Advanced Packaging for Automotive Dashboard Application

Author(s):  
Nokibul Islam

The current automotive market for the IC (integrated circuit) packaging industry has grown significantly due to the increasing need for automation and higher performance in vehicles. These changes in the automotive market will enable cars to be more reliable and intelligent. To address the increasingly complex demands of the automotive market, the semiconductor packaging industry is shifting its focus to prioritize the development of advanced packages for next generation automotive market requirements. Automotive IC's are traditionally wirebond packages. Due to the increasing complexity and higher performance requirements of automotive applications, the packaging industry is moving towards high performance flip chip packages for automotive infotainment, GPS, and radar applications. In this study a comprehensive view of the changing packaging landscape from traditional wirebond to flip chip interconnect to advanced fan-out wafer level packages will be discussed. The pros and cons of each packaging technology will be examined Packaging roadmap details will be discussed along with assembly process information, determining the right BOM (bill of materials), cost data, and extensive package and board level reliability.

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (1) ◽  
pp. 000452-000457
Author(s):  
Nokibul Islam ◽  
HC Choi

Abstract The current automotive market for the integrated circuit (IC) packaging industry has grown significantly due to the increasing need for automation and higher performance in vehicles. These changes in the automotive market will enable cars to be more reliable and intelligent. To address the increasingly complex demands of the automotive market, the semiconductor packaging industry is shifting its focus to prioritize the development of advanced packages for next generation automotive market requirements. Automotive IC's are traditionally wirebond packages. Due to the increasing complexity and higher performance requirements of automotive applications, the packaging industry is moving towards high performance flip chip packages for automotive infotainment, GPS, and radar applications. In this study, a comprehensive view of the evolving packaging landscape from traditional wirebond to flip chip interconnect to advanced fan-out wafer level packages will be discussed. The pros and cons of each packaging technology will be examined. Packaging roadmap details will be discussed along with assembly process information, determining the right bill of materials (BOM), and extensive package and board level reliability (BLR) including grade 1 and grade 0 reliability data will be discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (1) ◽  
pp. 000793-000798
Author(s):  
Keith Best ◽  
Roger McCleary ◽  
Richard Hollman ◽  
Phillip Holmes

Advanced packaging technologies continue to enable the semiconductor industry to meet the needs for ever thinner, smaller and faster components required in mobile devices and other high performance applications. In the early days of advanced packaging, C4 solder bumps were the alternative to wire bonding. Although lead-free solder remains one of the preferred methods for assembly, tall copper structures (copper pillars) are becoming the standard interconnect solution for many applications. A process of lithography and subsequent electroplating are the mainstream process for today's copper pillar formation on wafer level for high-end flip chip devices. The latest trends in advanced packaging require another technology development when it comes to copper pillars. Modern integration schemes such as 2.5D interposer as well as 3D stacking have pushed the limits of standard lithography and copper electroplating capabilities. Specifically, the need for fine-pitch high aspect ratio copper pillars represents a challenge. In addition, the trend towards rectangular panel-based packaging as seen with glass interposers or panel fan-out (P-FO) devices demands a challenging scale-up of lithography and electroplating equipment and processing capabilities. This work specifically focuses on the formation of high-aspect ratio copper pillars in excess of 100μm by means of stepper-based lithography followed by electroplating. A unique test vehicle has been created to evaluate the process latitude for lithography for different resist materials as well as the specific electroplating challenges associated with these tall and narrow structures. The paper investigates the influence of key parameters such as CD uniformity, pattern density variations and resist profile on the critically important pillar height uniformity across the wafer or panel. In addition, the resist profile behavior at the substrate interface is being examined as it influences undercut behavior during wet etch of the plating seed layer. A number of wet and dry-film resist materials and appropriate lithography processes (spin coat or laminate, expose, develop) followed by copper plating based on varying chemistries and process parameters are being explored. The paper also summarizes the current requirements for the above mentioned lithography and plating processes as seen in the industry today.


