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1.
As one of the key requirements of the no-flow underfill materials for flip-chip applications, a proper self-fluxing agent must be incorporated in the developed no-flow underfill materials to provide proper fluxing activity during the simultaneous solder reflow and underfill material curing. However, most fluxing agents have some adverse effects on the no-flow underfill material properties and assembly reliability. In this paper, we have extensively investigated the effects of the concentration of the selected fluxing agent on the material properties, interconnect integrity and assembly reliability. Through this work, an optimum concentration window of the fluxing agent is obtained and a routine procedure of evaluating fluxing agents is established  相似文献   

2.
The advanced flip chip in package (FCIP) process using no-flow underfill material for high I/O density and fine-pitch interconnect applications presents challenges for an assembly process that must achieve high electrical interconnect yield and high reliability performance. With respect to high reliability, the voids formed in the underfill between solder bumps or inside the solder bumps during the no-flow underfill assembly process of FCIP devices have been typically considered one of the critical concerns affecting assembly yield and reliability performance. In this paper, the plausible causes of underfill void formation in FCIP using no-flow underfill were investigated through systematic experimentation with different types of test vehicles. For instance, the effects of process conditions, material properties, and chemical reaction between the solder bumps and no-flow underfill materials on the void formation behaviors were investigated in advanced FCIP assemblies. In this investigation, the chemical reaction between solder and underfill during the solder wetting and underfill cure process has been found to be one of the most significant factors for void formation in high I/O and fine-pitch FCIP assembly using no-flow underfill materials.  相似文献   

3.
As a concept to achieve low-cost, high-throughput flip chip on board (FCOB) assembly, a new process has been developed implementing next generation flip chip processing based no-flow fluxing underfill materials. The low-cost, high throughput flip chip process implements large area underfill printing, integrated chip placement and underfill flow and simultaneous solder interconnect reflow and underfill cure. The goals of this study are to demonstrate feasibility of no flow underfill materials and the high throughput flip chip process over a range of flip chip configurations, identify the critical process variables affecting yield, analyze the yield of the high throughput flip chip process, and determine the impact of no-flow underfill materials on key process elements. Reported in this work is the assembly of a series of test vehicles to assess process yield and process defects. The test vehicles are assembled by depositing a controlled mass of underfill material on the chip site, aligning chip to the substrate pads, and placing the chip inducing a compression type underfill flow. The assemblies are reflowed in a commercial reflow furnace in an air atmosphere to simultaneously form the solder interconnects and cure the underfill. A series of designed experiments identify the critical process variables including underfill mass, reflow profile, placement velocity, placement force, and underfill material system. Of particular interest is the fact that the no-flow underfill materials studied exhibit an affinity for unique reflow profiles to minimize process defects  相似文献   

4.
In order to enhance the reliability of a flip-chip on organic board package, underfill is usually used to redistribute the thermomechanical stress created by the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) mismatch between the silicon chip and organic substrate. However, the conventional underfill relies on the capillary flow of the underfill resin and has many disadvantages. In order to overcome these disadvantages, many variations have been invented to improve the flip-chip underfill process. This paper reviews the recent advances in the material design, process development, and reliability issues of flip-chip underfill, especially in no-flow underfill, molded underfill, and wafer-level underfill. The relationship between the materials, process, and reliability in these packages is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Flip chip on board (FCOB) is one of the most quickly growing segments in advanced electronic packaging. In many cases, assembly processes are not capable of providing the high throughputs needed for integrated surface mount technology (SMT) processing (Tummala et al, 1997). A new high throughput process using no-flow underfill materials has been developed that has the potential to significantly increase flip chip assembly throughput. Previous research has demonstrated the feasibility and reliability of the high throughput process required for FCOB assemblies. The goal of this research was to integrate the high throughput flip chip process on commercial flip chip packages that consisted of high lead solder balls on a polyimide passivated silicon die bonded with eutectic solder bumped pads on the laminate substrate interface (Qi, 1999). This involved extensive parametric experimentation that focused on the following elements: no-flow process evaluation and implementation on the commercial packages, reflow profile parameter effects on eutectic solder wetting of high lead solder bumps, interactions between the no-flow underfill materials and the package solder interconnect and tented via features, void capture and void formation during processing, and material set compatibility and the effects on long term reliability performance  相似文献   

