometry is given by before formed cavities.
In embodiments of the present invention that do not require a baking step for the magnetic material, the process is compatible with many integrated circuit processes because the substrate is not exposed to high temperatures.
It will also be readily understood by those skilled in the art that materials and methods may be varied while remaining within the scope of the present invention. It is also appreciated that the present invention provides many applicable inventive concepts other than the specific contexts used to illustrate embodiments. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps.
This is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/686,164, “System and Method for Integrated Inductor,” which was filed on Jan. 12, 2010, and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 12686164 | Jan 2010 | US |
| Child | 13888185 | US |