Chapter A 1
Chapter A 1
1.1
What is wirebonding
Wirebonding is an electrical interconnection technique using thin wire and a combination of heat, pressure and/or ultrasonic energy. Wirebonding is a solid phase welding process, where the two metallic materials (wire and pad surface) are brought into intimate contact. Once the surfaces are in intimate contact, electron sharing or interdiffusion of atoms takes place, resulting in the formation of wirebond. In wirebonding process, bonding force can lead to material deformation, breaking up contamination layer and smoothing out surface asperity, which can be enhanced by the application of ultrasonic energy. Heat can accelerate Interatomic diffusion, thus the bond formation.
1.1.1
Wirebonding processes
Wirebonding process begins by firmly attaching the backside of a chip to a chip carrier using either an organic conductive adhesive or a solder (Die Attach). The wires then are welded using a special bonding tool (capillary or wedge). Depending on bonding agent (heat and ultrasonic energy), the bonding process can be defined to three major processes: thermocompression bonding (T/C), ultrasonic bonding (U/S), and thermosonic bonding (T/S), as shown in Table 1-1. Table 1-1. Three wirebonding processes. Wirebonding Pressure Thermocompression Ultrasonic Thermosonic High Low Low
1.1.2
Wirebond forms
There are two basic forms of wirebond: ball bond and wedge bond, the corresponding bonding technique, bonding tool and materials are listed in Table 1-2. Currently, thermosonic gold ball bonding is the most widely used bonding technique, primarily because it is faster than ultrasonic aluminum bonding. Once the ball bond is made on the device, the wire may be moved in any direction without stress on the wire, which greatly facilitates automatic wire bonding, as the movement need only be in the x and y directions.
Ball bond
Wedge bond
Wire Au Au, Al
1.3
Wirebonding is the earliest technique of device assembly, whose first result was published by Bell Laboratories in 1957. Sine then, the technique has been extremely developed: Fully automatic machines have been developed for volume production. Bonding parameters can be precisely controlled; mechanical properties of wires can be highly reproduced. Bonding speed can reach 100-125 ms per each wire interconnection (two welds and a wire loop). Bond pitch of 50 m and the consistent loop with less than 40 m have been achieved. Most reliability problems can be eliminated with properly controlled and much improved tools (capillaries and wedges) and processes. Specific bonding tools and wires can be selected by packaging engineers to meet the requirements. Infrastructure of the technique has been comprised by large wirebonding knowledge, manufacturing people, equipment venders and materials. As a result, a reliable and completely repeatable bond formation process can be produced. Owing to its potentially low cost, its much improved yields and reliability, wirebonding, as the dominant chipconnection technology, has been used with all styles of microelectronic packages, from small individual chip packages to large, high-density multichip modules. The most popular applications that use wirebonding are: Single and multitiered cofired ceramic and plastic ball grid arrays (BGAs), single chip and multichip Ceramic and plastic quad flat packages (CerQuads and PQFPs) Chip scale packages (CSPs) Chip on board (COB)
Virtually all dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips and most commodity chips in plastic packages are assembled by wirebonding. About 1.2-1.4 trillion wire interconnections are produced annually. Manufacturing losses and test failures are about 40-1000 ppm and trending downward each year. It is believed that wirebonding will continue to dominate memory and commodity packaging requiring relatively small I/O counts (< 500 I/O) in the future. In addition, wirebonding method is used to connect other components, such as resistors or capacitors, to substrate, package terminals to substrate, or one substrate to another.
1.4
Cost
The main cost of wirebonding method includes: Wirebonder. Die attach equipment. Support equipment, such as wire pull and shear stations, plasma etchers, as well as storage facilities. Materials including tool, wire, die attach materials. Engineering.
Wirebonding is a low cost process since: No chip modification is needed. Equipment has an established base of competitive development.
Substantial non-recurring engineering (NRE) charge and tooling charge are minimized. Cost analysis should include volume and individual process cycle time predictions. In some cases, the cost associated with the flexibility required for engineering and product design charges, which occur and should be anticipated as a part of the planing cycle, also should be evaluated.
1.5
Limitation of wirebonding
For the application of wirebonding method, terminals of chips have to be arranged at the periphery of the chips, otherwise short circuit is easily caused. Therefore, wirebonding technique is difficult for high I/O (>500) interconnections.