6.
Lead-free solder reflow process has presented challenges to no-flow underfill material and assembly. The currently available no-flow underfill materials are mainly designed for eutectic Sn-Pb solders. This paper presents the assembly of lead-free bumped flip-chip with developed no-flow underfill materials. Epoxy resin/HMPA/metal AcAc/Flux G system is developed as no-flow underfills for Sn/Ag/Cu alloy bumped flip-chips. The solder wetting test is conducted to demonstrate the fluxing capability of the underfills for lead-free solders. A 100% solder joint yield has been achieved using Sn/Ag/Cu bumped flip-chips in a no-flow process. A scanning acoustic microscope is used to observe the underfill voiding. The out-gassing of HMPA at high curing temperatures causes severe voiding inside the package. A differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) used to study the curing degree of the underfill after reflow with or without post-cure. The post-curing profiles indicate that the out-gassing of HMPA would destroy the stoichiometric balance between the epoxy and hardener, and result in a need for high temperature post-cure. The material properties of the underfills are characterized and the influence of underfill out-gassing on the assembly and material properties is investigated. The impact of lead-free reflow on the material design and process conditions of no-flow underfill is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
No-flow underfill process in flip-chip assembly has become a promising technology toward a smaller, faster and more cost-efficient packaging technology. The current available no-flow underfill materials are mainly designed for eutectic tin-lead solders. With the advance of lead-free interconnection due to the environmental concerns, a new no-flow underfill chemistry needs to be developed for lead-free solder bumped flip-chip applications. Many epoxy resin/hexahydro-4-methyl phthalic anhydride/metal acetylacetonate material systems have been screened in terms of their curing behavior. Some potential base formulations with curing peak temperatures higher than 200°C (based on differential scanning calorimetry at a heating rate of 5°C/min) are selected for further study. The proper fluxing agents are developed and the effects of fluxing agents on the curing behavior and cured material properties of the potential base formulations are studied using differential scanning calorimetry, thermomechanical analysis, dynamic-mechanical analysis, thermogravimetric analysis, and rheometer. Fluxing capability of the developed no-flow formulations is evaluated using the wetting test of lead-free solder balls on a copper board. The developed no-flow underfill formulations show sufficient fluxing capability and good potential for lead-free solder bumped flip-chip applications  相似文献   

8.
Most no-flow underfill materials are based on epoxy/anhydride chemistry. Due to the sensitizing nature, the use of anhydride is limited and there is a need for a no-flow underfill using nonanhydride curing system. This paper presents the development of novel no-flow underfill materials-based on epoxy/phenolic resin system. Epoxy and phenolic resins of different structures are evaluated in terms of their curing behavior, thermo-mechanical properties, viscosity, adhesion toward passivation, moisture absorption and the reliability in flip-chip underfill package. The influence of chemical structure and the crosslinking density of the resin on the material properties is investigated. The assembly with nonanhydride underfill shows high reliability from the thermal shock test. Solder wetting test has confirmed the sufficient fluxing capability of phenolic resins. Results show that epoxy/phenolic system has great potential for an environmentally friendly and highly reliable no-flow underfill  相似文献   

9.
Flip chip on organic substrate has relied on underfill to redistribute the thermomechanical stress and to enhance the solder joint reliability. However, the conventional flip-chip underfill process involves multiple process steps and has become the bottleneck of the flip-chip process. The no-flow underfill is invented to simplify the flip-chip underfill process and to reduce the packaging cost. The no-flow underfill process requires the underfill to possess high curing latency to avoid gelation before solder reflow so to ensure the solder interconnect. Therefore, the temperature distribution of a no-flow flip-chip package during the solder reflow process is important for high assembly yield. This paper uses the finite-element method (FEM) to model the temperature distribution of a flip-chip no-flow underfill package during the solder reflow process. The kinetics of underfill curing is established using an autocatalytic reaction model obtained by DSC studies. Two approaches are developed in order to incorporate the curing kinetics of the underfill into the FEM model using iteration and a loop program. The temperature distribution across the package and across the underfill layer is studied. The effect of the presence of the underfill fillet and the influence of the chip dimension on the temperature difference in the underfill layer is discussed. The influence of the underfill curing kinetics on the modeling results is also evaluated.  相似文献   

