Electrical connection methods employing corresponding, insulator-coated members of interconnection elements
A method of electrically connecting corresponding contact pads of semiconductor device components to each other includes interconnecting first and second members of an interconnection element. The first and second members respectively protrude from first and second semiconductor device components, with a conductive element of each member in communication with a contact pad of its corresponding semiconductor device component. Each member of the interconnection element also includes an insulative coating, or shell. When the first and second member of an interconnection element are interconnected, the insulative coating, or shell, may substantially cover or encase the conductive elements of the interconnection element.
This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 09/590,646, filed Jun. 8, 2000, pending. The disclosure of the previously referenced U.S. patent application referenced is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to conductive structures for use with semiconductor device components, such as flip-chip type semiconductor devices, including chip-scale packages. Particularly, the present invention pertains to complementarily configured and located conductive structures on a semiconductor device and another substrate to which the semiconductor device is to be connected. The invention also relates to methods of fabricating the conductive structures and, more particularly, to the use of stereolithography to fabricate at least a portion of the conductive structures.
2. State of the Art
Conductive Structures Used to Connect a Semiconductor Device Face Down to a Higher Level SubstrateSome types of semiconductor devices, such as flip-chip type semiconductor devices, including flip-chip type dice and ball grid array (BGA) packages (including chip-scale packages, or CSPs), can be connected to higher level substrates by orienting these semiconductor devices face down over the higher level substrate. The contact pads of such semiconductor devices are typically connected directly to corresponding contact pads of the higher level substrate by solder balls.
Examples of solders that are known in the art to be useful in connecting semiconductor devices face down to higher level substrates include, but are not limited to, lead-tin (Pb/Sn) solder, silver-nickel (Ag/Ni) solder, copper, gold, and conductive or conductor-filled polymers. For example, 95/5 type Pb/Sn solder bumps (i.e., solder having about 95% by weight lead and about 5% by weight tin) have been used in flip-chip and ball grid array type attachments, including chip-scale packages (CSPs).
When 95/5 type Pb/Sn solder bumps are employed as conductive structures to form a direct connection between a contact pad of a semiconductor device and a contact pad of a higher level substrate, a quantity of solder paste having a higher melting temperature, such as 63/37 type Pb/Sn solder, can be applied to the contact pad of the higher level substrate to facilitate bonding of the solder bump thereto. As the 95/5 type Pb/Sn solder and the 63/37 type Pb/Sn solder are heated to bond the solder bump to a contact pad of the substrate, the 95/5 type Pb/Sn solder, which has a lower melting temperature, softens first. Thus, the gravitational or compressive forces holding the semiconductor device in position over the higher level substrate can cause the softened 95/5 type Pb/Sn solder bump to flatten, pushing the solder laterally outward onto portions of the surface of the semiconductor device that surround the contact pad to which the solder bump is secured.
Further, when solder balls are reflowed to connect a semiconductor device to a substrate, a phenomenon referred to as “outgassing” occurs, which can damage a semiconductor device proximate to the solder balls. Moreover, relatively high temperatures are required to reflow even low temperature solders, such as 95/5 type Pb/Sn solders. The reflow temperatures can damage package components, such as packaging or encapsulant materials, and even features of the semiconductor die being connected to the substrate.
Assemblies that include semiconductor devices connected face down to higher level substrates are subjected to thermal cycling during further processing, testing thereof, and in normal use. As these assemblies undergo thermal cycling, the solder balls thereof are also exposed to wide ranges of temperatures, causing the solder balls to expand when heated and contract when cooled. Solder balls have a very different coefficient of thermal expansion than the primary materials of the semiconductor device and the substrate between which the solder balls are disposed. Thus, the amount that the solder balls expand and contract differs significantly from the amount of expansion and contraction of the semiconductor device and the substrate. As a result, repeated variations in temperatures can cause solder fatigue, which can reduce the strength of the solder balls, cause the solder balls to fail, and diminish the reliability of the solder balls. Thermal cycling can also alter the conformations of the conductive structures.
The likelihood that a solder ball will be damaged by thermal cycling is particularly high when the solder ball spreads over and contacts the surface of the semiconductor device or the higher level substrate surrounding the contact pad. The solder ball loses some of its ability to dissipate heat and, therefore, can be exposed to the full range of temperatures that can occur during thermal cycling. Thus, flattened solder balls and solder balls that contact regions of the surface of a semiconductor device that surround the contact pads thereof are particularly susceptible to the types of damage that can be caused by thermal cycling of the semiconductor device.
Furthermore, when solder balls contact regions of the semiconductor device that surround the contact pads to which the solder balls are secured, undesirable parasitic capacitance can occur.
