The present invention relates to MEMS engineering and in particular to providing thin capping structures made of highly resistive materials such as glass, having substrate (wafer) through inter-connects (vias).
For RF (Radio Frequency) applications in MEMS structures and devices the dielectric properties of the support structures are of great importance, and it is desirable to eliminate “cross-talk” between neighbouring components or elements on chips or wafers on which the components in question are provided. Also the permeability constant is an important factor that controls coupling between substrate and components.
The most commonly used material for building MEMS structures and devices is silicon, which is a material having a comparatively high dielectric constant.
However, most often the silicon is doped in order to increase conductivity and thus, the conductivity will contribute to negative effects, such as increased losses and non-linearity effects.
Stray capacitances are the most important negative factor in both RF applications and in capacitive measurements, and traditional silicon processing will inherently cause such problems.
Applicants own Swedish patent application No. 1251236-4 relates to a method of making metal vias in a glass substrate.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company has presented a method of making a glass interposer having metallized vias at International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) 2013, Dec. 9 to 11, 2013, in Washington, D.C. (lecture number: 13.4).
In view of the drawbacks in using silicon in the above discussed applications, the inventor has devised a new structure based on highly resistive materials, such as glass, as the base material for the structure, and methods for making the necessary features of the new structure. The advantage of the method according to the invention is that the cap can be made very thin.
Specifically, there is disclosed a method of making a micro-device with a capping structure, comprising the steps of providing a base substrate on which there is a micro-electronic and/or micro-mechanic component attached or integrated; providing a cap substrate of a glass material, i.e. a non-crystalline (i.e. amorphous) material and that exhibits a glass transition when heated towards the liquid state, preferably a material selected from borofloat glasses, quartz, metallic alloys, ionic melts, AlOx, and polymers; making micro-depressions in said cap substrate to a predetermined depth; metallizing the depressions in the cap substrate; providing electrical connection through the cap substrate; bonding together the base substrate and the cap substrate, such that there is an electrical contact between the component on the base substrate and the metallized depressions in the cap substrate. The material in the cap wafer should gave a CTE (Coefficient of Thermal Expansion) matching the other wafer, in order to avoid thermal mis-match and mechanical stress issues.
The base substrate is suitably bonded to the cap substrate on the side where optionally the micro-depressions are made, after the metallization of the micro-depressions, but before the electrical connection through the cap substrate is made. Alternatively, the base substrate is bonded to the cap substrate on the side opposite from where the micro-depressions are made, after the metallization of the micro-depressions, and after the electrical connection through the cap substrate is made.
The provision of electrical connections preferably comprises thinning the cap substrate on the opposite side from where the micro-depressions are made and exposing the metal in the micro-depressions. The thinning can be stopped before the metal is exposed and making openings to expose the metal, and metallizing the openings to provide contact and to hermetically seal the through connection.
The method suitably also comprises making the micro-depressions by stamping or pressing a plurality of needles protruding from a support wafer, into the glass wafer under heating and pressure. The needles are removed together with their support wafer immediately after the depressions are made so as to leave holes in the glass. Alternatively, the metal/metallized needles are left in the glass material after the depressions and only the support wafer is removed so as to leave metal filled or partly filled holes in the glass.
There is also disclosed a device comprising a base substrate with a micro component attached thereto; routing elements for conducting signals to and from said component; spacer members which also can act as conducting structures for routing signals vertically; a capping structure of a glass material, provided above the base substrate, bonded via said spacer members, preferably by TC (Thermo Compression) or eutectic bonding, wherein the capping structure comprises vias comprising metal for providing electrical connection through said capping structure. The component is preferably a MEMS or CMOS component.
Further embodiments are defined in the dependent claims.
For the purpose of this application and invention the term “glass” should be interpreted broadly, and is defined in a wide sense, including beside traditional silica glasses, every solid that possesses a non-crystalline (i.e. amorphous) structure and that exhibits a glass transition when heated towards the liquid state. In this wider sense, glasses can be made of quite different classes of materials: borofloat glasses, quartz, metallic alloys, AlOx, and polymers.
Also, when the term “substrate” is used it should be taken to encompass entire wafers, as the term is known in the semiconductor industry, as well as other kinds of structures of different sizes that can be processed as described herein.
For certain aspects and applications so called borofloat glasses are suitable, for other applications quartz materials are preferred.
An important property of the material for RF applications is that it be highly resistive and that it exhibits a low dielectric constant.
In
There are further bonding structures 18 shown which form substrate-to-substrate electrical interconnects and which also can act as support structures and/or spacer structures for the device.
The capping structure 20 is a glass substrate (wafer) (as defined herein above) having electrical through connections 22, referred to as vias herein, essentially being recesses or holes extending through the glass substrate. Examples of the fabrication of these vias will be disclosed in detail below. The vias have a metal coating 24 on the inner walls thereof which is connected to fan in/fan out wires to contact pads 26 on the upper surface (as seen in the figure) of the glass substrate 20.
