Patents by Inventor Donald C. Abbott
Donald C. Abbott has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
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Publication number: 20110068443Abstract: A semiconductor device without cantilevered leads uses conductive wires (120) to connect the chip terminals to the leads (110), and a package compound (140) to encapsulate the chip surface (101a) with the terminals, the wires, and the lead surfaces with the attached wires. The chip surface (101b) opposite the terminals together with portions (103) of the chip sidewalls protrude from the package, allowing an unimpeded thermal contact of the protruding chip surface to a substrate (201) to optimize the thermal flux from the chip to the substrate. Solder bodies (250) attached to the compound-free lead surfaces (113b) can be connected to the substrate so that the solder bodies are as elongated as the protruding chip height, facilitating the void-free distribution of an underfill compound into the space between chip and substrate, and improving the absorption of thermomechanical stresses during device operation.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 30, 2010Publication date: March 24, 2011Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventor: Donald C. Abbott
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Patent number: 7872336Abstract: A leadframe with a structure made of a base metal (105), wherein the structure has a plurality of surfaces. On each of these surfaces are metal layers in a stack adherent to the base metal. The stack comprises a nickel layer (201) in contact with the base metal, a palladium layer (202) in contact with the nickel layer, and an outermost tin layer (203) in contact with the palladium layer. In terms of preferred layer thicknesses, the nickel layer is between about 0.5 and 2.0 ?m thick, the palladium layer between about 5 and 150 nm thick, and the tin layer less than about 5 nm thick, preferably about 3 nm. At this thinness, the tin has no capability of forming whiskers, but offers superb adhesion to polymeric encapsulation materials, improved characteristics for reliable stitch bonding as well as affinity to reflow metals (solders).Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 2008Date of Patent: January 18, 2011Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C Abbott
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Patent number: 7863103Abstract: A semiconductor device without cantilevered leads uses conductive wires (120) to connect the chip terminals to the leads (110), and a package compound (140) to encapsulate the chip surface (101a) with the terminals, the wires, and the lead surfaces with the attached wires. The chip surface (101b) opposite the terminals together with portions (103) of the chip sidewalls protrude from the package, allowing an unimpeded thermal contact of the protruding chip surface to a substrate (201) to optimize the thermal flux from the chip to the substrate. Solder bodies (250) attached to the compound-free lead surfaces (113b) can be connected to the substrate so that the solder bodies are as elongated as the protruding chip height, facilitating the void-free distribution of an underfill compound into the space between chip and substrate, and improving the absorption of thermomechanical stresses during device operation.Type: GrantFiled: October 22, 2008Date of Patent: January 4, 2011Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C Abbott
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Publication number: 20100320579Abstract: A leadframe for the assembly of a semiconductor chip has regions (112) with an original smooth surface of glossy appearance and regions (113, 114, 210) of a frosty appearance with rough surface contours. The regions of rough surface contours include two-dimensional arrays of spots (401) comprising a central area (402) below the original surface (400) and a piled ring (403) above the original surface. The piled ring (403) consists of the leadframe material in amorphous configuration.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 22, 2009Publication date: December 23, 2010Applicant: Texax Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C ABBOTT
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Patent number: 7851928Abstract: A semiconductor device having an insulating substrate with differentially plated metal and selective solder. Chip 221 with contact studs 223 is attached onto the traces 203 on tape 101. The traces, which are unprotected by soldermask 110, have solder on the top surface, but not on the sidewalls. The sidewalls of the traces are at right angles to the trace top, giving the trace a rectangular cross section. Consequently, the area for attaching stud 223 is maximized. At the same time, the differential plating method of trace metal 203 and through-hole metal 206 allows different metal thicknesses and provides independent control of the trace aspect ratio for low electrical resistance and trace fatigue.Type: GrantFiled: June 10, 2008Date of Patent: December 14, 2010Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventors: Bernardo Gallegos, Donald C. Abbott