In an attempt to increase the reliability with which solder balls connect semiconductor devices face down to higher level substrates, resins have been applied to semiconductor devices to form collars around the bases of the solder balls protruding from the semiconductor devices. These resinous supports laterally contact the bases of the solder balls to enhance the reliability thereof. The resinous supports are applied to a semiconductor device after solder balls have been secured to the contact pads of the semiconductor device and before the semiconductor device is connected face down to a higher level substrate. As those of skill in the art are aware, however, the shapes of solder balls can change when bonded to the contact pads of a substrate. If the shapes of the solder balls change, the solder balls can fail to maintain contact with the resinous supports, which could thereby fail to protect or enhance the reliability of the solder balls.
The use of solder balls in connecting a semiconductor device face down to higher level substrates is also somewhat undesirable from the standpoint that, due to their generally spherical shapes, solder balls consume a great deal of area, or “real estate”, on a semiconductor device. Thus, solder balls can unduly limit the minimum spacing between the adjacent contact pads of a semiconductor device and, thus, the minimum pitch of the contact pads on the semiconductor device.
Other types of conductive structures have been used to connect semiconductor devices, including those with relatively tight contact pad pitches, to substrates. Examples of these alternative conductive structures include pillars of conductive elastomer or conductor filled epoxy. When such conductive pillars are secured to the contact pads of a semiconductor device, however, the conductive materials from which these conductive structures are fabricated can bleed. This may cause the material to flow onto regions of the semiconductor device surrounding the contact pad, which may cause parasitic capacitance or even electrical shorts when adjacent conductive structures bleed into contact with each other or a conductive structure bleeds onto an adjacent contact pad.
The use of other conductive structures which have more desirable shapes, such as pillars, or columns, and mushroom-type shapes, and consume less conductive material than solder balls, to connect semiconductor devices face down to higher level substrates, has been limited since these taller and thinner conductive structures are typically made from materials that do not retain their shapes upon being bonded to the contact pads of a higher level substrate or in thermal cycling of the semiconductor device.
The inventors are not aware of any art that discloses reinforced, self-aligning conductive structures that facilitate the connection of a semiconductor device to a substrate while preventing conductive material from bleeding or flowing over the edges of contact pads to which the conductive structures are secured. Moreover, the inventors are not aware of methods that can be used to fabricate such reinforced conductive structures.
StereolithographyIn the past decade, a manufacturing technique termed “stereolithography”, also known as “layered manufacturing”, has evolved to a degree where it is employed in many industries.
Essentially, stereolithography, as conventionally practiced, involves utilizing a computer to generate a three-dimensional (3-D) mathematical simulation or model of an object to be fabricated, such generation usually effected with 3-D computer-aided design (CAD) software. The model or simulation is mathematically separated or “sliced” into a large number of relatively thin, parallel, usually vertically superimposed layers, each layer having defined boundaries and other features associated with the model (and thus the actual object to be fabricated) at the level of that layer within the exterior boundaries of the object. A complete assembly or stack of all of the layers defines the entire object, and surface resolution of the object is, in part, dependent upon the thickness of the layers.
The mathematical simulation or model is then employed to generate an actual object by building the object, layer by superimposed layer. A wide variety of approaches to stereolithography by different companies has resulted in techniques for fabrication of objects from both metallic and nonmetallic materials. Regardless of the material employed to fabricate an object, stereolithographic techniques usually involve disposition of a layer of unconsolidated or unfixed material corresponding to each layer within the object boundaries. This is followed by selective consolidation or fixation of the material to at least a partially consolidated, or semisolid, state in those areas of a given layer corresponding to portions of the object, the consolidated or fixed material also at that time being substantially concurrently bonded to a lower layer of the object to be fabricated. The unconsolidated material employed to build an object may be supplied in particulate or liquid form, and the material itself may be consolidated or fixed or a separate binder material may be employed to bond material particles to one another and to those of a previously formed layer. In some instances, thin sheets of material may be superimposed to build an object, each sheet being fixed to a next lower sheet and unwanted portions of each sheet removed, a stack of such sheets defining the completed object. When particulate materials are employed, resolution of object surfaces is highly dependent upon particle size, whereas when a liquid is employed, surface resolution is highly dependent upon the minimum surface area of the liquid which can be fixed and the minimum thickness of a layer that can be generated. Of course, in either case, resolution and accuracy of object reproduction from the CAD file is also dependent upon the ability of the apparatus used to fix the material to precisely track the mathematical instructions indicating solid areas and boundaries for each layer of material. Toward that end, and depending upon the layer being fixed, various fixation approaches have been employed, including particle bombardment (electron beams), disposing a binder or other fixative (such as by ink-jet printing techniques), or irradiation using heat or specific wavelength ranges.
