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Electroplated Compliant High-Density Interconnects For Next-Generation Microelectronic Packaging

Dramatic advances are taking place in the microelectronic industry. The feature size continues to scale down and it is expected that the minimum feature size on the integrated circuit is expected to reach 9 nm by 2016, and there will be more than 8 billion transistors on a 310 cm² chip, according to various available roadmaps. Subsequently, this reduction in feature size would require the first-level input-output interconnects to decrease in pitch size to meet the increased number of transistors on the chip. Also, to minimize the on-chip interconnect delay, development of low-K dielectric/copper will become increasingly common in future devices. However, due to the low fracture strength of low-K dielectric, it is essential that the first-level interconnects exert minimal force on the die pads and therefore, do not crack or delaminate the low-K dielectric material. It is also preferable to have a wafer-level packaging approach to facilitate test-and-burn in and to produce known-good dies. Based on these growing demands from the microelectronics industry, there is a compelling need to develop innovative interconnect technologies.
This thesis aims to develop one such innovative interconnect — G-Helix interconnect. G-Helix is a scalable lithography-based wafer-level electroplated compliant interconnect that has the potential to meet the fine-pitch first-level chip-to-substrate interconnect requirements. The three-mask fabrication of G-Helix is based on lithography, electroplating and molding (LIGA-like) technologies, and this fabrication can be easily integrated into large-area wafer-level fine-pitch batch processing. In this work, the fabrication, assembly, experimental reliability testing, and numerical physics-based modeling of the G-Helix interconnects will be presented.
The fabrication of the interconnects will be demonstrated at 100μm pitch on a 20 x 20 mm die in a class 10/1000 cleanroom facility. The wafers with compliant interconnects will be singulated into individual dies and assembled on substrates using Pb/Sn eutectic solder. The assembly will then be subjected to air-to-air thermal cycling between 0℃and 100℃ and the reliability of the compliant interconnect will be assessed. In addition to the thermo-mechanical reliability testing, some of the dies with free-standing interconnects will also be used for measuring the compliance of the interconnects by compressing with a nanoindenter. In parallel to the experimental research, a numerical analysis study will also be carried out. The numerical model will use direction-, temperature, time-dependent, and time independent material constitutive properties as appropriate. The thermo-mechanical fatigue life of the compliant interconnect assembly will be determined and compared with the experimental data. Recommendations will be developed for further enhancement of reliability and reduction in pitch size.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/4778
Date20 August 2004
CreatorsLo, George Chih-Yu
PublisherGeorgia Institute of Technology
Source SetsGeorgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format5529875 bytes, application/pdf

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