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Patent number: 7788800Abstract: A semiconductor device has a leadframe with a structure made of a base metal (105), wherein the structure consists of a chip mount pad (402) and a plurality of lead segments (403). Covering the base metal are, consecutively, a nickel layer (301) on the base metal, and a continuous layer of noble metal, which consists of a gold layer (201) on the nickel layer, and an outermost palladium layer (202) on the gold layer. A semiconductor chip (410) is attached to the chip mount pad and conductive connections (412) span from the chip to the lead segments. Polymeric encapsulation compound (420) covers the chip, the connections, and portions of the lead segments. In QFN devices with straight sides (501), the compound forms a surface (421) coplanar with the outermost palladium layer (202) on the un-encapsulated leadframe surfaces.Type: GrantFiled: November 7, 2007Date of Patent: September 7, 2010Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C Abbott
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Publication number: 20100096734Abstract: A semiconductor device without cantilevered leads uses conductive wires (120) to connect the chip terminals to the leads (110), and a package compound (140) to encapsulate the chip surface (101a) with the terminals, the wires, and the lead surfaces with the attached wires. The chip surface (101b) opposite the terminals together with portions (103) of the chip sidewalls protrude from the package, allowing an unimpeded thermal contact of the protruding chip surface to a substrate (201) to optimize the thermal flux from the chip to the substrate. Solder bodies (250) attached to the compound-free lead surfaces (113b) can be connected to the substrate so that the solder bodies are as elongated as the protruding chip height, facilitating the void-free distribution of an underfill compound into the space between chip and substrate, and improving the absorption of thermomechanical stresses during device operation.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 22, 2008Publication date: April 22, 2010Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventor: DONALD C. ABBOTT
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Publication number: 20100096738Abstract: A method of forming integrated circuit (IC) die configured for attachment to another die or a package substrate, and stacked IC devices therefrom. At least one IC die having a top semiconductor surface and a bottom surface and at least one through substrate via (TSV) including a tip protruding beyond the bottom surface to a tip length is provided. The tip has an outer dielectric tip liner, and an electrically conductive portion within the outer dielectric tip liner. A compliant layer is applied to the bottom surface of the IC die. The dielectric tip liner is removed from a distal portion of the tip to expose an electrically conductive tip portion. A solder material is deposited on the exposed distal portion of the tip. The solder material is reflowed and coalesced to form a solder bump on the distal portion of the tip.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 1, 2009Publication date: April 22, 2010Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventors: Margaret R. Simmons-Matthews, Donald C. Abbott
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Publication number: 20100009500Abstract: A post-mold plated semiconductor device has an aluminum leadframe (105) with a structure including a chip mount pad and a plurality of lead segments without cantilevered lead portions. A semiconductor chip (210) is attached to the chip mount pad, and conductive connections (212) span from the chip to the aluminum of the lead segments. Polymeric encapsulation material (220), such as a molding compound, covers the chip, the connections, and portions of the aluminum lead segments without leaving cantilevered segment portions. Preferably by electroless plating, a zinc layer (301) and a nickel layer (302) are on those portions of the lead segments, which are not covered by the encapsulation material including the aluminum segment surfaces (at 203b) formed by the device singulation step, and a layer (303) of noble metal, preferably palladium, is on the nickel layer.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 18, 2009Publication date: January 14, 2010Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventor: Donald C. ABBOTT
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Publication number: 20090302463Abstract: A semiconductor device having an insulating substrate with differentially plated metal and selective solder. Chip 221 with contact studs 223 is attached onto the traces 203 on tape 101. The traces, which are unprotected by soldermask 110, have solder on the top surface, but not on the sidewalls. The sidewalls of the traces are at right angles to the trace top, giving the trace a rectangular cross section. Consequently, the area for attaching stud 223 is maximized. At the same time, the differential plating method of trace metal 203 and through-hole metal 206 allows different metal thicknesses and provides independent control of the trace aspect ratio for low electrical resistance and trace fatigue.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 10, 2008Publication date: December 10, 2009Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventors: BERNARDO GALLEGOS, DONALD C. ABBOTT
