ENGINEERED CARRIER WAFERS
Apparatuses and methods for reducing the warp of semiconductor wafer stacks during manufacturing are disclosed. An engineered carrier wafer is disclosed. The engineered carrier wafer may be pre-stressed such that it exhibits a warp. The warp may be configured to counteract a warp of a device wafer included in the wafer stack. The overall warp of the wafer stack may be reduced.
Semiconductor device wafers may be temporarily coupled to carrier wafers during semiconductor processing. The carrier wafers may provide support for the device wafers during one or more processes during manufacturing. Carrier wafers may reduce breakage of fragile device wafers and/or allow non-standard sized device wafers to be processed by a machine that performs one or more processes. Certain processes may apply stress to the device wafer. The device wafer may become warped in response to the applied stress. The warping of the device wafer may translate to the carrier wafer, causing the carrier wafer to warp as well. In some instances, the warping of the device wafer may be severe enough that one or more machines may not be able to perform a process on the device wafer. Warping of the device and carrier wafers may also degrade the outcome of processes that are performed on the device wafer.
Certain details are set forth below to provide a sufficient understanding of embodiments of the invention. However, it will be clear to one skilled in the art that embodiments of the invention may be practiced without these particular details. Moreover, the particular embodiments of the present invention described herein are provided by way of example and should not be used to limit the scope of the invention to these particular embodiments. In other instances, well-known wafer components, machines, and semiconductor processes have not been described or shown in detail in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the invention.
Different processing of a device wafer may cause different magnitudes and directions of warping. Examples of processes that may induce stress that may warp a device wafer include, but are not limited to, polishing, grinding, layer deposition, implantation, and doping. A carrier wafer may be pre-stressed to produce an engineered carrier wafer by one or more processes. The processes may be performed to a first surface and/or a second surface opposite the first surface. For example, processes may be performed to the back and/or face of the carrier wafer. The face of the carrier wafer may be coupled to a device wafer. In some embodiments, an engineered carrier wafer may be engineered to compensate for the device wafer warping to reduce the warp of the wafer stack over multiple processes. In some embodiments, multiple engineered carrier wafers may be engineered to compensate for each process performed on the device wafer. For example, the device wafer may be removed from a first engineered carrier wafer after a first process and then applied to a second engineered carrier wafer before a second process is performed.
In some embodiments, an engineered carrier wafer may also have one or more processes performed on it while it is coupled to a device wafer. The processes performed on the engineered carrier wafer may be selected to compensate for device wafer warping due to different processes performed on the device wafer to reduce warping of the wafer stack. For example, a device wafer coupled to a carrier wafer according to an embodiment of the disclosure may undergo a first process after which the engineered carrier wafer may undergo a separate process before a second process is performed on the device wafer. The separate process performed on the engineered carrier wafer may configure the engineered carrier wafer such that it is pre-stressed to compensate for warping of the wafer stack induced by the second process performed on the device wafer.
In some embodiments, a carrier wafer may be pre-stressed by depositing one or more material on one or more surfaces of the carrier wafer to produce an engineered carrier wafer. Materials may include metals, oxides, nitrides, polysilicon, and polymers, for example. Other materials may also be used. The deposition may be a uniform deposition or a patterned deposition. In some embodiments, one deposited layer of material may be uniform and a subsequent deposited layer may be patterned, or vice versa. In some embodiments, an engineered carrier wafer may be pre-stressed by ion implantation and/or doping. In some embodiments, the engineered carrier wafer may be pre-stressed by thermally treating the engineered carrier wafer. In some embodiments, the adhesive used to couple the engineered carrier wafer to the device wafer may be configured to apply a stress to the engineered carrier wafer. One or more of the processes described above may be used in combination to achieve the desired pre-stress warp of the engineered carrier wafer.
