DocumentCode
2174661
Title
Improved bonding pad design for fluxless flip chip bonding process and low fracture strength substrates
Author
Bonda, Rao ; Guo, Yifan ; Stafford, John ; Swan, Geoff
Author_Institution
Semicond. Products Sector, Motorola Inc., Tempe, AZ, USA
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
1701
Lastpage
1704
Abstract
A fluxless flip-chip bonding process and a metallized glass substrate have been used for the development of an optical display module. Two major problems were encountered with this design and the bonding process that affected both the assembly yield and reliability of the modules. One was, in the absence of flux, holding the chip in place on the bonding pads until the solder reflow had been difficult. This resulted non-wets and low assembly yield. The other problem was, fracture of the glass around and underneath the bonding pads during flip chip bonding and subsequent reliability tests. Incorporating “donut hole” structure in the bonding pads provided excellent tacking, as the solder deformed into these donut hole structures, and held the chip in place until the solder reflow. This dramatically improved the assembly yield. Covering the bonding pad edges with passivation, which modified the stress state around the bonding pads, eliminated the latter problem (fracture of glass)
Keywords
flip-chip devices; fracture toughness; multichip modules; reflow soldering; assembly yield; bonding pad design; donut hole structure; fluxless flip-chip bonding; fracture strength; metallized glass substrate; multichip module; optical display; passivation; reflow soldering; reliability; tacking; Assembly; Atherosclerosis; Bonding processes; Flip chip; Glass; Metallization; Plasma applications; Plasma temperature; Substrates; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electronic Components & Technology Conference, 2000. 2000 Proceedings. 50th
Conference_Location
Las Vegas, NV
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5908-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ECTC.2000.853449
Filename
853449
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