This is the latest in a series of flip chip tutorials intended for new flip chip users and potential users. Tutorial #1 presented the basics: an overview of what flip chip is and does, and how it is made. Further tutorials, also found in the Archives, explain the topics in more detail. Concurrently, FlipChips Dot Com’s Technology Updates present industry experts describing the newest developments in their fields; our Literature and Photo pages give supplemental material.
As semiconductor fabrication has advanced
inexorably to the beat of Moore’s drum, low power VLSI circuits containing
large numbers of signal processing channels have become increasingly available.
Concurrently, solid state detector fabrication, following the same parade, has
produced increasingly larger and denser arrays of segmented detectors. The
marriage of these two technologies in a functioning high channel count high
performance detector depends on one more element: a suitable interconnection
technology.
That technology must meet some rigorous
requirements. The interconnections must be physically small, to accommodate
closely spaced detectors while minimizing the non-active detector area
sacrificed to interconnections. The interconnections must be inexpensive,
because the exponential growth in the number of detector channels cannot, in
the practical world, be accompanied by a similar exponential growth in cost.
The interconnections must facilitate high speed signal transmission, to
maintain system speed. They must be reliable, with high connection yield in
large arrays. They must be rugged, to withstand harsh environments such as in spacecraft.
They must be of materials compatible with the detectors and not incompatible
with the detectees. Finally, the interconnection process must be gentle,
because some high performance detector materials are soft, brittle, or
intolerant of elevated temperatures.
Flip chip interconnection is a natural
solution for this difficult task. It is the smallest interconnection method,
wasting the least possible area. By eliminating the inductance of bond wires,
flip chip offers the highest speed interconnection. Flip chip is inherently
rugged, with no bond wires flailing about under vibration. Flip chip allows,
no, encourages area, rather than peripheral, interconnection. Flip chip is
potentially the lowest cost interconnection, especially in large arrays. However,
there are many varieties of flip chip interconnection, and not all are equally
well suited to detector arrays.
Solder bump flip chip in its various
mutations has the longest production history and the most impressive
reliability data. However, solder has clear disadvantages in this application.
Conventional solder bumps cannot offer the required fine spacing, because of
the bridging proclivities, the urge to merge, of molten closely spaced blobs of
solder. Solder processing temperatures are too high for thermally intolerant
detectors. Lead is an excellent shielding material, absorbing x-rays and
screening out particles, while contributing a few alpha particle emissions of
its own, making it not a good neighbor in most X-ray and particle detectors.
Indium bump flip chip has a long and
checkered history in detector applications. Indium is commonly used, but many
of the users swear at it, rather than swear by it. Indium bumping offers the
worst of both worlds: high cost and high temperature processing. Sensitive
detector surfaces such as Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CdZnTe) may be damaged by
indium bumping, and processing temperatures are higher than the 125 C maximum desired for these materials.
The stud bump flip chip process also has the
advantage of being chip-based, rather than wafer based, so that signal
processors may be obtained, bumped, and used in only the needed quantities, a
considerable cost saving.1 The stud bump assembly procedure also
allows testing for "known good die" in the actual circuit, the best
place to seek such animals, and easily replacing "found bad die" if
needed.
Seller reported on the construction and
performance of a 256 pixel high energy X-ray silicon 16x16 detector array
fabricated with gold stud bump adhesive flip chip.2 The array
comprised a silicon detector chip with 256 detectors individually
interconnected by stud gold bumps to the signal processor chip.
The processor chip has 256 aluminum bond pads
measuring 50 by 115 microns. Connection was through a gold stud bump on each of
these pads, using 100 micron diameter gold-palladium wire in a Hughes 2460 wire
bonder. Figure 1 shows a portion of the stud bump array on the
electronics chip. Note that the stud bumps fit well within the pad boundaries.
The wire tails show height variations that are well within the acceptable
range.
The detector chips had larger pads than the
processor chip, more than adequate for precision stenciling of the conductive
mounting adhesive to connect each pixel of the gold stud bumped chip to the processor.
However, the detector chips are fabricated with the aluminum metallization
typical of semiconductor processing. While the gold stud bump penetrates the
aluminum oxide on the electronics chip,
it cannot, without application of considerable heat and pressure, also
penetrate the aluminum oxide on the detector chip pads. These pads instead were
first treated with an under-bump remetalization, applied by Pac Tech.