An early application of stereolithography was to enable rapid fabrication of molds and prototypes of objects from CAD files. Thus, either male or female forms on which mold material might be disposed might be rapidly generated. Prototypes of objects might be built to verify the accuracy of the CAD file defining the object and to detect any design deficiencies and possible fabrication problems before a design was committed to large-scale production.
In more recent years, stereolithography has been employed to develop and refine object designs in relatively inexpensive materials, and has also been used to fabricate small quantities of objects where the cost of conventional fabrication techniques is prohibitive for same, such as in the case of plastic objects conventionally formed by injection molding. It is also known to employ stereolithography in the custom fabrication of products generally built in small quantities or where a product design is rendered only once. Finally, it has been appreciated in some industries that stereolithography provides a capability to fabricate products, such as those including closed interior chambers or convoluted passageways, which cannot be fabricated satisfactorily using conventional manufacturing techniques. It has also been recognized in some industries that a stereolithographic object or component may be formed or built around another, pre-existing object or component to create a larger product.
However, to the inventors' knowledge, stereolithography has yet to be applied to mass production of articles in volumes of thousands or millions, or employed to produce, augment or enhance products including other, pre-existing components in large quantities, where minute component sizes are involved, and where extremely high resolution and a high degree of reproducibility of results is required. In particular, the inventor is not aware of the use of stereolithography in the fabrication of conductive structures protruding from the contact pads of semiconductor devices, such as flip-chip type semiconductor devices or chip-scale packages. Furthermore, conventional stereolithography apparatus and methods fail to address the difficulties of precisely locating and orienting a number of pre-existing components for stereolithographic application of material thereto without the use of mechanical alignment techniques or to otherwise assuring precise, repeatable placement of components.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention includes a reinforced, self-aligning conductive structure. The conductive structure includes interconnectable male and female members, each having a conductive center and a dielectric jacket formed from a thermally stable resin surrounding the conductive center.
In one embodiment, the female member of the reinforced, self-aligning conductive structure is secured to or fabricated on a contact pad of one of a semiconductor device and a substrate, while the male member is secured to or fabricated on a corresponding contact pad of the other one of the substrate and the semiconductor device. Each of the male and female members include an outer dielectric support component that contains a quantity of conductive material in contact with the contact pad over which each of the members is disposed. The female member has a recess configured complementarily to at least an end of the male member so as to receive the end of the male member. Upon connection of the female and male members, the conductive center portions of the members contact each other to place the corresponding contact pads of the semiconductor device and the substrate in electrical communication with each other.
According to another aspect, the invention includes a method for joining the conductive centers of an assembled male member and female member. The conductive material of each of the male and female members is preferably a thermally curable polymer. Preferably, the material of at least one of the conductive centers is at least partially uncured. Once the male and female members have been assembled, the material of the conductive centers can be fully cured to form an integral conductive center between a contact pad of the semiconductor device and a corresponding contact pad of the substrate. In addition, curing the conductive material of the male and female members following assembly thereof secures the semiconductor device to the substrate.
Alternatively, other conductive materials, such as solders, metals, or metal alloys, can be employed as the conductive centers of each of the male and female members. The conductive centers of an interconnected male member and female member can be formed into an integral conductive center by reflowing the material of the conductive centers.
A conductive structure incorporating teachings of the present invention surrounds the periphery of a contact pad exposed at the surface of a semiconductor device or substrate to confine the conductive material over the contact pad and to prevent the conductive material from bleeding or flowing onto portions of the surface of the semiconductor device or substrate that surround the contact pad.
According to another aspect, the present invention includes a method for fabricating the reinforced conductive structure according to the present invention. In a preferred embodiment of the method, a computer-controlled, 3-D CAD initiated process known as “stereolithography” or “layered manufacturing” is used to fabricate the jacket of both the male and female members. When stereolithographic processes are employed, each jacket is formed as either a single layer or a series of superimposed, contiguous, mutually adhered layers of material.
The stereolithographic method of fabricating the jackets of the present invention preferably includes the use of a machine vision system to locate the semiconductor devices or substrates on which the jackets are to be fabricated, as well as the features or other components on or associated with the semiconductor devices or substrates (e.g., contact pads, conductive traces, etc.). The use of a machine vision system directs the alignment of a stereolithography system with each semiconductor device or substrate for material disposition purposes. Accordingly, the semiconductor devices or substrates need not be precisely mechanically aligned with any component of the stereolithography system to practice the stereolithographic embodiment of the method of the present invention.
In a preferred embodiment, the jackets to be fabricated or positioned upon and secured to a semiconductor device component in accordance with the invention are fabricated using precisely focused electromagnetic radiation in the form of an ultraviolet (UV) wavelength laser under control of a computer and responsive to input from a machine vision system, such as a pattern recognition system, to fix or cure selected regions of a layer of a liquid photopolymer material disposed on the semiconductor device or substrate.
