Wafer bonding (Chapter 17) & CMP (Chapter 16) sami.franssila@aalto.fi
Wafer bonding applications Advanced substrates (SOI) Packaging Capping/Encapsulation Multi layer devices 3D structures Layer transfer Wire bonding Flip chip bonding Not part of this course
Wafer bonding techniques direct bonding: Si/Si, glass/glass, PMMA/PMMA,… also known as fusion bonding anodic bonding (AB): Si/glass, glass/Si/glass thermo-compression bonding (TCB): Au-Au eutectic bonding: Si/Au (363oC) glass frit bonding: glass melting adhesive bonding: “glues” applied, any substrate
Basic requirements for bonding Wafers are flat (no centimeter scale wavyness) Wafer are smooth (atomic/micrometer scale) Materials form chemical bonds across their interface High stresses are avoided No interface bubbles develop
Bonding process steps -particle removal -surface chemistry modification -(optional) vacuum pumping -(optional) wafer alignment -room temperature joining -application of force/heat/voltage -(optional) wafer thinning
SOI wafer fabrication: bonding an oxidized wafer to a bare silicon wafer device Si BOX Handle Si a) surface preparation b) room temperature joining c) annealing for bond improvement d) top wafer thinning BOX= buried oxide
Bond strength Tong & Gösele: Semiconductor wafer bonding
Silicon bonding At low temperature: weak hydrogen bonds At high temperature: strong Si-O-Si bonds Tong & Gösele: Semiconductor wafer bonding
Why SOI wafers ? CMOS Why not SOI ? Expensive MEMS -easy isolation of transistors -fewer process steps -elimination of substrate effects faster transistors -easy etch stop -single crystal material superior -device and handle silicon optimized separately Why not SOI ? Expensive
Silicon fusion bonding: cMUT (capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducer) SOI wafer Processed bulk wafer Etching away SOI handle and BOX Processing electrodes on the device SOI membrane Yongli Huang, JMEMS 2003, p. 128
Glass-to-glass fusion bonding Same cleaning, particle, surface chemistry problems as in Si-Si fusion bonding Wafer stack is heated close to glass “softening temperature” (e.g. 650 °C for Pyrex 7740) Deformation due to glass flux (Ville Saarela, unpublished) Isotropically wet etched channel in glass with fusion bonded glass channel.
Polymer fusion bonding Wafers are heated above glass transition temperature Tg and pressed together. Tg usually 100-200oC Works best for two identical wafers. Also called thermal bonding
Anodic bonding: Si-glass At elevated temperature Na+ ions in glass become mobile Electric field drives Na+ towards cathode Oxygen O- ions in glass migrate towards silicon anode Depletion region High electric field Attraction of wafers
Anodic bonding: Si-glass Double Sided Heating: High Voltage: Bonding Atmosphere: e.g. 350°C e.g. 500V e.g. 1 mbar nitrogen
Thermal matching Si-glass Coefficients of thermal expansion of silicon and glass must be matching, otherwise cracking upon cooling only certain glasses suitable for anodic bonding: Pyrex, Borofloat
Anodic bonding: capacitor Silicon DRIE etched Al capacitor electrode Al counter electrode on a glass wafer Materials must tolerate ca. 400oC Accurate gap control because no intermediate materials
Glass-silicon-glass anodic bonding Fig. 1.10: Oxyhydrogen burner of a flame ionization detector by Pyrex-glass/silicon/Pyrex-glass bonding, from ref. Zimmermann 2002.
Adhesive bonding photoresists (spin coated, photopatterned) glues (e.g. silk screen printing) Applicable to almost any material If thick photoresist used, not sensitive to particles Temperatures 100-200oC (resists are polymers !)
Adhesive bonding (2) Because of low temperature, CMOS electronics not affected Spin coating determined thickness (and actuation voltage)
Bond alignment None Perfect Misaligned Simple equipment enough Requires advanced tools Misaligned Some devices more sensitive to misalignment than others.
Bond alignment (2) Critical alignment Non-critical alignment
Glass frit bonding for MEMS packaging Glass frit is a particle slurry of low melting point glass and organic binders. It is spread by silk screen printing (thickness e.g. 10 µm). Cured at ca. 400oC (solvent evaporates and glass particles fuse together)
Comparing bonding methods
CMP: Chemical-Mechanical Polishing Chemical Mechanical Polishing (CMP) combines chemical action with mechanical abrasion to achieve selective material removal through polishing Microfabrication
Applications of polishing Smoothing Planarization Damascene SiO2 Cu Al
Applications of polishing Smoothing Planarization Damascene SiO2 Cu Al
Applications of polishing Smoothing Planarization Damascene SiO2 Cu Al
Results of CMP SiC wafer before and after CMP CMP of SiO2 Microfabrication
Rotary CMP tool 60-90s per wafer
Polishing in action Polishing pad
Grinding vs. polishing 500 µm 10 µm Both use abrasive particles, but: Grinding removes 10 µm/min in large chunks because large particles Grinding results in very rough surface because very large chunks Grinding leaves mechanical damage due to large chunks being torn off Polishing uses nanoparticles to achieve smooth surfaces Polishing removes 0.1 µm/min because small particles, small forces Mechanism is removal is chemical and mechanical (CMP !)
After grinding, need polishing Planarization Damascene SiO2 Cu Al
Erosion and dishing in CMP Size dependent Pattern density dependent
Photonic crystal by CMP
Log pile photonic crystal fabrication Poly-Si Si wafer CVD of oxide CMP of oxide CVD of poly-Si oxide
Poly-Si litho & etching CVD of poly-Si CVD of oxide CMP of oxide
Etch all CVD oxide away with HF