The thickness of the final capping substrate structure as shown can be as low as 30 μm although 50-100 μm is preferred, which hitherto has been unattainable in the prior art.
In general, a device made according to the invention comprises the provision of a capping substrate having through connections referred to as vias. The vias themselves can be made in several ways, and the methods for making vias are not part of the inventive concept as such although some of the methods are regarded as inventive per se.
Thus, in
A substrate, suitably a wafer, 200 of a glass material (as defined herein above) is provided, for making a cap,
The walls in the holes are metallized 206 by any suitable method such as plating, ink-jet printing, evaporation, sputtering or a combination of these methods, see
Now there are two options available for the continued processing.
The first option is to provide a component substrate 204,
Again, within this option, two further options exist—either the glass cap substrate can be thinned down further than shown in
The process of making the openings 208 is described in some further detail below in connection with a specific embodiment,
As mentioned, alternatively the thinning can be made all the way down to the metal in the vias, which requires that the depth of the vias are very accurately defined, which can be difficult to achieve.
Going back to the alternative after the step in
In one embodiment for making the holes by using needles (to be described below) this temporary carrier will be automatically be provided by the process. Otherwise, if e.g. drilling or etching is used for making the holes, a real temporary carrier 211, as shown in
In a still further embodiment a stamping or pressing procedure using needles is used for providing the cap substrate with vias, schematically illustrated in
Thus, as shown in
Now a component MEMS or semiconductor substrate 200 is bonded to the cap substrate 204. After bonding of the component substrate 204 the silicon material, i.e. the substrate 200 with its needles 214 is etched away leaving a structure shown in
In the next step,
In an alternative embodiment the needles 214 can be metallized before the matrix is pressed into the glass substrate (not shown). Thus, the metal on the needles will remain in the holes when the silicon is selectively etched away after the needles have been pressed into the glass substrate. In this embodiment then no separate metallization of the via holes will be required.
However, the end result will be identical to the structure in
Alternatively, only the needle carrier material is etched away and the needles themselves remain in the holes (not shown). This can be advantageous from a processing point of view since the resulting wafer is essentially planar, and there are no voids which could cause processing issues.
One embodiment of the method according to the invention for making a device is described with reference to the process sequence illustrated in
In
A glass substrate 304, thickness a 300-500 μm is provided having suitable softening properties at elevated temperatures, and the needles are pressed or stamped into this glass substrate at a temperature of about 650° C. and under a force (>10 kN), see
When the needles have been pressed down in the glass the carrier can be removed simply by breaking off, and then the needles 302 remaining in the glass are etched away. Possibly the entire structure, i.e. substrate and needles, is etched away.
If a stamping method is used the needles are just pressed into the glass and thereafter directly separated from the glass in the same process, thereby leaving depressions 306 in the glass. Thereby there is no need to remove any residual silicon in a following process step.
If silicon needs to be removed this is suitably done by TMAH/KOH/grinding/lapping or combinations thereof to yield a structure as the one shown in
Next, as shown in
The structure shown in
Next, see
Ni/Au pads for contact and seal ring are also made with methods well known to the skilled man. The structure in
The intermediate capping structure from
Using heat and pressure the two structures are bonded together by eutectic or TC bonds, or combinations of these, by virtue of the bonding materials provided on each structure.
However, as already indicated above, it should be noted that other bonding methods such as thermo compression or soldering can be used as well. Such methods are described in applicants own WO 2010/059118, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Briefly, typically bonding of the capping structure to another substrate is achieved by thermo compression, or soldering, and bond pads must be provided.
In particular it is also required that there be provided sealing structures so as to enable the capping to provide a hermetic sealing of components inside the capping.
To achieve this, the wafer is covered with a resist film on the front side applied by for example lamination, and holes and areas are opened up to provide a mask defining the bond pads/bonding/sealing structures. Then, stacked metal layer structures are applied through the mask by e.g. electroplating. Suitably the structure is made up of a first layer of Ni, a second layer of Au and a final layer of Sn, but also other solder alloys such as AgSn, CuSn, AgCuSn, PbSn to mention a few, are possible.
By the method disclosed above a hermetic seal of the wafer through via is ascertained.
The glass substrate 304 is thinned down by grinding and/or etching to expose the metal 308 in the depressions 306. By suitable masking and plating further contacts 314 are provided on the glass capping, forming a structure as shown in
However, in general it is very difficult to control the depth of the vias, and consequently the grinding to expose the metal, as described above, is not always possible since some vias will be exposed before others. Therefore, alternatively the glass can be thinned down only to the extent that 10-30 μm of the glass material is left above the vias, see
In the process of making the depressions by pressing needles into the glass material, as in
This effect may cause problem in subsequent processing, such as the metallizing and bonding steps to follow where planarity is a desired property. Therefore, in preferred embodiments, the substrate is pre-processed to provide recesses 318 in the substrate, see
This is illustrated in
As an alternative to the stamping or pressing methods described above, the holes can also be made using other techniques, in particular where the material in the capping structure (for example quartz and alkali free glass) is not so easily softened by heating as the traditional glass materials.