The jackets may be fabricated either separately from the semiconductor device or substrate to which they are to be secured or directly on the semiconductor device or substrate. If the jackets are fabricated directly on the semiconductor device or substrate, they may be fabricated around pre-formed quantities of conductive material protruding from the contact pads of the semiconductor device or substrate. Alternatively, the jackets may be fabricated around or over the peripheries of contact pads of the semiconductor device or substrate with the contact pads being exposed therethrough. Conductive material may then be disposed in the jackets and against the contact pads exposed therethrough.
Following the fabrication of a hollow jacket, a quantity of unconsolidated (e.g., particulate, molten, or uncured liquid) conductive or conductor-filled material is disposed in the centers of the jackets. Alternatively, stereolithography may also be used to form the conductive centers of the male and female members from an electrically conductive photopolymer. If stereolithography is used to fabricate the conductive centers, the conductive center of at least one of a corresponding pair of members is preferably left at least partially unconsolidated so as to facilitate the subsequent formation of an integral conductive center through the conductive structure.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those of skill in the art through consideration of the ensuing description, the accompanying drawings, and the appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
With reference to
Each conductive structure 30 has a separate, interconnectable male member 40 and female member 50. As illustrated, male members 40 are secured to and protrude from contact pads 12 of semiconductor device 10, while female members 50 are secured to and protrude from contact pads 22 of substrate 20.
Referring now to
Turning to
As illustrated, the periphery of the end portion 43′ of jacket 42′ is smaller than the periphery of the remainder of jacket 42′, with an outer ledge 48 being formed at the junction between end portion 43′ and the remainder, or base portion 45′, of jacket 42′. When male member 40′ is interconnected with female member 50′, a complementarily configured upper portion 58′ of aperture 54′ receives end portion 43′ of male member 40′ and ledge 48 prevents further insertion of male member 40′ into aperture 54′ of female member 50′. Thus, outer ledge 48 defines a minimum length of conductive structure 30′ and a minimum distance between an assembled semiconductor device 10 and substrate 20.
With continued reference to
Yet another embodiment of a conductive structure 30′″ according to the present invention is illustrated in
Turning now to
While the jackets of the male and female members of the conductive structures according to the present invention, including jackets 42, 42′, 42″, 52, 52′, 52″, are preferably substantially simultaneously fabricated on or secured to a collection of semiconductor devices 10 or substrates 20, such as prior to singulating semiconductor dice from a wafer 72, the jackets of each of the members of the conductive structures can also be fabricated on or secured to collections of individual semiconductor devices 10 or substrates 20, or to individual semiconductor devices 10 or substrates 20. As another alternative, the jackets can be substantially simultaneously fabricated on or secured to a collection of different types of semiconductor devices 10 or substrates 20.
The jackets of both members of the conductive structures of the present invention can be fabricated directly on semiconductor devices 10 or substrates 20. Alternatively, the jackets can be fabricated separately from semiconductor devices 10 or substrates 20, then secured thereto as known in the art, such as by the use of a suitable adhesive.
The jackets are preferably fabricated from a photo-curable polymer, or “photopolymer”, by stereolithographic processes. When fabricated directly on a semiconductor device 10 or substrate 20, the jackets can be made either before or after preformed conductive centers 46, 56 are connected to contact pads 12 of semiconductor device 10 or to contact pads 22 of substrate 20.
For simplicity, the ensuing description is limited to an explanation of a method of fabricating jackets 52 on a semiconductor device 10 prior to placing conductive material in contact with contact pads 12 of semiconductor device 10. As should be appreciated by those of skill in the art, however, the method described herein is also useful for fabricating the jackets of other embodiments of the female member of a conductive structure according to the present invention on one or more semiconductor devices or substrates, as well as for fabricating the jackets of any embodiment of a male member of a conductive structure that incorporates teachings of the present invention on one or more semiconductor devices or substrates.
Stereolithography Apparatus and Methods
With continued reference to
The data is preferably formatted in an STL (for STereoLithography) file, STL being a standardized format employed by a majority of manufacturers of stereolithography equipment. Fortunately, the format has been adopted for use in many solid-modeling CAD programs, so translation from another internal geometric database format is often unnecessary. In an STL file, the boundary surfaces of an object are defined as a mesh of interconnected triangles.
Apparatus 80 also includes a reservoir 84 (which may comprise a removable reservoir interchangeable with others containing different materials) of an unconsolidated material 86 to be employed in fabricating the intended object. In the currently preferred embodiment, the unconsolidated material 86 is a liquid, photo-curable polymer, or “photopolymer”, that cures in response to light in the UV wavelength range. The surface level 88 of material 86 is automatically maintained at an extremely precise, constant magnitude by devices known in the art responsive to output of sensors within apparatus 80 and preferably under control of computer 82. A support platform or elevator 90, precisely vertically movable in fine, repeatable increments in direction 116 responsive to control of computer 82, is located for movement downward into and upward out of material 86 in reservoir 84.