10.
The no-flow underfill has been invented and practiced in the industry for a few years. However, due to the interfering of silica fillers with solder joint formation, most no-flow underfills are not filled with silica fillers and hence have a high coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE), which is undesirable for high reliability. In a novel invention, a double-layer no-flow underfill is implemented to the flip-chip process and allows fillers to be incorporated into the no-flow underfill. The effects of bottom layer underfill thickness, bottom layer underfill viscosity, and reflow profile on the solder wetting properties are investigated in a design of experiment (DOE) using quartz chips. It is found that the thickness and viscosity of the bottom layer underfill are essential to the wetting of the solder bumps. Chip scale package (CSP) components are assembled using the double-layer no-flow underfill process. Silica fillers of different sizes and weight percentages are incorporated into the upper layer underfill. With a high viscosity bottom layer underfill, up to 40 wt% fillers can be added into the upper layer underfill and do not interfere with solder joint formation.  相似文献   

11.
For miniature interconnection applications, innovative material systems based on gallium alloys offer potentially attractive alternatives over commonly used bonding materials, such as solders and conductive adhesives, without the reliability and environmental drawbacks. Gallium alloys are mechanically alloyed mixtures of a liquid metal and metallic powders, formed at room temperature. The alloys cure to form solid intermetallic compounds. In this work, gallium alloys have been investigated for flip-chip interconnect applications. Specifically, this paper presents the results of a preliminary feasibility study demonstrating gallium alloys as advanced interconnect materials for flip-chip on laminate applications. The topics covered include the test vehicle assembly process, reliability screening results, preliminary failure mode analysis, and interconnect microstructure analysis. To demonstrate preliminary feasibility and application, gallium alloyed with copper and nickel was used as micro-miniature interconnects between bare silicon chips and printed circuit boards. This study shows preliminary feasibility of such interconnects and reliability tests demonstrate reasonable cyclic fatigue with the use of underfill. Moreover, through the course of this work a new micro-deposition technology for gallium alloys was developed which leverages existing industry infrastructure. This initial study represents a significant advancement in microelectronic interconnect materials unveiling the potential for an innovative lead-fine, low-temperature interconnect alternative  相似文献   

12.
Underfills are traditionally applied for flip-chip applications. Recently, there has been increasing use of underfill for board-level assembly including ball grid arrays (BGAs) and chip scale packages (CSPs) to enhance reliability in harsh environments and impact resistance to mechanical shocks. The no-flow underfill process eliminates the need for capillary flow and combines fluxing and underfilling into one process step, which simplifies the assembly of underfilled BGAs and CSPs for SMT applications. However, the lack of reworkability decreases the final yield of assembled systems. In this paper, no-flow underfill formulations are developed to provide fluxing capability, reworkability, high impact resistance, and good reliability for the board-level components. The designed underfill materials are characterized with the differential scanning calorimeter (DSC), the thermal mechanical analyzer (TMA), and the dynamic mechanical analyzer (DMA). The potential reworkability of the underfills is evaluated using the die shear test at elevated temperatures. The 3-point bending test and the DMA frequency sweep indicate that the developed materials have high fracture toughness and good damping properties. CSP components are assembled on the board using developed underfill. High interconnect yield is achieved. Reworkability of the underfills is demonstrated. The reliability of the components is evaluated in air-to-air thermal shock (AATS). The developed formulations have potentially high reliability for board-level components.  相似文献   