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Patent number: 7608916Abstract: A post-mold plated semiconductor device has an aluminum leadframe (105) with a structure including a chip mount pad and a plurality of lead segments without cantilevered lead portions. A semiconductor chip (210) is attached to the chip mount pad, and conductive connections (212) span from the chip to the aluminum of the lead segments. Polymeric encapsulation material (220), such as a molding compound, covers the chip, the connections, and portions of the aluminum lead segments without leaving cantilevered segment portions. Preferably by electroless plating, a zinc layer (301) and a nickel layer (302) are on those portions of the lead segments, which are not covered by the encapsulation material including the aluminum segment surfaces (at 203b) formed by the device singulation step, and a layer (303) of noble metal, preferably palladium, is on the nickel layer.Type: GrantFiled: February 2, 2006Date of Patent: October 27, 2009Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C. Abbott
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Patent number: 7535104Abstract: A metal structure for a contact pad of a wafer or substrate (101), which have copper interconnecting traces (102) surrounded by a barrier metal layer (103). The wafer or substrate is protected by an insulating overcoat (104). In the structure, the barrier metal layer is selectively exposed by a window (110) in the insulating overcoat. A layer of copper (105), adherent to the barrier metal, conformally covers the exposed barrier metal. Preferably, the copper layer is deposited by sputtering using a shadow mask. A layer of nickel (106) is adherent to the copper layer and a layer of noble metal (106) is adherent to the nickel layer. The noble metal may be palladium, or gold, or a palladium layer with an outermost gold layer. Preferably, the nickel and noble metal layers are deposited by electroless plating.Type: GrantFiled: April 11, 2007Date of Patent: May 19, 2009Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventors: Howard R Test, Donald C Abbott
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Patent number: 7507605Abstract: A leadframe with a structure made of a base metal (105), wherein the structure has a plurality of surfaces. On each of these surfaces are metal layers in a stack adherent to the base metal. The stack comprises a nickel layer (201) in contact with the base metal, a palladium layer (202) in contact with the nickel layer, and an outermost tin layer (203) in contact with the palladium layer. In terms of preferred layer thicknesses, the nickel layer is between about 0.5 and 2.0 ?m thick, the palladium layer between about 5 and 150 nm thick, and the tin layer less than about 5 nm thick, preferably about 3 nm. At this thinness, the tin has no capability of forming whiskers, but offers superb adhesion to polymeric encapsulation materials, improved characteristics for reliable stitch bonding as well as affinity to reflow metals (solders).Type: GrantFiled: December 30, 2004Date of Patent: March 24, 2009Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C. Abbott
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Patent number: 7504716Abstract: A semiconductor device comprising a semiconductor chip (101) assembled on a first copper cuboid (110); the cuboid has sides of a height (111). The device further has a plurality of second copper cuboids (120) suitable for wire bond attachment; the second cuboids have sides of a height (121) substantially equal to the height of the first cuboid. The back surfaces of all cuboids are aligned in a plane (130). Encapsulation compound (140) is adhering to and embedding the chip, the wire bonds, and the sides of all cuboids so that the compound forms a first surface (140b) aligned with the plane of the back cuboid surfaces and a second surface (140a) above the embedded wires. For devices intended for stacking, the devices further comprise a plurality of vias (160) through the encapsulation compound from the first to the second compound surfaces; the vias are filled with copper, and the via locations are matching between the devices-to-be-stacked.Type: GrantFiled: October 26, 2005Date of Patent: March 17, 2009Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: Donald C. Abbott
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Publication number: 20090051036Abstract: A ball grid array device with an insulating substrate (110) having metal traces (106, for example copper, about 18 ?m thick) with sidewalls (108) at right angles to the trace top. The traces are grouped in a first (120) and a second set (121). The first set traces have the top surface covered by a thin noble metal (for example a nickel layer (130) about 0.1 ?m thick and an outermost gold layer (131) about 0.5 ?m thick), while the sidewalls are un-covered by the noble metal. About 1.5 ?m are thus gained for the trace spacing; oxidation of the trace sidewalls is enabled. The second set traces have the top surface un-covered by the noble metal; the traces are covered by an insulating soldermask. A semiconductor chip (101) with terminals (102) is attached to the substrate with the terminals connected to the noble metal of the first set traces, either by bonding wires (for example gold) or by metal studs (for example gold).Type: ApplicationFiled: July 7, 2008Publication date: February 26, 2009Applicant: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventor: DONALD C. ABBOTT