An object may be fabricated directly on platform 90 or on a substrate disposed on platform 90. When the object is to be fabricated on a substrate disposed on platform 90, the substrate may be positioned on platform 90 and secured thereto by way of one or more base supports 122 (see
Apparatus 80 has a UV wavelength range laser plus associated optics and galvanometers (collectively identified as laser 92) for controlling the scan of laser beam 96 in the X-Y plane across platform 90. Laser 92 has associated therewith a mirror 94 to reflect beam 96 downwardly as beam 98 toward surface 100 of platform 90. Beam 98 is traversed in a selected pattern in the X-Y plane, that is to say, in a plane parallel to surface 100, by initiation of the galvanometers under control of computer 82 to at least partially cure, by impingement thereon, selected portions of material 86 disposed over surface 100 to at least a partially consolidated (e.g., semisolid) state. The use of mirror 94 lengthens the path of the laser beam, effectively doubling same, and provides a more vertical beam 98 than would be possible if the laser 92 itself were mounted directly above platform surface 100, thus enhancing resolution.
Referring now to
When one or more base supports 122 are to be stereolithographically fabricated, supports 122 may be programmed as a separate STL file from the other objects to be fabricated. The primary STL file for the object or objects to be fabricated and the STL file for base support(s) 122 are merged.
Before fabrication of a first layer for a support 122 or an object is commenced, the operational parameters for apparatus 80 are set to adjust the size (diameter if circular) of the laser light beam used to cure material 86. In addition, computer 82 automatically checks and, if necessary, adjusts by means known in the art, the surface level 88 of material 86 in reservoir 84 to maintain same at an appropriate focal length for laser beam 98. U.S. Pat. No. 5,174,931, referenced above and previously incorporated herein by reference, discloses one suitable level control system. Alternatively, the height of mirror 94 may be adjusted responsive to a detected surface level 88 to cause the focal point of laser beam 98 to be located precisely at the surface of material 86 at surface level 88 if level 88 is permitted to vary, although this approach is more complex. Platform 90 may then be submerged in material 86 in reservoir 84 to a depth equal to the thickness of one layer or slice of the object to be formed, and the liquid surface level 88 is readjusted as required to accommodate material 86 displaced by submergence of platform 90. Laser 92 is then activated so laser beam 98 will scan unconsolidated (e.g., liquid or powdered) material 86 disposed over surface 100 of platform 90 to at least partially consolidate (e.g., polymerize to at least a semisolid state) material 86 at selected locations, defining the boundaries of a first layer 122A of base support 122 and filling in solid portions thereof. Platform 90 is then lowered by a distance equal to thickness of second layer 122B, and laser beam 98 is scanned over selected regions of the surface of material 86 to define and fill in the second layer while simultaneously bonding the second layer to the first. The process may then be repeated as often as necessary, layer by layer, until base support 122 is completed. Platform 90 is then moved relative to mirror 94 to form any additional base supports 122 on platform 90 or a substrate disposed thereon or to fabricate objects upon platform 90, base support 122, or a substrate, as provided in the control software. The number of layers required to erect support 122 or one or more other objects to be formed depends upon the height of the object or objects to be formed and the desired layer thickness 108, 110. The layers of a stereolithographically fabricated structure with a plurality of layers may have different thicknesses.
If a recoater blade 102 is employed, the process sequence is somewhat different. In this instance, surface 100 of platform 90 is lowered into unconsolidated (e.g., liquid) material 86 below surface level 88 a distance greater than a thickness of a single layer of material 86 to be cured, then raised above surface level 88 until platform 90, a substrate disposed thereon, or a structure being formed on either platform 90 or a substrate thereon, is precisely one layer's thickness below blade 102. Blade 102 then sweeps horizontally over platform 90 or (to save time) at least over a portion thereof on which one or more objects are to be fabricated to remove excess material 86 and leave a film of precisely the desired thickness. Platform 90 is then lowered so that the surface of the film and material level 88 are coplanar and the surface of the unconsolidated material 86 is still. Laser 92 is then initiated to scan with laser beam 98 and define the first layer 130. The process is repeated, layer by layer, to define each succeeding layer 130 and simultaneously bond same to the next lower layer 130 until all of the layers of the object or objects to be fabricated are completed. A more detailed discussion of this sequence and apparatus for performing same is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,174,931, previously incorporated herein by reference.
As an alternative to the above approach to preparing a layer of material 86 for scanning with laser beam 98, a layer of unconsolidated (e.g., liquid) material 86 may be formed on surface 100 of support platform 90, on a substrate disposed on platform 90, or on one or more objects being fabricated by lowering platform 90 to flood material 86 over surface 100, over a substrate disposed thereon, or over the highest completed layer of the object or objects being formed, then raising platform 90 and horizontally traversing a so-called “meniscus” blade horizontally over platform 90 to form a layer of unconsolidated material having the desired thickness over platform 90, the substrate, or each of the objects being formed. Laser 92 is then initiated and a laser beam 98 scanned over the layer of unconsolidated material to define at least the boundaries of the solid regions of the next higher layer of the object or objects being fabricated.
Yet another alternative to layer preparation of unconsolidated (e.g., liquid) material 86 is to merely lower platform 90 to a depth equal to that of a layer of material 86 to be scanned, and to then traverse a combination flood bar and meniscus bar assembly horizontally over platform 90, a substrate disposed on platform 90, or one or more objects being formed to substantially concurrently flood material 86 thereover and to define a precise layer thickness of material 86 for scanning.
All of the foregoing approaches to liquid material flooding and layer definition and apparatus for initiation thereof are known in the art and are not material to the practice of the present invention, therefore, no further details relating thereto will be provided herein.
In practicing the present invention, a commercially available stereolithography apparatus operating generally in the manner as that described above with respect to apparatus 80 of
By way of example and not limitation, the layer thickness of material 86 to be formed, for purposes of the invention, may be on the order of about 0.0001 to 0.0300 inch, with a high degree of uniformity. It should be noted that different material layers may have different heights so as to form a structure of a precise, intended total height or to provide different material thicknesses for different portions of the structure. The size of the laser beam “spot” impinging on the surface of material 86 to consolidate (e.g., cure) same may be on the order of 0.001 inch to 0.008 inch. Resolution is preferably ±0.0003 inch in the X-Y plane (parallel to surface 100) over at least a 0.5 inch×0.25 inch field from a center point, permitting a high resolution scan effectively across a 1.0 inch×0.5 inch area. Of course, it is desirable to have substantially this high a resolution across the entirety of surface 100 of platform 90 to be scanned by laser beam 98, such area being termed the “field of exposure”, and being substantially coextensive with the vision field of a machine vision system employed in the apparatus of the invention as explained in more detail below. The longer and more effectively vertical the path of laser beam 96/98, the greater the achievable resolution.
Referring again to
It is noted that a variety of machine vision systems are in existence, examples of which and their various structures and uses are described, without limitation, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,526,646; 4,543,659; 4,736,437; 4,899,921; 5,059,559; 5,113,565; 5,145,099; 5,238,174; 5,463,227; 5,288,698; 5,471,310; 5,506,684; 5,516,023; 5,516,026; and 5,644,245. The disclosure of each of the immediately foregoing patents is hereby incorporated by this reference.
Stereolithographic Fabrication of the Jackets In order to facilitate fabrication of one or more dielectric jackets 52 in accordance with the method of the present invention with apparatus 80, a data file representative of the size, configuration, thickness and surface topography of, for example, a particular type and design of semiconductor device 10 or other substrate upon which one or more jackets 52 are to be mounted, is placed in the memory of computer 82. Also, as jackets 52 are configured to be interconnected with complementary jackets 42 (see
One or more semiconductor devices 10, wafers 72 (see
Camera 140 is then activated to locate the position and orientation of each semiconductor device 10, including those on a wafer 72 (see
Continuing with reference to
Laser 92 is then activated and scanned to direct beam 98, under control of computer 82, toward specific locations of surface 88 relative to each semiconductor device 10 or other substrate to effect the aforementioned partial cure of material 86 to form a first layer 52A of each jacket 52. Platform 90 is then lowered into reservoir 84 and raised a distance equal to the desired thickness of another layer 52B of each jacket 52, and laser 92 is activated to add another layer 52B to each jacket 52 under construction. This sequence continues, layer by layer, until each of the layers of jackets 52 have been completed.
In
Each layer 52A, 52B of a dielectric jacket 52 is preferably built by first defining any internal and external object boundaries of that layer with laser beam 98, then hatching solid areas of jacket 52 located within the object boundaries with laser beam 98. An internal boundary of a layer may comprise aperture 54, a through-hole, a void, or a recess in jacket 52, for example. If a particular layer includes a boundary of a void in the object above or below that layer, then laser beam 98 is scanned in a series of closely-spaced, parallel vectors so as to develop a continuous surface, or skin, with improved strength and resolution. The time it takes to form each layer depends upon the geometry thereof, the surface tension and viscosity of material 86, and the thickness of that layer.
