The described embodiments relate to a substrate involving many through-substrate, power-conducting, capacitive vias.
Large high-speed integrated circuits (ICs) often require decoupling capacitors (also known as bypass capacitors). A typical decoupling capacitor is a capacitor coupled between the power and ground terminals (for example, pins) of a packaged IC to reduce noise on the power system within the IC. While in some cases the IC itself includes some decoupling capacitance, the amount of capacitance required is so large that one or more additional discrete decoupling capacitors are usually added external to the packaged IC. When a typical large state-of-the-art Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) is mounted on a printed circuit board (PCB) or other suitable substrate, some sixty bypass capacitors may be required. With space on the PCB or substrate being limited, it can be difficult to find the room needed for all the discrete bypass capacitors.
In the past, the location of discrete decoupling capacitors was a less important issue. The switching frequency of digital integrated circuits was relatively low, e.g., in the range of hundreds of kHz (kilohertz) to tens of MHz (megahertz). Transient currents within the devices were also relatively low. Hence, parasitic inductance in the PCB mountings was not an important consideration. For example, for an IC mounted in a medium-performance package, a 0.1 uF (microfarad) decoupling capacitor could typically be mounted on the PCB anywhere within a few inches of the packaged IC.
Many digital ICs are now clocked at frequencies in the hundreds of megahertz. At these higher frequencies, transient currents are significantly higher than in the past, and parasitic inductance is a much more important issue. It is therefore desirable to provide systems and structures that provide decoupling capacitance to IC devices with reduced parasitic inductance between the bypass capacitance and the IC. It is further desirable to reduce the space consumed by the bypass capacitance.
Large state-of-the-art integrated circuits “IC's” may contain several million active components. One type of device fitting this description is the large FPGA. FPGAs and other devices may operate at speeds of several hundred megahertz and it is not unusual that these integrated circuits include over a thousand terminals that bring high-speed signals into and out of the integrated circuit die. With a large number of active internal components switching at high speeds, these devices consume large amounts of power. A packaging solution is therefore desired that allows for the distribution of hundreds of high-speed signal lines and also provides for thousands of connections to supply power to the device. To solve this problem for a single FPGA, IC designers have used a technique wherein thousands of “bumps” are distributed over the surface of a flip-chip mounted FPGA. It would not be unusual to have two thousand bumps for power and another two thousand for ground. The large number of bumps reserved for power ensures only a minimal resistive drop from the surface of the device to the active devices within the FPGA.
In one example, the power and signal connections extend from the bumps present on the surface of the FPGA to balls of a ball-grid-array “BGA” package that contains the FPDA die. A BGA package utilized for packaging such a large FPGA may have approximately fifteen hundred balls; one thousand for input and output “I/O” connections and five hundred for power and ground connections. Power is supplied from the balls of the BGA package, through thick metal conductors within the package, and to the bumps present on the surface of the FPGA.
The bumped FPGA construction and BGA package is adequate to power and to connect a single FPGA to a substrate, but it is not generally adequate to power and connect a system of many FPGAs. The problems associated with the large number of signals and the high power requirements of a single FPGA are multiplied when several FPGA devices are required in a single system. In this case, many thick and wide conductors may be needed for power connections while many minimum width conductors may be desirable for routing high speed input and output signals. Thus a larger substrate is often needed for the increased routing requirements while the area needed for routing all of these signals should be minimized for the highest possible system performance.
Rather than using a PCB as the substrate upon which the FPGAs are mounted, a large portion of a silicon wafer can be used as the substrate. Even with the use of such a silicon substrate, multiple layers with multiple cross-overs are used to route the large number of signals and power. The addition of multiple layers to allow for the requisite signal density further decreases performance and increases fabrication costs.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,221,769 discusses a method to decrease the density of signal lines and increase performance by creating a semiconductor chip package having a silicon substrate with substrate vias for connecting to a power source and other electronic devices. A plurality of integrated circuit dice is connected to multilevel wiring layer using die bonding bumps. Power is routed from integrated circuit die through die bonding bumps through the multilevel wiring layer and to the bonding balls through substrate vias.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,379,982 discusses a semiconductor wafer-on-wafer package which is shown in
While the prior art drawing of
A plurality of FPGA dice or other components is disposed upon a novel substrate structure. In order to 1) connect thousands of interconnect lines between the FPGA die, and 2) supply the immense amount of power required for these types of devices, the novel substrate structure includes a semiconductor substrate including an amount of single-crystal semiconductor material. The novel substrate structure includes many conductive vias as well as thick conductor layers. The vias are approximately twenty-five microns or greater in diameter, and are at least two hundred fifty microns long. These vias are used to electrically couple thick conductors on the bottom surface of the semiconductor substrate to other thick conductors on the other side of the semiconductor substrate (disposed in multiple layers below the plurality of FPGA dice). The thickness of the semiconductor substrate is at least two hundred fifty microns and is preferably approximately five hundred microns.
Each via includes a first metal tube, and a second metal tube of a smaller diameter disposed inside of and coaxially with respect to the first metal tube. A thin layer of dielectric separates the first and second coaxial metal tubes such that the tubes and dielectric layer form a cylindrical capacitor structure. In one example, each via has a capacitance of approximately one to two picofarads. The dielectric material can be a high-K dielectric. The many capacitive vias are disposed uniformly across the semiconductor substrate at a high density similar to the high density of power bumps present on FPGA dice mounted in flip-chip fashion to the semiconductor substrate. In one example, the via density is approximately 60,000 vias per square inch of semiconductor substrate. The novel capacitive vias provide approximately 0.1 microfarads of bypass capacitance per square centimeter of substrate area (about 0.6 microfarads per square inch), and additional bypass capacitance is provided due to parallel plate capacitance in metallization layers at the upper surface of the substrate structure. In an example in which the semiconductor substrate is at least one inch wide, and at least two inches long, the many vias provide a combined bypass capacitance of at least 1.2 microfarads.