Processing the device wafer may expose the device wafer to a range of temperatures. The warp of the device wafer may be temperature dependent. In some embodiments, an engineered carrier wafer may be engineered to also have a temperature dependent warp. In some embodiments, a metal layer may be applied to an engineered carrier wafer to apply a stress. The stress applied by the metal layer may be temperature dependent. The temperature dependence of the stress applied to the engineered carrier wafer by the metal layer may allow for the carrier wafer to compensate for the changing warp of a device wafer as it is exposed to a range of temperatures to reduce the warp of the wafer stack. The degree of warp and the temperature dependence of the warp of the engineered carrier wafer may be affected by the thickness of the layer and the type of material deposited. The pattern in which the material is deposited may also impact the magnitude of warp and the temperature dependence. In some embodiments, more than one material is deposited on the engineered carrier wafer to achieve a desired warp and temperature dependence. The temperature dependence of the warp may be linear or non-linear.
A machine that may process device wafers may be configured to tolerate a range of warp of a wafer stack. In some embodiments, an engineered carrier wafer may be pre-stressed to keep the warp of the wafer stack within a desired warp range. In some embodiments, the engineered carrier wafer may not precisely counteract the warp of the device wafer but may keep the warp of the wafer stack within the tolerance range of all machines that may process a device wafer.
A device wafer coupled to an engineered carrier wafer may not always reduce the warp of the wafer stack. For example, still referring to
In some embodiments, the warp induced in a device wafer by each manufacturing step may be known. In some embodiments, the pre-stress required to apply to an engineered carrier wafer to induce a desired warp may also be known. In some embodiments, the pre-stress applied to an engineered carrier wafer by a process may be modeled by engineering software.
In some embodiments, the warping of the engineered carrier wafer may not be seen visually, even after the engineered carrier wafer has been pre-stressed. In some embodiments, the material of the engineered carrier wafer may be chosen such that the stress applied by the engineered carrier wafer on the device wafer counteracts, at least in part, a warp of the device wafer, even when the engineered carrier wafer alone does not exhibit a visually detectable warp.
In some embodiments, the engineered carrier wafers may be reusable. After being removed from a first device wafer, it may be coupled to a second device wafer to be processed. In some embodiments, the engineered carrier wafers may be disposable. A new engineered carrier wafer may be fabricated for each device wafer produced.
The use of engineered carrier wafers may reduce the warp of a wafer stack that includes the engineered carrier wafer and a device wafer. The reduction in warp may improve the quality of processing the device wafer. For example, polishing may produce a more even polish across the entire surface of the device wafer. The improved quality may be due, at least in part, by a more even surface of the device wafer provided to a machine for processing. The reduction in warp of the wafer stack may also reduce the incidence of false defect detection. For example, a camera may be used to image a surface of the device wafer. If the wafer stack exhibits a high magnitude of warp, portions of the surface may be outside the focal plane of the camera. This may result in areas of the image being out of focus. During processing, the out-of-focus areas of the image of the device wafer may be incorrectly labeled as defective. This may cause the rejection of a non-defective device wafer. Engineered carrier wafers may reduce damage to device wafers. For example, reduction in warp of the wafer stack may prevent the device wafer from cracking or permanently deforming due to the intrinsic stress applied to the device wafer. Other benefits of utilizing engineered carrier wafers to counteract the warp of device wafers may also be possible.
From the foregoing it will be appreciated that, although specific embodiments of the invention have been described herein for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without deviating from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not limited except as by the appended claims.
Claims
1. (canceled)
2. The method of claim 27, further comprising depositing a layer on at least one of the first surface and second surface to pre-stress the engineered carrier wafer.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the layer includes a metal.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein the layer is a passivation layer.
5. The method of claim 27, wherein the warp is dependent on temperature.
6. The method of claim 27, further comprising polishing least one of the first surface and second surface to pre-stress the engineered carrier wafer.
7. The method of claim 27, further comprising forming an adhesive on the first surface of the engineered carrier wafer.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the adhesive pre-stresses the engineered carrier wafer.