Alternatively, dielectric jackets 52 may each be formed as a partially cured outer skin extending above surface 14 of semiconductor device 10 or above surface 24 of substrate 20 and forming a dam within which unconsolidated material 86 can be contained. This may be particularly useful where the jackets 52 protrude a relatively high distance 60 from surface 14. In this instance, support platform 90 may be submerged so that material 86 enters the area within the dam, raised above surface level 88, and then laser beam 98 activated and scanned to at least partially cure material 86 residing within the dam or, alternatively, to merely cure a “skin” comprising the surface of dielectric jackets 52, a final cure of the material of the jackets 52 being effected subsequently by broad-source UV radiation in a chamber or by thermal cure in an oven. In this manner, jackets 52 of extremely precise dimensions may be formed of material 86 by apparatus 80 in minimal time.
When dielectric jackets 52″, depicted in
Once dielectric jackets 52, or at least the outer skins thereof, have been fabricated, platform 90 is elevated above surface level 88 of material 86 and platform 90 is removed from apparatus 80, along with any substrate (e.g., semiconductor device 10, wafer 72 (see
Jackets 52 and semiconductor device 10 or substrate 20 may also be cleaned by use of known solvents that will not substantially degrade, deform, or damage jackets 52 or a substrate to which jackets 52 are secured.
As noted previously, jackets 52 may then require postcuring. Jackets 52 may have regions of unconsolidated material contained within a boundary or skin thereof or in a shadowed area 53 (see
It should be noted that the height, shape, or placement of each jacket 52 on each specific semiconductor device 10 or other substrate may vary, again responsive to output of camera 140 or one or more additional cameras 144, 146, or 148, shown in broken lines, detecting the protrusion of unusually high (or low) preformed, preplaced conductive centers 56 which could affect the desired distance that jackets 52 will protrude from surface 14. Likewise, the lateral extent (i.e., diameter or width) of each preplaced conductive center may be recognized and the girth of the outer boundary of each jacket 52 adjusted accordingly. In any case, laser 92 is again activated to at least partially cure material 86 residing on each semiconductor device 10 or other substrate to form the layer or layers of each jacket 52.
Although
The use of a stereolithographic process as exemplified above to fabricate dielectric jackets 52 is particularly advantageous since a large number of jackets 52 may be fabricated in a short time, the jacket height and position are computer controlled to be extremely precise, wastage of unconsolidated material 86 is minimal, solder coverage of passivation materials is avoided, and the stereolithography method requires minimal handling of semiconductor devices 10, wafers 72, or other substrates.
Stereolithography is also an advantageous method of fabricating dielectric jackets 52 according to the present invention since stereolithography can be conducted at substantially ambient temperature, the small spot size and rapid traverse of laser beam 98 resulting in negligible thermal stress upon semiconductor devices 10, wafers 72, or other substrates, as well as on the features thereof.
The stereolithography fabrication process may also advantageously be conducted at the wafer level or on multiple substrates, saving fabrication time and expense. As the stereolithography method of the present invention recognizes specific semiconductor devices 10 or other substrates 20, variations between individual substrates are accommodated. Accordingly, when the stereolithography method of the present invention is employed, jackets 52 can be simultaneously fabricated on different types of semiconductor devices 10 or other substrates, as well as on both semiconductor devices 10 and other substrates.
Of course, other known methods can also be used to fabricate the jackets of the conductive structures of the present invention. Exemplary methods include, but are not limited to, the use of photoresist materials to form the reinforcement structures and fabrication of the reinforcement structure from dielectric materials using known semiconductor device patterning (e.g., mask and etch) processes.
Fabricating Conductive Centers Referring again to
When conductive centers 46, 56 are formed after dielectric jackets 42, 52 have been secured to contact pads 12 of semiconductor device 10 or to contact pads 22 of substrate 20, conductive material is disposed in each aperture 44, 54 in jackets 42, 52. Preferably, unconsolidated, molten, or uncured liquid conductive material is placed into apertures 44, 54.
When a solder, metal, or metal alloy is used to form conductive centers 46, 56, molten material can be disposed into dielectric jackets 42, 52. As the melting temperatures of solders, metals, and metal alloys are typically very high, it is preferred that the material from which jackets 42, 52 are fabricated can withstand such temperatures without being damaged and without undergoing significant conformational or dimensional changes. For example, and not to limit the scope of the present invention, solder can be disposed in apertures 44, 54 by submerging jackets 42, 52 in a solder bath, after which the solder may be allowed to harden and the conductive members secured to contact pads. Alternatively, when solder is used to form conductive centers 46, 56, solder paste or a preformed solder brick can be disposed in apertures 44, 54, then subsequently reflowed to form conductive centers 46, 56.
Conductive thermoplastic materials can similarly be disposed in apertures 44, 54 in a melted state, then cooled to form conductive centers 46, 56. As an alternative, particles of thermoplastic conductive material can be placed in apertures 44, 54 and heated and cooled to form conductive centers 46, 56. Such heating and cooling may be effected either before or after male member 40 and female member 50 are interconnected.
