Title: IMAPS Global Business Council Roadmap Process
1IMAPS Global Business CouncilRoadmap Process
2The GBC Roadmap Team
- This Roadmap Process presentation was prepared by
these members of the IMAPS Global Business
Council National Technology Council - Steve Adamson (sadamson_at_asymtek.com)
- Justin Blount (Justin.M.Blount_at_usa.dupont.com)
- Laurie Roth (lroth_at_kns.com)
- Lee Smith (lsmit_at_amkor.com)
- Andy Strandjord (andrew.strandjord_at_flipchip.com)
- Jie Xue (jixue_at_cisco.com)
3Topics
- Where does IMAPS fit in with the ITRS and iNEMI
Roadmaps? - What is the ITRS Roadmap and how does it work?
- What is the iNEMI Roadmap and how does it work?
- How does IMAPS interact with this Roadmap
Process? - Why IMAPS should be involved.
- IMAPS Areas of Focus.
- If you are already familiar with the ITRS iNEMI
Roadmap Process, skip to slide 19 - The Roadmaps
- ITRS
- iNEMI
- Summary IMAPS Areas of Focus.
4ITRS iNEMI Packaging Roadmaps Intersect
IMAPS addresses the Semiconductor Packaging needs
of this space.
5What is the ITRS?
- The International Technology Roadmap for
Semiconductors (ITRS) is an assessment of
semiconductor technology requirements. - The objective of the ITRS is to ensure
advancements in the performance of integrated
circuits. - This assessment, called roadmapping, is a
cooperative effort of global industry
manufacturers and suppliers, government
organizations, consortia, and universities. - The ITRS identifies the technological challenges
and needs facing the semiconductor industry over
the next 15 years. - It is sponsored by the European Semiconductor
Industry Association (ESIA), the Japan
Electronics and Information Technology Industries
Association (JEITA), the Korean Semiconductor
Industry Association (KSIA), the Semiconductor
Industry Association (SIA), and Taiwan
Semiconductor Industry Association (TSIA). - SEMATECH is the global communication center for
this activity. The ITRS team at SEMATECH also
coordinates the USA region events.
http//public.itrs.net/
6ITRS Technology Working Groups
- The ITRS process encourages discussion and debate
throughout the community about the requirements
for success. - The key factor in the success of the Roadmap is
obtaining consensus on industry drivers,
requirements, and technology timelines. - The Technology Working Groups are the
organizations that "build" the roadmaps. - These representatives assess the state of
technology and identify areas that may provide
solutions. - The TWG members also indicate opportunities for
new research and innovation. - These groups are made up of volunteer technology
experts from chip manufactures, supplier
companies, universities and academia, technology
labs, and semiconductor technology consortia. - The Technology Working Groups, also known as
TWGs, are comprised of the technical disciplines
of - System Drivers
- Design
- Test and Test Equipment
- Process Integration, Devices, and Structures
- RF and Analog/Mixed-signal Technologies for
Wireless Communications - Emerging Research Devices and Materials
- Front End Processes
- Lithography
- Interconnect
- Factory Integration
- Assembly and Packaging This is the area where
IMAPS will focus. - Environment, Safety, and Health
7Example of ITRS Short Term Challenges
8iNEMI has strong industry support.
9iNEMI Roadmap Methodology
- iNEMI focusses on top level industry segments via
their Product Emulator Groups. - In addition, they address technology areas via
their different Technology Working Groups. - A cross-cut matrix ensures feedback between the
various groups.
10iNEMI Technology Working Groups
- Business Processes/Technologies
- Product Lifecycle Information Management
- Design Technologies
- Environmentally Conscious Electronics
- Modeling, Simulation Design Tools
- Thermal Management
- Manufacturing Technologies
- Board Assembly
- Test, Inspection Measurement
- Final Assembly
- Component Subsystem Technologies
- Passive Components
- RF Components Subsystems
- Packaging This is one of the areas where IMAPS
will focus. - Semiconductor Technology
- Organic Substrates
- Mass Data Storage
- Connectors
- Energy Storage Systems
11iNEMI Cross-cut Matrix
A cross-cut matrix ensures feedback between the
various groups.
12Example of iNEMI short term challenges
13Update calendar for ITRS / iNEMI
- 2006 ITRS Roadmap release scheduled for December
4, 2006. - 2007 iNEMI Roadmap release scheduled for February
2007 at APEX, Los Angeles.
