Copper die bumps (first level interconnect) and low-K dielectrics in 65nm high volume manufacturing

The benefits of copper (Cu) die-side bumps for flip chip application are well known and have been sought for more than a decade. However, the introduction of fragile low-k interlayer dielectrics (ILD's) into back end interconnect architectures have made integrating copper bumps challenging, i.e...

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Published in56th Electronic Components and Technology Conference 2006 p. 5 pp.
Main Authors Yeoh, A., Chang, M., Pelto, C., Tzuen-Luh Huang, Balakrishnan, S., Leatherman, G., Agraharam, S., Guotao Wang, Zhiyong Wang, Chiang, D., Stover, P., Brandenburger, P.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 2006
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ISBN1424401526
9781424401529
ISSN0569-5503
DOI10.1109/ECTC.2006.1645872

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Summary:The benefits of copper (Cu) die-side bumps for flip chip application are well known and have been sought for more than a decade. However, the introduction of fragile low-k interlayer dielectrics (ILD's) into back end interconnect architectures have made integrating copper bumps challenging, i.e. low-k ILD cracking that often leads to partial or complete die failure. For the 65nm technology node, Intel has successfully incorporated copper die-side bumps mated to eutectic tin-lead (SnPb) package-side bumps in high volume manufacturing (HVM). Advantages of using copper die bumps include lowering the bump critical dimension (CD) floor, continued downward scaling of passivation opening size, a drastically simplified underbump metallization (UBM) scheme that projects to improved electromigration resistance, and extensions to higher 10 densities. This paper will discuss some of these gains
ISBN:1424401526
9781424401529
ISSN:0569-5503
DOI:10.1109/ECTC.2006.1645872