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Publication number: 20080307644Abstract: In a method and apparatus for fabricating a semiconductor device having a flexible tape substrate, a hole is punched in the flexible tape substrate. The flexible tape substrate includes a metal layer attached to a polyimide layer without an adhesive there between. A cover is placed on the metal layer to cap a base of the hole. A metal is deposited on the cover exposed at the base of the hole, the metal being used to form a bond with the metal layer. The metal being deposited causes the hole to be plugged up to a selective height. Upon removal of the cover, the metal may also be deposited on the metal layer to increase a thickness of the metal layer.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 12, 2007Publication date: December 18, 2008Applicant: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventors: Donald C. Abbott, Usman M. Chaudhry
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Publication number: 20080280394Abstract: A method of making integrated circuit packages using a conductive plate as a substrate includes forming a partial circuit pattern on one side of the conductive plate by stamping or selectively removing a portion of the conductive plate through part of its thickness, and then electrically coupling semiconductor dies to the formed patterns on the conductive plate. The method further includes encapsulating at least a portion of the dies and the conductive plate with an encapsulant and removing a portion of the conductive plate from the side opposite the patterned side to form conductive traces based on the formed pattern.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 7, 2008Publication date: November 13, 2008Inventors: Masood Murtuza, Satyendra Singh Chauhan, Donald C. Abbott
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Publication number: 20080274294Abstract: A metal structure (100) for a contact pad of a semiconductor device, which has interconnecting traces of a first copper layer (102). The substrate is protected by an insulating overcoat (104). In the structure, the first copper layer of first thickness and first crystallite size is selectively exposed by a window (110) in the insulating overcoat. A layer of second copper (105) of second thickness covers conformally the exposed first copper layer. The second layer is deposited by an electroless process and consists of a transition zone, adjoining the first layer and having copper crystallites of a second size, and a main zone having crystallites of the first size. The second thickness is selected so that the distance a void from the second layer can migrate during the life expectancy of the structure is smaller than the combined thicknesses of the first and second layers. A layer of nickel (106) is on the second copper layer, and a layer of noble metal (107) is on the nickel layer.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 18, 2008Publication date: November 6, 2008Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventors: Howard R. Test, Donald C. Abbott
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Publication number: 20080224290Abstract: A leadframe with a structure made of a base metal (105), wherein the structure has a plurality of surfaces. On each of these surfaces are metal layers in a stack adherent to the base metal. The stack comprises a nickel layer (201) in contact with the base metal, a palladium layer (202) in contact with the nickel layer, and an outermost tin layer (203) in contact with the palladium layer. In terms of preferred layer thicknesses, the nickel layer is between about 0.5 and 2.0 ?m thick, the palladium layer between about 5 and 150 nm thick, and the tin layer less than about 5 nm thick, preferably about 3 nm. At this thinness, the tin has no capability of forming whiskers, but offers superb adhesion to polymeric encapsulation materials, improved characteristics for reliable stitch bonding as well as affinity to reflow metals (solders).Type: ApplicationFiled: May 30, 2008Publication date: September 18, 2008Applicant: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATEDInventor: DONALD C. ABBOTT
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Patent number: 7413974Abstract: A metal structure (100) for a contact pad of a semiconductor, which has interconnecting traces of a first copper layer (102). The substrate is protected by an insulating overcoat (104). The first copper layer of first thickness and first crystallite size is selectively exposed by a window (110) in the insulating overcoat. A second copper layer (105) of second thickness covers conformably the exposed first copper layer. The second layer is deposited by an electroless process and consists of a transition zone, adjoining the first layer and having copper crystallites of a second size, and a main zone having crystallites of the first size. The distance a void can migrate from the second layer is smaller than the combined thicknesses of the first and second layers. A nickel layer (106) is on the second copper layer, and a noble metal layer (107) is on the nickel layer.Type: GrantFiled: August 4, 2005Date of Patent: August 19, 2008Assignee: Texas Instruments IncorporatedInventors: Howard R. Test, Donald C. Abbott