14Why IMAPS should be involved.
- ITRS focuses mainly on front end wafer fab
areas, with a chapter on Semiconductor Assembly
Packaging. - iNEMI focuses mainly on board level assembly,
with a chapter on Semiconductor Assembly
Packaging. - ITRS/iNEMI are working together to align their
Semiconductor Assembly Packaging Roadmaps. - Many of the same people are on both teams.
- Some IMAPS members are also on both teams.
- IMAPS focus is on Semiconductor Assembly
Packaging. - Its a natural fit to take the output of the
ITRS/iNEMI Semiconductor Assembly Packaging
Roadmaps and use that output to direct IMAPS
activities towards solving gaps in the roadmap. - IMAPS corporate members will benefit by
developing real industry solutions for real
industry challenges.
15Global Semiconductor Packaging Materials Outlook
Market Size for Materials Market Opportunities
for IMAPS members.
Source SEMI Industry Research and Statistics and
TechSearch International, November 2005
This forecast was supplied courtesy of SEMI
Techsearch International. The full report is
available from SEMIs web catalog at www.semi.org
.
16Launched The Road Ahead in Advancing
Microelectronics 4/06
17Roll-out plan for IMAPS to address roadmaps
- Form a GBC Roadmap Team.- DONE
- GBC Roadmap Team creates a roadmap template (red
brick) and identifies current gaps on the
existing roadmaps. - DONE - GBC Roadmap Team communicates those gaps to the
NTC. - GBC and NTC structure future IMAPS events to
focus on those gaps ongoing. - Dave Saums to give short presentation at LED
Thermal ATWs in September 2006. - Meantime, GBC/NTC to support ITRS/iNEMI updates
with input communicate back to IMAPS
issues/trends. - Use IMAPS members on the ITRS/iNEMI roadmap TWGs
to facilitate communication Laurie Roth, Howard
Imhof....and other volunteers.
"Red Brick" template "Red Brick" template "Red Brick" template "Red Brick" template "Red Brick" template
2006 2007 2008 etc
X
Manufacturing solutions exist and are being optimized. Manufacturing solutions exist and are being optimized. Manufacturing solutions exist and are being optimized. Manufacturing solutions exist and are being optimized. Manufacturing solutions exist and are being optimized.
Manufacturing solutions are know. Manufacturing solutions are know. Manufacturing solutions are know. Manufacturing solutions are know.
X Interim solutions are known. Interim solutions are known. Interim solutions are known.
Manufacturable solutions are NOT known. Manufacturable solutions are NOT known. Manufacturable solutions are NOT known. Manufacturable solutions are NOT known.
18Recommended Areas of Focus for IMAPS Members
- Develop Feasible Embedded Components.
- Develop Enhanced Materials to Enable Wafer Level
Packaging. - Bring Solutions to Resolve Thermal Management
Issues. - Develop New Materials to Reduce System Cost While
Delivering the Necessary Performance. - Close the Gap Between Chip and Substrate
Interconnect Density. - Resolve the issues low K and Cu bring to
Packaging.
19The Roadmaps
20The complete chapter can be downloaded from the
ITRS website http//www.itrs.net/Common/2005ITRS/
AP2005.pdf The following slides contain key
excerpts.
21ITRS 2005 Semiconductor Packaging Roadmap Table
of Contents
All of these topics and those on the next slide
are comprehensively covered in the ITRS
Roadmap. This presentation will focus on the key
challenges only.