9. (canceled)
10. The method of claim 27, wherein the warp of the engineered carrier wafer is configured to reduce a warp of a wafer stack, wherein the wafer stack includes the engineered carrier wafer and the device wafer.
11. A method, comprising:
- forming an engineered carrier wafer by performing a first process on a carrier wafer to pre-stress the carrier wafer;
- coupling a device wafer to the engineered carrier wafer;
- performing a second process on the device wafer,
- performing a third process on the engineered carrier wafer, wherein the third process pre-stresses the engineered carrier wafer such that it induces a warp in the engineered carrier wafer configured to at least in part counteract a warp to be induced in the device wafer due to a fourth process, and
- performing the fourth process on the device wafer.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the device wafer is coupled to the carrier wafer before performing the first process.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein the first process pre-stresses the carrier wafer such that it induces a warp in the carrier wafer configured to counteract, at least in part, a warp in the device wafer.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein the first process is a layer deposition process.
15. The method of claim 11, wherein the first process is a doping process.
16. The method of claim 11, wherein the first process is an ion implantation process.
17. The method of claim 11, wherein the first process includes a plurality of processes.
18. The method of claim 11, wherein the first process is performed on at least one of a first surface or a second surface opposite the first surface of the carrier wafer.
19. The method of claim 11, further comprising performing a fifth process on the engineered carrier wafer and performing a sixth process on the device wafer.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the fifth process pre-stresses the engineered carrier wafer such that it induces a warp in the engineered carrier wafer configured to counteract, at least in part, a warp in the device wafer, wherein the warp in the device wafer is induced by the sixth process.
21. (canceled)
22. The method of claim 28, further comprising selecting the first desired warp based on a warp the device wafer will incur due to mounting the device wafer on the engineered carrier wafer.
23. The method of claim 28, wherein performing the first and second pre-stress processes on the wafer stack performed to counteract, at least in part, a warp of the device wafer to reduce a warp of the wafer stack.
24. (canceled)
25. The method of claim 28, wherein the engineered carrier wafer includes at least one of silicon, quartz, sapphire, and silicon carbide.
26. The method of claim 28, wherein the desired warp is not substantially detectable in the engineered carrier wafer.
27. A method, comprising:
- performing a plurality of processes on a device wafer, wherein the device wafer is mounted to an engineered carrier wafer, and wherein the engineered carrier wafer at least comprises a first surface and a second surface opposite the first surface, and wherein the engineered carrier wafer is pre-stressed to exhibit a warp; and
- performing a plurality of pre-stress processes on the engineered carrier wafer, wherein each of the plurality of pre-stress processes occurs prior to a subsequent process of the plurality of processes performed on the device wafer, and wherein each of the pre-stress processes are configured to further pre-stress the carrier wafer to exhibit further warp based on a stress the subsequent process of the plurality of processes will induce in the wafer.
28. A method, comprising:
- pre-stressing an engineered carrier wafer to induce a first desired warp;
- forming an adhesive layer on a surface of the engineered carrier wafer;
- mounting a device wafer on the engineered carrier wafer by the adhesive layer to form a wafer stack;
- forming a wafer stack comprising a wafer and the engineered carrier wafer;
- performing a first pre-stress process on the wafer stack to induce a second desired warp in the engineered carrier wafer, wherein the second desired warp is based on and counteractive to a warp to be induced in the device wafer due to a first device wafer process;
- performing the first wafer process; and
- performing a second pre-stress process on the wafer stack to induce a third desired warp in the engineered carrier wafer, wherein the third desired warp is based on and counteractive to a warp to be induced in the device wafer due to a second wafer process,
- wherein the first and second warps in the engineered carrier wafer are different.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 29, 2015
Publication Date: Aug 4, 2016
Inventors: Ahmed H. Abdelnaby (Boise, ID), Sony Varghese (Boise, ID)
Application Number: 14/609,272