The capacitive vias provide many power and ground connections that extend vertically through the semiconductor substrate and down into laterally extending thick strip-like conductors. The laterally extending thick strip-like conductors disposed on the underside of the semiconductor substrate are two microns or more in thickness. Power and ground current paths traverse a minimal lateral distance on the underside of the substrate structure before extending vertically through vias to the upper surface of the semiconductor substrate and to FPGA die-bonding bumps disposed upon the upper surface of the substrate structure. These die-bonding bumps are arrayed to match the corresponding array of lands present on the face side of the particular FPGAs to be attached to the substrate structure. Alternatively, the FPGA die may be have die-bonding bumps that match up with lands on the upper surface of the substrate structure.
On the underside of the novel substrate structure, coupled to the thick strip-like conductors, is a set of bus bar structures that corresponds to the set of strip-like thick conductors. Some bus bars are used to supply a supply voltage and are referred to as “power bus bars”. Other bus bars are used to provide grounding and are referred to as “ground bus bars”. These bus bars are made of solid copper or a similar conductive material and are approximately 1.5 millimeters high by 1.5 millimeters wide. There are ten or so of these bus bars and each bus bar spans the entire width of the semiconductor substrate. Each copper bus bar is coupled by a hundred or more local vertically-extending vias up to the footprint area of each FPGA on the upper surface of the substrate structure such that the IR drop between the bus bar and the FPGA is less than approximately twenty to thirty millivolts. This small amount of voltage loss can be compensated for by a similar increase in the supply voltage supplied between the power bus bars and the ground bus bars.
During operation of the semiconductor device (operation of the FPGAs on top of the substrate structure), expansion and contraction caused by rapid heating to a high temperature and subsequent cooling may stress the power connection structure at the junctions of different materials. The vertical vias also serve to reduce stress at the junctions of the copper plane and semiconductor material by riveting the copper plane to the semiconductor substrate at thousands of locations.
In one example, the novel substrate structure having the many capacitive vias is formed by the following method. A first oxide layer (for example, thermal oxide) is formed on the second surface of a planar semiconductor substrate. At least two parallel spaced apart through-holes are formed in the substrate, each through-hole extending from the first planar surface of the substrate, through the substrate, and to the second planar surface of the substrate. A first layer of conductive material is deposited on the surfaces inside the through-holes and on the first planar surface of the semiconductor substrate. A first layer of dielectric (for example, high-K dielectric) is deposited on the surfaces inside the through-holes and on the first planar surface of the semiconductor substrate. A second layer of conductive material is deposited on the surfaces inside the through-holes and on the first planar surface of the semiconductor substrate. A first opening is formed through the second relatively thick layer of electroplated copper. The through-holes are filled with a dielectric having a coefficient of thermal expansion that matches the coefficient of thermal expansion of the semiconductor substrate (dcte) as closely as possible. A second layer is also deposited on the first planar surface and the exposed surfaces of the first opening.
A second opening is formed through the dcte. A third opening is formed through the dcte in the first opening to the first layer of conductive material. A third layer of conductive material is deposited on the surfaces inside the second and third openings and on the first planar surface of the semiconductor substrate. Portions of the third layer of conductive material are removed leaving disconnected portions of conductive material over the first opening and the second opening. A fourth opening to the first through-hole is formed through the first thermal oxide on a second surface of the planar semiconductor substrate. A portion of the second layer of conductive material is removed from the end of the through-hole in the fourth opening.
A second oxide layer is deposited in the exposed surfaces in the fourth opening and on the first oxide layer on the second surface of the planar semiconductor substrate. A fifth opening in the second oxide layer is formed in the fourth opening to the second layer of electroplated copper. A sixth opening is formed in the first and second oxide layers to the first layer of conductive material in the end of the second through-hole. A fourth layer of conductive material is deposited on the surfaces inside the fifth and sixth openings and on the second planar surface of the semiconductor substrate. Portions of the fourth layer of conductive material are removed to leave disconnected first power and second power portions of conductive material over the fifth opening and the sixth opening.
Further details, embodiments and techniques are described in the detailed description below. This summary does not purport to define the invention. The invention is defined by the claims.
The accompanying drawings, where like numerals indicate like components, illustrate embodiments of the invention.
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The strip-like laterally-extending thick conductors 304 and 307 are approximately two microns or more in thickness. Power and ground current paths traverse a minimal lateral distance on bottom surface 308 before they extend vertically up through the semiconductor substrate and to the upper surface of the semiconductor substrate to FPGA die-bonding bumps (not shown) disposed upon the surface of the semiconductor substrate. These die bonding bumps are arrayed to match the corresponding array of lands (not shown) present on the particular FPGAs to be attached to the semiconductor substrate.
Contacting the thick strip-like conductors 304 and 307 on the underside of the semiconductor substrate is a plurality of bus bar structures 320 and 322 (only two bus bars are shown in the illustration of
In order to reduce the space needed on the substrate for bypass capacitors and to reduce parasitic inductance, a substrate structure (see
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Although certain specific embodiments are described above for instructional purposes, the teachings of this patent document have general applicability and are not limited to the specific embodiments described above. Although an example is described above where bare FPGA integrated circuit dice are surface mounted to a substrate structure, in other embodiments packaged FPGA integrated circuits are attached to the substrate structure. Although a capacitive via is described above that conducts substantial current through only one of its two coaxial metal tubes, other vias may conduct current one way through one of metal tubes and may conduct current the other way through the other metal tube of the via. Accordingly, various modifications, adaptations, and combinations of various features of the described embodiments can be practiced without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the claims.