Lithography, i.e. masking end etching are standard methods in MEMS and semi-conductor engineering, and the skilled man would be able to design appropriate set-ups for creating holes in selected capping substrate materials, the holes having the desired dimensions (diameter, depth, pitch) to suit the present invention.
Blasting, milling, (laser) drilling and EDM (Electro Discharge Machining) techniques are also possible to employ.
Thus, generally a device can comprise a base substrate 700 with some component 702, e.g. MEMS or CMOS component, attached thereto. There are routing elements 704 for conducting signals to and from said component 702. Inner and outer spacer members 706, 707, respectively, are provided which also can act as conducting structures for routing signals vertically. Suitably the outer spacer members 707 form an enclosure for sealing purposes, i.e. they form a closed loop around the component 702, and the inner spacer members 706 serve for electrical connection, and can therefore be provided in form of pillars or the like. Above the base substrate 700 there is provided a capping structure 708 of glass, bonded via said spacer members 706, 707 preferably by eutectic bonding, as discussed above.
The spacers 706, 707 provide a finite and well defined distance between base substrate and capping.
Some of the spacers can be actual rigid elements that defines a predetermined height. Other members, as indicated above suitably the outer members 707, can be used as sealing elements in which case they surround the component 702 to form a sealed cavity, and need not necessarily be rigid themselves, but then rely on other spacers to define the height.
The capping structure 708 comprises vias 710 comprising metal for providing electrical connection through said capping structure, and contact pads 712 connected to the metal in the vias.
In
This feature, i.e. of providing recesses in the substrates is usable in all embodiments of the present invention, and the recess can be provided in the base substrate, in the cap substrate or in both, which is illustrated in
Thus, in
In
The components 802 can be integrated or discrete components, both MEMS and CMOS structures (mechanical, electrical (IC), optical (laser, LED etc.).
In a further embodiment, there is provided a feature that simplifies processing.
Namely, the glass capping being extremely thin in the finished structure, it will be difficult to process it further. For example the provision of contact pads and/or redistribution layers (RDL) requires lithography, etching etcetera, which exposes the structure to great risk of being damaged. It would be beneficial to be able to refrain from post processing of this kind.
Therefore, the invention provides a method for making such contacts/RDLs before the glass via wafer is bonded to the component wafer, whereby the contact pads will be recessed in the final product. This will now be described with reference to
As can be seen in
In fact, the pads/RDLs 1018 are made before even a carrier wafer 1002 is attached to the glass wafer 1000 and before the vias are made. This will now be described with reference to
Thus, a glass wafer 1000 is masked and etched to provide depressions 1011, as shown in
Again suitable masking is made and the bottoms of the depressions are electroplated to provide the desired metal contacts 1018.
Now the glass wafer 1000 is bonded to a carrier wafer 1002 as shown in
Now the component wafer is bonded to the structure in
One embodiment of the invention will be now described in the form of an example.
A glass wafer 900 is bonded to a carrier wafer of silicon 902. The glass wafer could be a standard glass wafer, typically 400-600 μm thick which is thinned down by grinding and CMP to about 100 μm (50-200 μm) after bonding to the carrier 902. Alternatively, a thin glass wafer (50-200 μm) can be used to bond to the carrier.
Via holes 904, with diameter 50-100 μm, are made (e.g. by dry or wet etching) in the glass wafer 900, either down to a predetermined depth, i.e. stopping within the glass (blind via, as shown in the figure) or through the entire thickness of the glass, using the carrier 902 as stopping layer,
A seed layer, 0.01-1 μm, preferably 0.1 μm thick, (not shown) is sputtered or evaporated onto the glass wafer 900 and the vias are subsequently metallized 906 using electroplating with a mask defined by photo lithography. The metal thickness is 5-10 μm and creates a metal liner 908 in the via (not filled).
As shown in
Wafers are aligned and bonded using thermo compression bonding, see
The component (base) wafer 910 is a glass wafer thicker than 300 μm, i.e. thick enough to handle without carrier.
The silicon carrier 902 is removed from the via wafer 900 after bonding by grinding and etching,
The glass is etched to reveal the Vias.
A seed layer is sputtered and pads 918 and RDL (redistribution layers) are formed by electroplating 3-5 μm Au, giving the final structure shown in
Optionally a final grinding/thinning step could be applied to thin down also the wafer 910 to 100-200 μm range for certain applications requiring low chip heights.
In an alternative embodiment the via holes 904 are made as in
The wafers are diced to singulate multiple single components out from the wafers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1350972 | Aug 2013 | SE | national |
1350980 | Aug 2013 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/SE2014/050973 | 8/26/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/030657 | 3/5/2015 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160207758 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |