Packaged electroosmotic pumps using porous frits for cooling integrated circuits
An integrated electroosmotic pump may be incorporated in the same integrated circuit package with a re-combiner, and an integrated circuit chip to be cooled by fluid pumped by the electroosmotic pump.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/669,212, filed on Sep. 24, 2003.
BACKGROUNDThis invention relates generally to electroosmotic pumps and, particularly, to such pumps fabricated in silicon using semiconductor fabrication techniques.
Electroosmotic pumps use electric fields to pump a fluid. In one application, they may be fabricated using semiconductor fabrication techniques. They then may be applied to the cooling of integrated circuits, such as microprocessors.
For example, an integrated circuit electroosmotic pump may be operated as a separate unit to cool an integrated circuit. Alternatively, the electroosmotic pump may be formed integrally with the integrated circuit to be cooled. Because the electroosmotic pumps, fabricated in silicon, have an extremely small form factor, they may be effective at cooling relatively small devices, such as semiconductor integrated circuits.
Thus, there is a need for better ways of providing electroosmotic pumps for cooling integrated circuits.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Referring to
As a result, a pumping effect may be achieved without any moving parts. In addition, the structure may be fabricated in silicon at extremely small sizes making such devices applicable as pumps for cooling integrated circuits.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, the frit 18 may be made of an open and connected cell dielectric thin film having open nanopores. By the term “nanopores,” it is intended to refer to films having pores on the order of 10 to 100 nanometers. In one embodiment, the open cell porosity may be introduced using the sol-gel process. In this embodiment, the open cell porosity may be introduced by burning out the porogen phase. However, any process that forms a dielectric film having interconnected or open pores on the order of 10 to 100 nanometers may be suitable in some embodiments of the present invention.
For example, suitable materials may be formed of organosilicate resins, chemically induced phase separation, and sol-gels, to mention a few examples. Commercially available sources of such products are available from a large number of manufacturers who provide those films for extremely low dielectric constant dielectric film semiconductor applications.
In one embodiment, an open cell xerogel can be fabricated with 20 nanometer open pore geometries that increase maximum pumping pressure by a few orders of magnitude. The xerogel may be formed with a less polar solvent such as ethanol to avoid any issues of water tension attacking the xerogel. Also, the pump may be primed with a gradual mix of hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS), ethanol and water to reduce the surface tension forces. Once the pump is in operation with water, there may be no net forces on the pump sidewalls due to surface tension.
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The resist 22 is patterned as shown in
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The microchannels 68a and 68b may be etched to the depth of the top of the catalyst material 66 and the resist used to do the etching may be cleaned. Then a resist 70 may be spun-on and ashed to clear the top of the wafer substrate 60, as shown in
A porous Teflon layer (not shown) may be deposited over the wafer surface and either etched back or polished so that the Teflon covers the catalyst material 66 while having the copper 72 exposed. The Teflon layer protects the catalyst material 66 if re-combined gas turns into water.
A pair of identical substrates 60, processed as described above, may then be combined in face-to-face abutment to form a re-combiner 30 as shown in
The re-combiner 30 may be used to reduce the buildup of gas in the cooling fluid pumped by the pump 28. Exposure of the gases to catalytic material 66 results in gas recombination. The re-combiner 30 may be made deep enough to avoid being covered with water formed from recombined gas.
The electroosmotic pump 28 may be provided in a system 100 coupled by fluid passageways as indicated in
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Thus, the die 114 active semiconductor 124 is underneath the bulk silicon 122. The die 114 may be coupled to another die 112 by a copper-to-copper connection 120. That is, copper metal 120 on each die 112 and 114 may be fused to connect the dice 112 and 114. The die 112 may be bonded by glass, polymers, or dielectric bonding to the die 140.
The die 112 may include a dielectric layer 118 and a plurality of microchannels 116, which circulate cooling fluid. On the opposite side of the die 112 are a plurality of electroosmotic pumps 28 formed as described previously. A dielectric layer 136 couples the die 112 to a die 140, which forms the re-combiner 30. The re-combiner/condenser 30 may be coupled to a radiator 132 such as a finned heat exchanger.
Thus, fluid may be circulated by the pumps 28 through the microchannels 116 to cool the die 114 active semiconductor 124. That fluid may be passed upwardly through appropriate passageways in the die 112 to the electroosmotic pumps 28. A pump liquid may then be communicated by appropriate passageways to the re-combiner/condenser 30.
In some embodiments, by providing a vertical stack of three dice, a compact footprint may be achieved in a conventional package 129. The re-combiner 30 may be thermally insulated by the dielectric layer 136 from the lower, heat producing components.
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The dice 112 and 114 are separately fabricated and, in this case, are bonded by a copper/copper bond as illustrated. The re-combiner 30 is inserted in the BBUL package 142 separately from the stack of the dice 112 and 114. A build-up layer 144 may be provided between the BBUL package 142 and the radiator 132. The build-up layer 144 serves to couple the re-combiner 30 to the stack including the dice 112 and 114.
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Via channels may be used to couple the dice 112, 114, and 140. Alternatively, channels or tubes may be utilized for this purpose. The channels or tubes may be formed in the same structure or may be separate structures physically joined to the dies 112, 114, and 140 for this purpose.
While the present invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of this present invention.
Claims
1. A method comprising:
- securing an integrated electroosmotic pump to an integrated circuit to be cooled; and
- packaging the integrated electroosmotic pump coupled to an integrated circuit with a re-combiner.
2. The method of claim 1 including forming said electroosmotic pump in an integrated circuit die, said pump formed on one side of said die.
3. The method of claim 2 including forming microchannels to circulate a cooling fluid on the opposite side of said die, and coupling said opposite of said die to said integrated circuit to be cooled.
4. The method of claim 1 including stacking a first die including said integrated electroosmotic pump on a second die including said integrated circuit to be cooled.
5. The method of claim 4 including forming said condenser on a third die and stacking said third die on said first die.
6. The method of claim 5 including mounting a heat exchanger on said re-combiner.
7. The method of claim 5 including coupling said first die to said second die using copper-to-copper bonding.
8. The method of claim 1 including packaging said integrated electroosmotic pump coupled to said integrated circuit in a flip-chip package.
9. The method of combiner claim 1 including packaging said integrated electroosmotic pump coupled to an integrated circuit with a re-combiner in a bumpless build-up layer package.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 15, 2007
Publication Date: Dec 6, 2007
Inventors: Sarah Kim (Portland, OR), R. List (Beaverton, OR), James Maveety (San Jose, CA), Alan Myers (Menlo Parks, CA), Quat Vu (Santa Clara, CA)
Application Number: 11/893,198
International Classification: H01L 23/34 (20060101);