- Packaging Materials Requirements
- New Materials
- Embedded and Integrated Passives
- Assembly and Packaging Infrastructure Challenges
- Electrical Design Requirements
- Cross Talk
- Power Distribution and Power Subsystem
- Thermo-mechanical Challenges in Electronic
Packaging - Mechanical Challenges
- Mechanical Modeling and Simulation and Validation
- Thermal Modeling and Simulation and Validation
- Equipment Requirements for Emerging Package Types
- Potential Solutions
- Wafer Level Packaging
- Chip to Next Level Interconnect
- Package to Board Interconnect
- Fine Pitch Ball Grid Array/CSP Packages
- Socketed Parts
- Embedded and Integrated Passives
- Chapter Scope
- Difficult Challenges
- Technology Requirements
- Single Chip Packages
- High Pin-Count Packages
- Wafer Level Packaging
- System in a Package (Multi-chip Packages, 3D
Packaging) - Flexible Substrates and Interconnect
- Optoelectronic Packaging
- RF Packaging
- MEMS
- Medical and Bio Chip Packaging
- Biocompatibility
- Bio Packaging Reliability
- Integrated Circuit
- Manufacturing
- Cost
- Reliability
- Package and Interconnect Characterization and
Simulation
22ITRS 2005 Semiconductor Packaging Roadmap Table
of Contentscontinued
- System in Package (SiP) System Level
Integration - Types/Categories of SiPs
- Side by Side Placement (Horizontal Packages)
- Stacked Structures
- Package-on-Package (POP), Package-in-Package
(PiP) - Stacked Die Packages
- Chip to Chip/Wafer Structure
- Embedded Structures
- Technologies for SiP
- Wafer level SiP and 3 D Integration Technologies
- Technologies for Embedded Devices
- Challenges for SiP
- Thermal management
- System in Package Outlook
- Wafer Thinning
- Glossary of Terms
- Cross-Cut ITWG Issues
- Design
- Factory Integration
23ITRS Single Chip Package
- Incremental improvements in traditional assembly
technologies will not be sufficient to meet
market requirements. - The substrate dominates the cost of single chip
packaging. - Cost per pin has been trending up, instead of
down. - Operating temperatures are a problem in harsh
environments. - Higher frequency chip-to-board speeds for
peripheral buses.
24ITRS High Pin-Count Packages
- Package pin count grows as higher frequency and
higher power density demand more power and ground
pins. - Substrate technology requires micro-vias, blind
buried vias, stacked vias and tighter lines and
spacing. - Substrate technology advances lead to significant
cost increases for design/test and a reduced
supplier base. - System-in-Package will become more important to
reduce the need for high density interconnects in
the package substrate and the PCB.
25ITRS Chip-to-Package Substrate
Development work is required for finer pitch
in-line wire bond area array flip chip.
26ITRS Package Substrate Physical Properties
Near Term
27ITRS Package Substrate Physical Properties
Long Term
28ITRS System-in-Package - definitions
- SiP enables reduction in size, weight, cost
power. - System-on-Chip can address size, weight power,
but at cost, design test premiums. - SiP integrates multiple functions/devices in a
single package. - Can integrate different elements such as MEMS,
opto, bio.... - Includes 3D stacked die packaging.
- Requires Known Good Die.
29ITRS System-in-Package Requirements
The number of stacked die and the number of die
in a SiP are challenges.
30ITRS Thinned Wafers
Long term challenge for extreme thin packages.
31ITRS Wafer Level Packaging
- Near term challenges
- I/O pitch between 150 µm - 250 µm gt100 I/O
- Solder joint reliability
- Wafer thinning and handling technologies
- Compact ESD structures
- TCE mismatch compensation for large die
32ITRS Flexible Substrates
- Near term challenges
- Conformal low cost organic substrates
- Small and thin die assembly
- Handling in low cost operation
33ITRS Interconnect
It is very challenging to maintain packaging
reliability with strong chip-to-package
interaction resulting from new materials, new
processes, and new interconnect features at the
Si level.
34ITRS Interconnect (contd)
35ITRS Optoelectronic Packaging
- Package Sealing
- Hermetic sealing to protect the optical devices -
TO header butterfly packaging. - Non-hermetically sealed organic packaging for
cost sensitive applications. - Alignment
- lt 0.5 µm alignment between single mode fiber
optical device for high data rate applications. - 5 to 10 µm alignment accuracy for cost sensitive
applications, using relatively large diameter
polymer optical fiber (POF) - Adhesive to assure alignment through succeeding
high temperature processes product usage life. - Materials
- POF material improvement in attenuation reduction
and data rate increase is required. - Material development for poly-clad-silica (PCS)
fiber. - Optically clear molding compound or clear glob
tops for optical windows. - Vertical integration to include more
functionality in a package. - Wafer-level-packaging (WLP) process to integrate
lenses or other micro-opticalelectro-mechanical
system (MOEMS) devices, and to provide
environmental protection for a VCSEL wafer. - Some micro-optical components, e.g. polymer
waveguides and beam reflectors, may be embedded
in the SiP substrate. - A BGA based SiP may house optical connectors,
laser diodes, photodetectors, CMOS IC containing
receivers/drivers and multiplexer/demultiplexer,
plus RF connectors, and decoupling capacitors.
