Title: 14' Packaging
114. Packaging
2Introduction
- Three major steps for electronic and mechanical
micromachine fabrication - 1. Fabrication with additive and subtractive
processes - 2. Packaging such as bonding, wafer scribing,
lead attachment and encapsulation - 3. Testing (leak test, electrical integrity
and sensor functionality)
3Packaging in IC vs. in Mechanical Micromachines
- IC
- Packing provides 4 functions
- 1. Signal redistribution
- 2. Mechanical support
- 3. Power distribution
- 4. Thermal management
4Packaging in MEMS
- Protecting from the environment and interaction
with environment. - Packaging problem is the least severe for a
physical sensor and the most severe - for chemical and biological sensor.
- Hybrid MEMS in which MEMS and electronics are
fabricated in separate processes - and put together afterward, is recommended.
Dicing
- Final step in fabrication of a 3D
microstructure, and the first in packaging. - Cutting processes involve surfactants,
cleanliness, and blade/depth ratio applied to - MEMS wafers
- If dices are less than 0.5mm on a side, edge
definition such as anisotropically - etched V-grooves and separation of individual
devices are recommended. - Most mechanical sensors and actuators are
equipped with a bonded cap or cover - protecting them during dicing, followed by a
final sacrificial release.
5Cavity Sealing and Bonding
Cavity sealing
Sealing of Polysilicon and Silicon Nitride
Cavities
Reactive sealing
6- Sealant films, such as oxides and nitrides, can
be deposited over small etchant holes.
7- Packaging shells takes long time due to the long
- etch process through the etch holes at the
perimeter - of the shell.
- Permeable polysilicon windows are used to
- remove the underlying sacrificial PSG using
- concentrated HF in 120s.
8Epitaxial Cavity Sealing
- Cavity is formed by selective etching of p
epitaxial Si over more heavily doped Si p
layers.
9HEXSIL Cavity Sealing
- Reactive sealing requires 1000oC and thick SiN
sealing requires 850oC. - Some sealant gas deposits on the encapsulated
micro devises. - Tethered cap structures are sealed down to the
substrate employing a low-temperatures - Au-Si eutectic bond at 363oC by HESIL process.
10Bonding
Field-Assisted Thermal Bonding (anodic bonding or
electrostatic bonding)
- Glass to Silicon (L1 wafer-scale die bonding)
- Sodium-rich glass and metal make bond.
- Coring 7070, soda lime 0080, and potash soda
lead 0120, and aluminosilicate - 1720 are suitable besides pyrex.
- Si-Pyrex bonding occures between 180 and 500oC.
- Depending on the thickness of the glass and the
temperature, voltages between - 200 and 1000V.
11- The operating temperatures are near the glass-
- softening point but well below its melting
point, as - well as below the sintering temperature of
standard - AlSi metallization.
- Advantage of a low-temperature process with a
- lower residual stress and less stringent
requirements - for the surface quality of the wafers.
- Surface roughness Ra lt 1 ?
- Dust free
- Native or thermal oxide layer on Si must
- be thinner than 200 nm.
12- Anodic bonding mechanism is not clean. At
elevated temperatures, the glass - becomes a conductive solid electrolyte and the
bonding results through the - migration of sodium toward the cathode.
- Sodium migration leaves a space charge (bound
negative charges) in the region of - the glass/silicon interface. The high electric
field between the glass and Si results - in an electrostatic force that pulls the glass
and Si together. - Problems
- 1. Difficult technology
- 2. Mismatch in the thermal coefficient between
the glass and Si. - 3. The viscous behavior of the glass results in
degraded long-term stability - of the components.
Field-assisted Thermal Bonding Modification
- NES used a Ti mesh bias electrode (400 oC, 600 V
less than 5 min bonding). - Protecting Si (Glass-Al-SiO2-Si or Glass-poly Si
SiO2 Si). - Two Si wafers between 4 7 ? thick borosilicate
glass.
13- Field-assisted bonding between two Si wafers
containing thermally grown oxide film (1 ? thick)
is succesful (850 950 oC, 30 V for 45 min)
Silicon Fusion Bonding
- Based on a chemical reaction between OH group at
the surface of oxide layer of - wafer
- Roughness must be smaller than 4 nm.
- Oxidize Si/Si, oxidized Si/ oxidized Si, Si/Si,
SiN layered Si/Si, SiN layered Si/Si- - N layered Si, GaAs/Si, Si/glass.
- Before fusion bonding, the oxidized Si surface
must be hydrated by soaking - wafers in H2O2-H2SO4, diluted H2SO4, or
boiling HNO3. - Oxygen-plasma treatment increases the number of
OH groups. - Then, the wafers are rinsed in deionized water
and dried. - Self bonding occurs
- Polymerization of the silanol group is believed
to be the main bonding reaction.
14Thermal bonding with intermediate layers
- LPCVD PSG (1-2 ? thick) layer with two Si wafers
at 1100 oC for 30 min shows good bonding as long
as the wafers are clean and reasonably flat.. - Low-temperature sealing glasses (glass frits
75xx) with sealing temperatures from 415 to 650
oC. - RF sputtering of corning 7593 glass frit to
obtain 8000 Å thick glass film. - APCVD boron oxide hygroscopic problem
- B-doped SiO2 (softening T 450 oC) crack
problem - SOG and sodium silicate layer
- To bond the unpolished back side of a Si die to
another Si part, an aqua-gel based on a
hydrophilic pyrogenic silica powder and PVA as a
binder may be used. (15 min at RT 1 Mpa bond
strength)
Eutectic Bonding
- Au-Si eutectic bonding at 363 oC.
- Difficult to obtain complete bonding over large
areas.