13.
In this paper, the reliability of the microBGA assembly using no-flow underfill is studied by thermal shock and bending cycle. Recently, a more promising underfill technology so-called “no-flow underfill” has been invented to cope with the limitations, which promises low cost assembly. The research results of self-alignment about no-flow underfill show that the self-alignment of microBGA using no-flow underfill is inferior to that using flux. There is residual displacement more or less in various offset volumes. Therefore, the effect of no-flow underfill on reliability of microBGA assembly needs to be investigated systematically. In this study, samples are reflowed with an optimized “rapid ramp” temperature profile, and using flux and no-flow underfill, respectively. One group of samples are subjected to thermal shock at temperature −40–125°C, and dwell time 15 min. Another group of samples is subjected to cyclic bending at a bending speed of 300 mm/min between 500 and −500 μ at the center of a microBGA package. The fatigue lifetime distribution is examined with the aid of “Weibull” method to investigate the effect of no-flow underfill on the reliability of microBGA assembly, and the failure mechanism is investigated by using the scanning electron microscope. Our experiment results show that the no-flow underfill can greatly enhance the mechanical fatigue lifetime. The underfilled material improves the stress distribution in solder joints. For assemblies with no underfills, the fracture always occurs in the outermost solder joint. The issue is improved by underfilling with no-flow underfill. However, the no-flow underfill cannot improve the thermal reliability of microBGA assembly, because the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of no-flow underfill is too great at present. It is necessary to reduce the no-flow underfill CTE, so as to apply actually to BGA and CSP etc. Moreover, it is displayed that the fatigue lifetime of the residual displacement solder is less than 50% of that of the non-misaligned solder. The residual displacement is formed when the misalignment is >25% during mounting. Therefore, when the no-flow underfill is used in microBGA assembly, care must be taken to keep the mount position, and misalignment <25%.  相似文献   

14.
The advanced flip-chip-in-package (FCIP) process technology, using no-flow underfill material for high I/O density (over 3000 I/O) and fine-pitch (down to 150 mum) interconnect applications, presents challenges for flip chip processing because underfill void formation during reflow drives interconnect yield down and degrades reliability. In spite of such challenges, a high yield, reliable assembly process (>99.99%) has been achieved using commercial no-flow underfill material with a high I/O, fine-pitch FCIP. This has been obtained using design of experiments with physical interpretation techniques. Statistical analysis determined what assembly conditions should be used in order to achieve robust interconnects without disrupting the FCIP interconnect structure. However, the resulting high yield process had the side effect of causing a large number of voids in the FCIP assemblies. Parametric studies were conducted to develop assembly process conditions that would minimize the number of voids in the FCIP induced by thermal effects. This work has resulted in a significant reduction in the number of underfill voids. This paper presents systematic studies into yield characterization, void formation characterization, and void reduction through the use of structured experimentation which was designed to improve assembly yield and to minimize the number of voids, respectively, in FCIP assemblies.  相似文献   

15.
The formation of underfill voids is an area of concern in the low cost, high throughput, or "no-flow" flip chip assembly process. This assembly process involves placement of a flip chip device directly onto the substrate pad site covered with pre-dispensed no-flow underfill. The forced motion of chip placement causes a convex flow front to pass over pad and solder mask-opening features promoting void capture. This paper determines the effects of substrate design on the phenomena of underfill voiding using the no-flow process. A full-factorial design experiment analyzes several empirically determined factors that can affect void capture in no-flow processing. The substrate design parameters included pad height, solder mask opening height, pad/solder mask opening separation, and pad pitch. The process parameters include chip placement velocity and underfill viscosity. The process robustness is measured in terms of the number of voids created during chip placement, and is further analyzed for the location and any visible modes of void formation. The goal of the work is to determine improved substrate designs to minimize voiding in flip chip processing using no flow underfills.  相似文献   

16.
Thermomechanical reliability of solder joints in flip-chip packages is usually analyzed by assuming a homogeneous underfill ignoring the settling of filler particles. However, filler settling does impact flip chip reliability. This paper reports a numerical study of the influence of filler settling on the fatigue estimation of flip-chip solder joints. In total, nine underfill materials ( 35 vol% silica filler in three epoxies with three filler settling profiles for each epoxy) are individually introduced in a 2-D finite element (FE) model to compare the thermal response of flip chip solder joints that are surrounded by the underfill. The results show that the fatigue indicators for the solder joints (inelastic shear strain increments and inelastic shear strain energy density) corresponding to a gradual, nonuniform filler profile studied in this paper can be smaller than those associated with the uniform filler profile, suggesting that certain gradual filler settling profiles in conjunction with certain resin grades may favor a longer solder fatigue lifetime. The origin of this intriguing observation is in the fact that the solder fatigue indicators are a function of the thermal mismatch among the die, substrate, solder, and underfill materials. The thermal mechanics interplayed among these materials along with a gradual filler profile may allow for minimizing thermal mismatch; and thus lead to lower fatigue indicators.   相似文献   