The remetalization was by the zincate process
described elsewhere in the literature.3 A layer of zinc seed
crystals replace the aluminum oxide, and serve as a base for plated nickel. A
flash of electroless gold provides the frosting for this nickel cake. The gold
provides a suitably conductive surface for stenciling the conductive mounting adhesive
to the gold stud bumps. The stud bumps were aligned to the detector pads and
joined in an SEC 810 Flip Chip bonder. The adhesive was Alpha Metals
Polysolder, and the underfill Alpha EL-18.
Note that the adhesive is uncured on
assembly, and does not comprise part of the bumping process. The conductive
adhesive layer is component attach for the gold stud bump. Depending on the
assembly method used, the electrical contact may be gold to gold, with little
or no adhesive remaining between the stud bump and substrate.
Protein Crystallography
Detector Array
A second detector array extended this process
to smaller dimensions. The 16x16 pixel detector array is a scaling up of an
earlier 8x8 array.4 Figure 2 shows a portion of the bond pads
for the array. In this case, the aluminum pads are smaller than for the array
described above. Pad size is 50 microns square, and the pad spacing is
asymmetric, 150 microns by 105 microns.
Figure 3 shows gold stud bumps placed on these pads. As shown, the bump extends
beyond the pad opening, onto the glassivation. This has not caused any
electrical problems. However, the closer spacing of pads caused some
interference by the bonder capillary with the first stud bump when placing the
adjacent stud bump. A special capillary was required to place satisfactory stud
bumps. Figure 4 shows a portion of the resulting stud bump array.
EXTENSIONS
There are a growing number of applications
that would benefit from multi-channel close spaced detector arrays. In addition
to those described above, we have found opportunities in nuclear medicine,
medical imaging, and high energy astrophysics.
In astrophysics, NASA has stated needs for
double sided fine pitch (100 micron to 0.5mm) silicon strip x-ray and gamma-ray
detectors, high resolution germanium strip detectors, and Cadmium Zinc
Telluride detector arrays with 500 micron pixel sizes. Applications include
focal plane pixel arrays for hard x-ray telescopes, strip detectors for hard
x-ray coded aperture telescopes, and strip detectors for particle trackers.
The key spacing limitations on the stud bump
arrays described above naturally divide into those of fabricating smaller bumps
on closer pitches, and those of dispensing adhesive onto these smaller bumps.
The present limits were set by wire bonding and stenciling capabilities.
The bumps described above were placed with
the Hughes 2460, a machine several generations older than current bonders. The
105 micron bump pitch is close to the limits of this machine, but current
machines can achieve finer pitches. Newer wire bonders have demonstrated ball
bond pitches below 50 microns . This has the potential to greatly increase
array density.
Similarly, adhesive dispensing by stencil
appears to be approaching its limit in the 50 micron region. However, higher
density may be obtained with adhesive dispensed by the dipping process.5 In
this method, a thin layer of adhesive is doctor bladed onto a flat surface, and
the stud bumps are dipped into it.
Dipped adhesive coats only the bump itself, not extending outwards onto
the pad.
Flip chip with gold stud bumps and conductive
adhesive has been shown to be a practical interconnection technique for
detector arrays. It offers advantages over both Indium bump and solder bump
flip chip interconnection, especially with temperature-limited detector
materials. The approach is capable of extension to the finer detector spacing
and larger arrays required by a growing variety of applications.
REFERENCES
This tutorial is a revision of "Flip Chip Interconnection of Detector
Arrays, " Proceedings of IPS/SMTA
Electronics Assembly Expo, October, 1998, pp. S18-3-1
to S18-3-4.
[1] G. Riley, "Bump, Dip, Flip: Single
Chip," Proc. Surface Mount International Conference, Sept. 1997,
pp. 535-541.
[2] P. Seller et al., "Silicon Pixel
Detector for X-Ray Spectroscopy," EUV, X-Ray, and Gamma Ray
Instrumentation for Astronomy, SPIE Vol 3445, July 1998.
[3] G. Riley, "Adhesive Flip Chip
Assembly Using Plated Bump Chips," Proc. IEEE International Electronics
Manufacturing Technology Symposium, Oct. 1997, pp. 313-318.
[4] P. Datte et al., "A Prototype 8x8
Pixel Array X-Ray Detector for Protein Crystallography," Nuclear
Instruments and Method in Physics Research, A 396, 1997.
[5] G. Riley, "Flip Chip Interconnection:
Dream or Nightmare?" Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Electronics
for LHC Experiments, CERN/LHCC/98-60, pp. 107-111.