Author(s):  
Amy Lujan

In recent years, there has been increased focus on fan-out wafer level packaging with the growing inclusion of a variety of fan-out wafer level packages in mobile products. While fan-out wafer level packaging may be the right solution for many designs, it is not always the lowest cost solution. The right packaging choice is the packaging technology that meets design requirements at the lowest cost. Flip chip packaging, a more mature technology, continues to be an alternative to fan-out wafer level packaging. It is important for many in the electronic packaging industry to be able to determine whether flip chip or fan-out wafer level packaging is the most cost-effective option. This paper will compare the cost of flip chip and fan-out wafer level packaging across a variety of designs. Additionally, the process flows for each technology will be introduced and the cost drivers highlighted. A variety of package sizes, die sizes, and design features will be covered by the cost comparison. Yield is a key component of cost and will also be considered in the analysis. Activity based cost modeling will be used for this analysis. With this type of cost modeling, a process flow is divided into a series of activities, and the total cost of each activity is accumulated. The cost of each activity is determined by analyzing the following attributes: time required, labor required, material required (consumable and permanent), capital required, and yield loss. The goal of this cost comparison is to determine which design features drive a design to be packaged more cost-effectively as a flip chip package, and which design features result in a lower cost fan-out wafer level package.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (S1) ◽  
pp. S1-S46
Author(s):  
Ron Huemoeller

Over the past few years, there has been a significant shift from PCs and notebooks to smartphones and tablets as drivers of advanced packaging innovation. In fact, the overall packaging industry is doing quite well today as a result, with solid growth expected to create a market value in excess of $30B USD by 2020. This is largely due to the technology innovation in the semiconductor industry continuing to march forward at an incredible pace, with silicon advancements in new node technologies continuing on one end of the spectrum and innovative packaging solutions coming forward on the other in a complementary fashion. The pace of innovation has quickened as has the investments required to bring such technologies to production. At the packaging level, the investments required to support the advancements in silicon miniaturization and heterogeneous integration have now reached well beyond $500M USD per year. Why has the investment to support technology innovation in the packaging community grown so much? One needs to look no further than the complexity of the most advanced package technologies being used today and coming into production over the next year. Advanced packaging technologies have increased in complexity over the years, transitioning from single to multi-die packaging, enabled by 3-dimensional integration, system-in-package (SiP), wafer-level packaging (WLP), 2.5D/3D technologies and creative approached to embedding die. These new innovative packaging technologies enable more functionality and offer higher levels of integration within the same package footprint, or even more so, in an intensely reduced footprint. In an industry segment that has grown accustomed to a multitude of package options, technology consolidation seems evident, producing “The Big Five” advanced packaging platforms. These include low-cost flip chip, wafer-level chip-scale package (WLCSP), microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), laminate-based advanced system-in-package (SiP) and wafer-based advanced SiP designs. This presentation will address ‘The Big Five’ packaging platforms and how they are adding value to the Semiconductor Industry.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 111-117
Author(s):  
Woon-Seong Kwon ◽  
Suresh Ramalingam ◽  
Xin Wu ◽  
Liam Madden ◽  
C. Y. Huang ◽  
...  

This article introduces the first comprehensive demonstration of new innovative technology comprising multiple key technologies for highly cost-effective and high-performance Xilinx field programmable gate array (FPGA), which is so-called stack silicon-less interconnect technology (SLIT) that provides the equivalent high-bandwidth connectivity and routing design-rule as stack silicon interconnect (SSI) technology at a cost-effective manner. We have successfully demonstrated the overall process integration and functions of our new SLIT-employed package using Virtex®-7 2000T FPGA product with chip-to-wafer stacking, wafer-level flux cleaning, microbump underfilling, mold encapsulation, and backside silicon removal. Of all technology elements, both full silicon removal process with faster etching and no dielectric layer damage and wafer warpage management after full silicon etching are most crucial elements to realize the SLIT technology. To manage the wafer warpage after full Si removal, a couple of knobs are identified and used such as top reinforcement layer, microbump underfill properties tuning, die thickness, die-to-die space, and total thickness adjustments. It is also discussed in the article how the wafer warpage behaves and how the wafer warpage is managed. New SLIT module shows excellent warpage characteristics of only −30 μm ∼ −40 μm at room temperature (25°C) for 25 mm × 31 mm in size and +20 μm ∼ +25 μm at reflow temperature (250°C). Thermal simulation results shows that thermal resistance of new SLIT package is almost comparable to that of standard 2000T flip-chip ball grid array (FC-BGA) package using through silicon via interposer with standard heat sink configuration and air wind condition. The reliability assessment is now under the study.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (1) ◽  
pp. 000321-000325
Author(s):  
Bob Chylak ◽  
Horst Clauberg ◽  
Tom Strothmann