36ITRS RF Packaging
- Many of the technology challenges for RF
packaging arise from the fact that the IC
packaging engineering practice, technology
knowledge base, and manufacturing infrastructures
have been based upon digital IC packaging
developed in the last forty odd years. - Issues
- The inductance characteristics associated with
bonding wires and leaded packages, and effect of
molding compound materials limit the RF
performance. - RF package modeling tools and materials
properties database for package design and
device-package co-design for the broad spectrum
of RF market applications. - Improvements in materials propertiesmolding
compounds, underfills, substrates are required. - Being able to embed passive components in LTCC.
- To meet the low cost challenges, embedded
inductance and capacitance components and
networks in organic packaging for RF applications
must be diligently pursued. - Tools to enable device package co-design in SIP
packages will be very important.
37ITRS MEMS
38ITRS Medical Bio Chip Packaging
- BIOCOMPATIBILITY
- No interaction with body tissues and fluids.
- No inflammatory reactions.
- No toxicity to bio-organisms.
- No outgassing or other decay products that may be
harmful to bio-organisms. - Must be chemically inert to various
concentrations of bio-reagents including ethanol.
- May include high flow rates with significant back
pressure. - BIO PACKAGING RELIABILITY
- Major concerns are patient safety and risk
mitigation. - For life-sustaining devices, component failure
rate as low as 100 ppm, few ppm critical failure
rate. - Challenge to capture low occurrence failures in
reliability testing. - EMI is a major concern.
- Pressure requirements in a barometric pressure
chamber or while scuba diving. - Defibrillation devices could generate significant
localized heating in the high voltage charging
circuit when delivering therapy, challenging the
package substrate and PCB. - MANUFACTURING
- In accordance with regulatory requirements for
medical devices - Requirements for control of the manufacturing
environment, labeling of the packages, and
documentation.
39ITRS Cost
- Today packaging costs often exceed die
fabrication costs. - Leadfree solders.
- Low K High K dielectrics.
- Higher processing temperatures.
- Wider range of environmental temperatures.
- More efficient thermal management needed.
40ITRS Reliability Simulation
New failure modes caused by new materials needed
to meet environmental and performance
requirements, result in significant challenges in
field reliability prediction based on accelerated
lab testing for broad product application field
requirements.
- The introduction of the new materials and
structures to meet environmental, heat and speed
requirements are posing new reliability
challenges. - New technology will be required to meet the
reliability goals including - New reliability tests such as drop tests for
mobile products. - Correlation between field- and laboratory
testing. - Improved methods for failure detection and
analysis (e.g., X-ray, acoustic, nano-deformation
and localized residual stress measurement.) - Materials and interface characterization.
Interfacial delamination will continue to be a
critical reliability hazard that is worsened by
the trends to larger chips, new materials and
increased layer count. More layers require the
understanding of more interfaces. - Simulation and modeling for life time prediction
(e.g., multi-field coupling, structure-property
correlation, ab-initio methods, modular and
parametric approaches).
41ITRS Packaging Materials
42ITRS Infrastructure
- Electrical design
- Cross talk
- Power distribution power subsystem
- Thermo-mechanical
- Modeling Simulation
- Equipment
43www.inemi.org
- The iNEMI Roadmap is only available for download
to TWG members or on-line purchase. - The following slides contain key excerpts from
the 2007 Roadmap Update-in-progess.
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48Recommended Areas of Focus for IMAPS
MembersSummary
- Develop Feasible Embedded Components.
- Develop Enhanced Materials to Enable Wafer Level
Packaging. - Bring Solutions to Resolve Thermal Management
Issues. - Develop New Materials to Reduce System Cost While
Delivering the Necessary Performance. - Close the Gap Between Chip and Substrate
Interconnect Density. - Resolve the issues low K and Cu bring to
Packaging.
49Back Up
50ITRS Difficult Challenges 32 nm Near Term
The ITRS Roadmap segments issues into those that
are Near Term affect Wafer Nodes 32 nm and
those that are Long Term affect Wafer Nodes lt32
nm.
51ITRS Difficult Challenges 32 nm Near Term
52ITRS Difficult Challenges 32 nm Near Term
53ITRS Difficult Challenges 32 nm Near Term
54ITRS Difficult Challenges lt 32 nm Long Term