15Photopatterned bonding
- Native oxide prevent the bonding to take place
- Great mounting stress, causing long-term drift
due - to the relaxation of the built-in stress.
Bonding with organic photopatternable layers
- Lithographic patterning of thick resist layers
- AZ-4000 ans SU-8 photoresist, Liga resist PMMA.
- Low bonding temp, high bond strength, no metal
ions, - reduced stress.
- L1 and L2 packaging are possible
- Impossible hermetic seals, high vapor pressures,
poor - mechanical properties.
16Bonding of plastic to plastic
- Using adhesives, tapes, plastic welding (hot
plate and ultrasonic welding), and selected
solvents by partially dissolving the bonding
surfaces. - Development of low-cost, high-speed, and
reliable bonding techniques for microfluidic
devices is challenging.
17Alignment during Bonding
- Guiding holes -gt 50 ? accuracy
- Bonding machine equipped with an in situ optical
alignment set up (- 2.5 ? - accuracy)
Alignment during Bonding
- Guiding holes -gt 50 ? accuracy
- Bonding machine equipped with an in situ
- optical alignment set up (- 2.5 ? accuracy)
Imaging and Bond Strength and Package Hermeticity
Tests
- Imaging a bonded pair of Si wafers IR
- transmission, ultrasound and X-ray topography
- Mechanical test
18- Hermeticity test was carried out by He leak
detection. (5 X 10-11 5 X 10-10 Torr - l/s leak rate)
- FTIR measurement of N2O inside sealed Si cavity.
- To control cavity pressure for critical damping
of packaged micromechanical - devices, non-evaporable getters (Ni/Cr ribbon
covered with a mixture of porous Ti - and Zr-V-Fe alloy that absorbs gases after
ativation at 400 oC)
19Higher Levels of Packaging L2 to L5
Sensor Die attach and Wire Bond in a TO-8 Header
- After dicing a sensor die, die was attached to a
TO-8 header.
20Die Protection
- Vapor-deposited organics for mildly aggressive
environments - (2 3 ? poly(p-xylene)).
- Silicone oil over the die.
- Coating of the die surface with soft substances.
- SiC coating for harsh environments.
- Plastic or ceramic cap for particle and handling
protectioin. - Welded-on Ni cap with pressure pore.
21Stress Isolation and Thermal Management
- Sensor elements should not be subject to
undesirable mechanical stresses originating from
their packaging structure.
Multichip Packaging
- Micromachined chips can be packed laterally as
in multichip modules (MCM).
22Connections between Layers (Vias)
- Wet etching (aspect ratio lt1)
- Dry etching (aspect ratio 30)
- Through-wafer electrical interconnect
fabrication compatible with standard - CMOS processing (High-density SF6 plasma Bosch
Process) - Laser Drilling (aspect ratio 50)
- Ultrasonic Drilling
- Temperature Zone Melting (TZM)
- Via formation and metal deposition are one and
the same process - Interconnects between plastic layers
Al
SiAl eutectics
Radiant heat (1000 1200 oC)
23Partitioning
- Partitioning is one of the major challenges in
MEMS - How far can we push integration of electronics
with the MEMS sensing function? - What can we include with the MEMS disposable ?
- What can we put into the fixed reader instrument
? - On board or off-board fluidics ?
- Battery or main power ?
Monolithic vs. Hybrid MEMS
- Hybrid integration means combining thin film Ics
with thick film technology - Hybrid sensor keeps the electronics separate
from the sensor - Tow pieces of Si on the same substrate connected
by a short wire bridge. - Si sensor mounted in a header plugged into an
electronics board. - In monolithic MEMS, electronics and MEMS
elements are cofabricated within - one single sequential silicon process, in
which yield is low.
24Partitioning in a Microfluidic Instrument
- Nozzle, pump, channel, reservoir, column, mixer,
oscillator, diode, amplifier, valves
25Fluid Propulsion Methods and MEMS Integration
- Mechanical pumps Piezoelectric,
electro-osmotic, electrowetting,
electrohydrodynamic pumping. - Acoustic streaming Constant fluid motor induced
by an oscillating sound field at a solid/fluid
boundary. Mixing is possible - Electrophoresis / Electro-osmosis
- Centrifugal pumping
- Vacuum Pressure Reservoir
Heating and Cooling and MEMS Integration
- Electrical current passing through resistors
integrated on thin membrane. - External heating and cooling system
- Heating fluid within the micro instrument using
radiation (ir, rf or microwave)
26Sample Introduction
- Flow injection analysis (rotary of sliding
valves) - Creating wells into which the sample is dropped.
Then the sample is then wicked into an internal
chamber by capillary action.
Micro and Nano Assembly
- By humans with tweezers and microscopes or
pick-and-place robots.
27Scaling of the Assembly Process
- Surface forces dominate over volume forces.
- To avoid some of these problems, the smallest
components are often manipulated in a liquid
medium.
Micro Assembly Examples
Serial micro assembly
- Optical tweezer light has momentum and can be
used to catch and manipulate objects in a size
range from nanometers to micrometers. - 0.7 1.06 ? wave length
- 25 500 mW in a focal spot between 0.5 and 1.0
mm in diameter - Laser scalpel cutting biological objects
inside cells. - STM to manipulate individual atoms
Parallel micro assembly
- HELIX flip-chip process
- Microgripper arrays
28Stochastic approaches
- Assemble magnetically coated semiconductor parts
employing an array of magnetic sites. - Solvent-surface force micro assembly
- Self-assembly using electrostatic levitation
- At nanogen, electric fields are used to
transport and the control the placement of
proteins, RNA and DNA.
29DNA-Meditated Assembly