Abstract Device packaging is undergoing a proliferation of assembly options within the ever-expanding category of Advanced Packaging. Fan Out-Wafer Level Packages are achieving wide adoption based on improved performance and reduced package size and new System in Package products are coming to market in FOWLP, 2.5D and 3D package formats with the full capability to leverage heterogeneous integration in small package profiles. While the wide-spread adoption of thermocompression bonding and 2.5D packages predicted several years ago has not materialized to the extent predicted, advanced memory modules assembled by TCB are in high volume manufacturing, as are some high-end GPUs with integrated memory on Si interposer. High accuracy flip chip has been pushed to fine pitches that were difficult to imagine only three years ago and innovation in substrates and bonder technology is pushing the throughput and pitch capability even further. The packaging landscape, once dominated by a few large assembly providers, now includes turn-key packaging initiatives from the foundries with an expanding set of fan-out packing options. The fan-out processes include face-up and face-down methods, die first and die last methods and 2.5D or 3D package options. Selection of the most appropriate packaging technology from the combined aspects of electrical performance, form-factor, yield and cost presents a complex problem with considerable uncertainty and high risk for capital investment. To address this problem, the industry demands flexible manufacturing solutions that can be modified and upgraded to accommodate a changing assembly environment. This presentation will present the assembly process flows for various packaging options and discuss the key aspects of the process that influence throughput, accuracy and other key quality metrics, such as package warpage. These process flows in turn impose design constraints on submodules of the bonder. It will be shown that thoughtfully designed machine architecture allows for interchangeable and upgradeable submodules that can support nearly the entire range of assembly options. As an example, a nimble, low weight, medium force, constant heat bondhead for high throughput FOWLP can be interchanged with a high force, pulse heater bondhead to support low stress/low warpage thermocompression bonding. The various configuration options for a flexible advanced packaging bonder will be reviewed along with the impact of configuration changes on throughput and accuracy.


Author(s):  
Maaike M. V. Taklo ◽  
Astrid-Sofie Vardøy ◽  
Ingrid De Wolf ◽  
Veerle Simons ◽  
H. J. van de Wiel ◽  
...  

The level of stress in silicon as a result of applying Cu-Sn SLID wafer level bonding to hermetically encapsulate a high-performance infrared bolometer device was studied. Transistors are present in the read out integrated circuit (ROIC) of the device and some are located below the bond frame. Test vehicles were assembled using Cu-Sn SLID bonding and micro-Raman spectroscopy was applied on cross sectioned samples to measure stress in the silicon near the bond frame. The test vehicles contained cavities and the bulging of the structures was studied using white light interferometry. The test vehicles were thermally stressed to study possible effects of the treatments on the level of stress in the silicon. Finite element modeling was performed to support the understanding of the various observations. The measurements indicated levels of stress in the silicon that can affect transistors in regions up to 15 μm below the bond frame. The observed levels of stress corresponded well with the performed modeling. However, no noticeable effect was found for the ROIC used in this work. The specific technology used for the fabrication of the ROIC of a MEMS device is thus decisive. The level of stress did not appear to change as a result of the imposed thermal stress. The level of stress caused by the bond frame can be expected to stay constant throughout the lifetime of a device.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (1) ◽  
pp. 000169-000175
Author(s):  
Christian Klewer ◽  
Frank Kuechenmeister ◽  
Jens Paul ◽  
Dirk Breuer ◽  
Bjoern Boehme ◽  
...  