Thermally curable conductive resins can also be disposed in apertures 44, 54 in an uncured or partially uncured state, then heated to cure the conductive resin and to form conductive centers 46, 56. As indicated previously herein, when thermally curable conductive resins are used, the conductive center 46, 56 of at least one of a pair of male and female members 40, 50 is left uncured or at least partially uncured until after male member 40 and female member 50 have been interconnected so as to allow for the full curing of the conductive resin and the formation of an integral conductive center extending through conductive structure 30.
Assembling A Semiconductor Device with A Substrate Referring again to
A single, integral conductive center can then be formed by bonding conductive centers 46 and 56. When conductive centers 46 and 56 are formed from a thermally curable conductive resin, at least one of conductive centers 46, 56 is left at least partially uncured until male member 40 and female member 50 are interconnected. The conductive material of conductive center 46, 56 can then be heated to a sufficient curing temperature so as to bond conductive center 46 to conductive center 56. When conductive centers 46 and 56 comprise a thermoplastic conductive elastomer, a solder, a metal, or a metal alloy, conductive centers 46 and 56 are heated to a sufficient temperature to wet or reflow the conductive material thereof and, thereby, to bond each conductive center 46, 56 to its corresponding contact pad 12, 22 and to bond conductive center 46 to conductive center 56.
While the present invention has been disclosed in terms of certain preferred embodiments, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize and appreciate that the invention is not so limited. Additions, deletions and modifications to the disclosed embodiments may be effected without departing from the scope of the invention as claimed herein. Similarly, features from one embodiment may be combined with those of another while remaining within the scope of the invention.
Claims
1. A method for electrically connecting corresponding contact pads of semiconductor device components to each other, comprising:
- providing a first semiconductor device component having a first member of an interconnection element protruding from at least one contact pad thereof, the first member of the interconnection element including a conductive element and an insulative coating on the conductive element;
- providing a second semiconductor device component having a second member of the interconnection element protruding from at least one contact pad thereof, the second member of the interconnection element including a conductive element and an insulative coating on the conductive element;
- orienting the first and second semiconductor device components with the first member and the second member in at least rough alignment; and
- interconnecting the first member and the second member such that the conductive elements of the first and second members establish electrical communication between the at least one contact pad of the semiconductor device and the at least one contact pad of the substrate.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein interconnecting comprises inserting a portion of the conductive element of the first member that protrudes beyond the insulative coating of the first member into a receptacle of the second member.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein interconnecting comprises establishing electrical communication between the conductive element of the first member and the conductive element of the second member.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein interconnecting comprises mutually engaging complementary features of the insulative coatings of the first and second members.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein interconnecting comprises interconnecting the first and second members such that the peripheries thereof are substantially covered by the insulative coatings of the first and second members.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein interconnecting comprises at least partially reflowing material of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein at least partially reflowing comprises wetting a material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein at least partially reflowing comprises substantially reflowing a material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein insulative coatings of the first and second members maintain a combined shape of the conductive elements while substantially reflowing the material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- integrating a conductive element of the first member with a conductive element of the second member.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein integrating comprises polymerizing at least a portion of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein providing the first semiconductor device component comprises providing a semiconductor device.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein providing the second semiconductor device component comprises providing a carrier for the semiconductor device.
14. A method of electrically connecting corresponding contact pads of semiconductor device components to each other, comprising:
- orienting a first member of an interconnection element protruding from a surface of a first semiconductor device component in at least rough alignment with a second member of a second interconnection element protruding from a surface of a second semiconductor device component; and
- interconnecting the first and second members of the interconnection element, insulative shells of the first and second members encasing conductive elements of the first and second members.
15. The method of claim 14, further comprising:
- establishing electrical contact between the conductive elements of the first and second members.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein establishing electrical contact occurs while interconnecting the first and second members.
17. The method of claim 15, wherein establishing electrical contact comprises at securing the conductive elements of the first and second members to one another.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein securing comprises at least partially liquefying material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members and allowing the material to resolidify.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein at least partially liquefying comprises substantially liquefying material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
20. The method of claim 17, wherein securing comprises at least partially consolidating material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein at least partially consolidating comprises at least partially polymerizing material of at least one of the conductive elements of the first and second members.
22. The method of claim 14, wherein interconnecting comprises mutually engaging complementary features of the insulative coatings of the first and second members.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 20, 2007
Publication Date: Jun 28, 2007
Inventors: Vernon Williams (Meridian, ID), Ford Grigg (Meridian, ID), Bret Street (Meridian, ID)
Application Number: 11/709,046
International Classification: H01L 21/00 (20060101);