17.
Electronic packaging designs are moving toward fewer levels of packaging to enable miniaturization and to increase performance of electronic products. One such package design is flip chip on board (FCOB). In this method, the chip is attached face down directly to a printed wiring board (PWB). Since the package is comprised of dissimilar materials, the mechanical integrity of the flip chip during assembly and operation becomes an issue due to the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) mismatch between the chip, PWB, and interconnect materials. To overcome this problem, a rigid encapsulant (underfill) is introduced between the chip and the substrate. This reduces the effective CTE mismatch and reduces the effective stresses experienced by the solder interconnects. The presence of the underfill significantly improves long term reliability. The underfill material, however, does introduce a high level of mechanical stress in the silicon die. The stress in the assembly is a function of the assembly process, the underfill material, and the underfill cure process. Therefore, selection and processing of underfill material is critical to achieving the desired performance and reliability. The effect of underfill material on the mechanical stress induced in a flip chip assembly during cure was presented in previous publications. This paper studies the effect of the cure parameters on a selected commercial underfill and correlates these properties with the stress induced in flip chip assemblies during processing  相似文献   

18.
Minimizing device side die stresses is especially important when multiple copper/low-k interconnect redistribution layers are present. Mechanical stress distributions in packaged silicon die resulting during assembly or environmental testing can be accurately characterized using test chips incorporating integral piezoresistive sensors. In this paper, measurements of thermally induced stresses in flip chip on laminate assemblies are presented. Transient die stress measurements have been made during underfill cure, and the room temperature die stresses in final cured assemblies have been compared for several different underfill encapsulants. In addition, stress variations have been monitored in the assembled flip chip die as the test boards were subjected to slow temperature changes from -40 to +150/spl deg/C. Using these measurements and ongoing numerical simulations, valuable insight has been gained on the effects of assembly variables and underfill material properties on the reliability of flip chip packages.  相似文献   

19.
Non-conductive adhesives (NCA), widely used in display packaging and fine pitch flip chip packaging technology, have been recommended as one of the most suitable interconnection materials for flip-chip chip size packages (CSPs) due to the advantages such as easier processing, good electrical performance, lower cost, and low temperature processing. Flip chip assembly using modified NCA materials with material property optimization such as CTEs and modulus by loading optimized content of nonconductive fillers for the good electrical, mechanical and reliability characteristics, can enable wide application of NCA materials for fine pitch first level interconnection in the flip chip CSP applications. In this paper, we have developed film type NCA materials for flip chip assembly on organic substrates. NCAs are generally mixture of epoxy polymer resin without any fillers, and have high CTE values un-like conventional underfill materials used to enhance thermal cycling reliability of solder flip chip assembly on organic boards. In order to reduce thermal and mechanical stress and strain induced by CTE mismatch between a chip and organic substrate, the CTE of NCAs was optimized by filler content. The flip chip CSP assembly using modified NCA showed high reliability in various environmental tests, such as thermal cycling test (-55/spl deg/C/+160/spl deg/C, 1000 cycle), high temperature humidity test (85/spl deg/C/85%RH, 1000 h) and high temperature storage test (125/spl deg/C, dry condition). The material properties of NCA such as the curing profile, the thermal expansion, the storage modulus and adhesion were also investigated as a function of filler content.  相似文献   

20.
Adhesion is one of the key properties of underfills used in flip chip assemblies. This paper characterizes the adhesion strengths of no-flow underfill materials to various die passivations using the shear test techniques. A novel shear test vehicle with planner underfill layers between the die and substrate is presented. The adhesion strengths and failure modes of the no-flow underfill materials during shear testing correlate well with their thermal shock reliability test results. Underfill adhesion related failures such as delamination and crack are investigated and correlated between flip chip assemblies and shear test vehicle assemblies without solder joint interconnects  相似文献   

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