Abstract This article describes the methodology used to derive the 22FDX® Fully-Depleted Silicon-On-Insulator (FDSOI) Chip Package Interaction (CPI) qualification envelope. In the first part it is discussed how the individual market segments influence the technology features and offerings, including BEOL stacks and package types. In the following, the criteria used for the selection of BEOL stacks, die and package sizes and the interconnect type for the qualification envelope are summarized and explained. The three CPI qualification stages and related characterization methods are presented. CPI test structures used in the envelope are reported and their placement on the technology qualification vehicles (TQV) is outlined on the basis of flip chip TQV. Finally, the paper presents the passing 22FDX® package and board level reliability results obtained for wire bond, flip chip, as well as wafer level fan-in and fan-out package technologies. Key aspects of the individual qualifications are reported.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (DPC) ◽  
pp. 001302-001327 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Swarbrick ◽  
Keith Best ◽  
Casey Donaher ◽  
Steve Gardner

Advanced packaging technologies continue to enable the semiconductor industry to meet the needs for ever thinner, smaller and faster components required in mobile devices and other high performance applications. However, the increase in chip I/O count, driven by Moore's law, and the ability to produce FinFETs below 10nm has presented numerous additional challenges to the existing advanced packaging processes. Furthermore, unlike Moore's law, which predicted the number of transistors in a dense integrated circuit to double approximately every two years, advanced packaging is experiencing an alternate “law”; where instead of the number of transistors increasing, it is the number of functions increasing, within the ever decreasing volume constraints of the final product that drives the technology roadmap. Inevitably, as functionality increases, so does the process complexity and cost. And in the very cost sensitive advanced packaging arena, Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test suppliers (OSATs) need to compensate by reducing their manufacturing costs. This requires the OSAT to reduce material costs, increase throughput, yield, and look for new ways to reduce the number of process steps. One of the ways in which the OSATs have reduced the cost of materials is by removing the silicon wafer from the backend processing altogether; using epoxy mold compound (EMC) to create reconstituted wafers, or by using glass carriers. In the case of glass carriers, it is often the case, where the dice are attached face down on the carrier and subsequent processing prevents the front side patterns from being visible from the top side of the composite stack, even with Infrared (IR) imaging. In this particular case, an additional lithography “clear out” window is defined in photoresist over the alignment mark so the opaque film can be etched away from the alignment mark, the resist is then stripped and cleaned. This additional processing is obviously costly and time consuming. This paper specifically focuses on the concepts, methodology, and performance of a stepper based photolithography solution that utilizes a photoresist latent image to provide temporary alignment marks for the lithography process, removing the need for the additional patterning and etching steps. This revolutionary system employs a backside camera, to align to die through the carrier. A separate exposure unit, calibrated to the alignment camera center, exposes temporary latent image targets which are then detected by the system's regular alignment system during the normal stepper lithography operation. The performance data for the alignment, overlay, and latent image depth control are discussed in detail. The final analysis proves that overlay of < 2um is readily achievable, with no impact on system throughput.


Author(s):  
XueSong Zhang ◽  
Qian Wang ◽  
Bo Wang ◽  
Gang Wang ◽  
Xin Gu ◽  
...  

Abstract Widespread millimeter wave applications have promoted rapid development of System in Package (SiP) and Antenna in Package (AiP). Most AiP structures take the form of flip chip on antenna substrate, where interconnect losses are caused by solder bumps, and manufacturing difficulties may be encountered for chips with fine pad pitches. Fan-out wafer level package (FOWLP) with antenna patterning on Redistributed Layers (RDL) is another method for mm-wave AiP realization. In this project a hybrid integration AiP structure is developed. The Microwave Monolithic Integrated Circuit (MMIC) chip and antenna unit are integrated with chip-first FOWLP process. By using multilayer organic substrate and fine pitch RDL interconnection, proper antenna performance and lower transmission loss can be achieved. Modified coplanar waveguide is adopted to feed 2x2 aperture array formed on RDL. Package warpage is evaluated using ANSYS and Shadow Moire measurement. The antenna realizes bandwidth 25% and gain 8.5dBi using aperture-coupled stacked patch for 60GHz digital communication system. The proposed approach is a convenient solution for the hybrid integration of millimeter wave AiP systems.


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